Grave Mistake
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''Grave Mistake'' is a
detective novel Detective fiction is a subgenre of crime fiction and mystery fiction in which an investigator or a detective—whether professional, amateur or retired—investigates a crime, often murder. The detective genre began around the same time as s ...
by
Ngaio Marsh Dame Edith Ngaio Marsh (; 23 April 1895 – 18 February 1982) was a New Zealand mystery writer and theatre director. She was appointed a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1966. As a crime writer during the "Golden Age of Det ...
; it is the thirtieth novel to feature
Roderick Alleyn Roderick Alleyn (pronounced "Allen") is a fictional character who first appeared in 1934. He is the policeman hero of the 32 detective novels of Ngaio Marsh. Marsh and her gentleman detective belong firmly in the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, ...
, and was first published in 1978. The plot concerns the supposed suicide of a wealthy widow in a chic rest spa, and involves a rare and famous
postage stamp A postage stamp is a small piece of paper issued by a post office, postal administration, or other authorized vendors to customers who pay postage (the cost involved in moving, insuring, or registering mail), who then affix the stamp to the fa ...
.


Plot synopsis

At a Women's Institute meeting in Quintern Place, the beautiful home of The Honorable Sybil Foster, a wealthy widow, we meet or hear of the characters who populate the idyllic Kentish village of Upper Quintern: Sybil's childhood friend, the West End playwright Verity Preston, their daily help Mrs Jim Jobbin and gardener Angus McBride, the vicar, the local GP and others. Sybil and Verity both live in houses inherited from their fathers. The "rhythms of life" of this highly traditional, class-structured community are described as having changed little "in spite of war, bombs, crises and inflation" except for the arrival of Nikolas Markos, a suave, exotic multi-millionaire. Markos has bought and refurbished the nearby Mardling Manor. At a dinner party, Markos introduces another outsider, Dr Basil Schramm, newly arrived medical incumbent at Greengages Hotel, a classy, expensive health retreat, where Sybil Foster is a frequent guest. Verity is disconcerted to recognise Schramm as Basil Smythe, a former medical student of her father's, who had seduced and then dropped her 25 years previously. The next outsider to arrive is Bruce Gardener, a strapping ex-soldier with an ersatz Scottish persona and accent, whose services as a skilled gardener are in demand following the sudden death of Mr McBride. Claude Carter, Sybil's stepson by her first marriage, an unprepossessing remittance man and petty criminal, is newly returned from Australia with the police on his trail. Sybil has taken herself off to Greengages, where she receives visits from most of the suspects, including her daughter Prunella, recently engaged to Markos' son Gideon. That evening, Sybil is found dead in her hotel room, apparently having committed suicide with an overdose of barbiturate pills taken in whisky. A final suspect is the hotel's luscious Sister Jackson. She puts Alleyn privately in mind of TV comedian Dick Emery's character 'Mandy'. Sister Jackson is jealous of her lover Basil Schramm's burgeoning intimacy with Sybil. When Sybil's newly revised will appears, its dispositions prove shockingly unexpected, and the resulting suspicions bring Chief Superintendent
Roderick Alleyn Roderick Alleyn (pronounced "Allen") is a fictional character who first appeared in 1934. He is the policeman hero of the 32 detective novels of Ngaio Marsh. Marsh and her gentleman detective belong firmly in the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, ...
to Quintern and Greengages, with his team of Detective-Inspector Fox and Thompson (photography) and Bailey (fingerprints). In the background lurks the 'Black Alexander', a priceless postage stamp, which disappeared when Sybil's first husband Maurice Carter was killed in a bombed train, returning from Quintern Place to London during the War. Was this treasure on his person when he died, or did he hide it for safety somewhere about Quintern Place? The murderer is


Reception

Newgate Callendar (pseudonym for Harold C Schonberg), writing in ''The New York Times'', found this novel, a traditional mystery featuring the suave Alleyn, to be one popular with fans of Ngaio Marsh, but other readers might find it "just a mite slow‐moving."


Background

Marsh's first biographer, Margaret Lewis suggests that, once again, the author's depiction of Quintern drew on her visits to the Rhodes family, her lifelong friends, in the Kentish village of Birling, quoting Marsh's admission that "Birling has a strong tendency to pop up when least expected" and a letter in which Marsh regrets that "however much I try to discipline myself as to plot and general whodunnitry, I always find myself writing about a set of people in a milieu that, for one reason or another, attracts me. And then... I have to involve them in some crime or other. Does this mean one is a straight novelist manquée?". Later biographer Joanne Drayton also comments on the struggles Marsh faced with a book she described in a letter to her agent Edmund Cork as having "hung round my neck like the Ancient Mariner's Albatross" and "been interrupted so often by illness".


Settings of last three novels

Set in and around the fictional village of Upper Quintern in England's Weald of Kent, it is the last of Marsh's "cosy" English village mysteries, and was followed by ''
Photo Finish A photo finish occurs in a sporting race when multiple competitors cross the finishing line at nearly the same time. As the naked eye may not be able to determine which of the competitors crossed the line first, a photo or video taken at the finis ...
'' (1980), her final novel set in New Zealand, and ''
Light Thickens ''Light Thickens'' is a detective novel by Ngaio Marsh; it is the thirty-second, and final, novel to feature Roderick Alleyn, and was first published in 1982. The plot concerns the murder of the lead actor in a production of ''Macbeth'' in Londo ...
'' (1982), her final novel with a theatrical setting.


Publication

The book was well received and sold well, as the author wrote in 1979 to a friend: "''Grave Mistake'' seems to be beating all records in the U.S.A. It has sold 22,000 copies... & sstill going strong" (quoted in Joanne Drayton's biography).


References

{{Ngaio Marsh Roderick Alleyn novels 1978 British novels Collins Crime Club books