Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Earl Derr Biggers' The House Without A Key (#1925Club)

"Amos!" cried Miss Minerva, "That man--why he--"
"Charlie Chan," Amos explained. "I'm glad they brought him. He's the best detective on the force."
 
1925 saw the first of the six Charlie Chan mystery novels. (And I don't know how many movies, etc...)

John Quincy Winterslip has left Boston to come to Honolulu to see what his Aunt Minerva is still doing there. Proper Bostonians don't go gallivanting off to the tropics and even though she's there to see her  cousins Dan and Amos Winterslip, it's time she come home.

But when John Quincy gets off the ship he learns Dan was murdered the night before. He also discovers that while Dan has been living an upright life for a while, he was a black sheep back in the 1880s, and there's still more than one person who would be happy to see him dead.

John Quincy's initial instinct is to pack up his Aunt Minerva and head back to Boston at once, but the Winterslip honour is at stake.

And anyway there's a girl, actually two girls, his distant cousin and Dan's daughter Barbara Winterslip, but more importantly Carlota Maria Egan, beautiful and also the daughter of a suspect.

It's a fun one in the Golden Age mystery tradition, more American than British, not an amateur detective, a few more chase scenes and a bit more violence. (A fist fight! An abduction with an escape!) John Quincy hangs out with Charlie Chan and comes to the correct solution, just a bit later than Chan and Chan has to rescue him. The romance is completely satisfactory.

In fact, really the only downside is that, though I last read it twenty-five years ago, I remembered the murderer and the solution. But I'm quite sure I didn't guess it the first time.

Biggers, already a professional writer, created Charlie Chan because he was impressed by an actual detective of Chinese ancestry on the Honolulu police force Chang Apana and disliked the whole idea of the Yellow Peril.


It's the 1925 Club week! Thanks to Kaggsy and Simon for hosting.
 
I see Fanda also read the novel and enjoyed it this week. 

 

4 comments:

  1. Isn't it nice to have read the same book almost at the same time, and for the same event (and our first read for it too)! I have just finished a book that discusses a lot about coincidences (Chasing Vermeer - loved it), and I'm so thrilled that we have our nice little coincidence... ;)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was fun to read yours about it and it was a fun read!

      Delete
  2. I've read one of this author's book, but never any of the Charlie Chan stories - they do sound entertaining!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And I've never read anything but his Charlie Chan books! But I see that some of his others are on Gutenberg so I may have to change that.

      Delete