Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    CNQ
    • Issues
      • Number 114
      • Number 113
      • Number 112
      • Number 111
      • Number 110
      • Number 109
      • Number 108
      • Number 107
      • Number 106
      • Number 105
      • Number 104
      • Number 103
      • Number 102
      • Archive
    • Magazine
      • About
      • Contests
      • Advertise
      • Submissions
      • Where to Buy
      • Subscribe
      • Promotional Subscriptions
      • Contact
    • Features
      • Web Exclusive
      • Essays
        • CanLitCrit Essay Contest
      • Interviews
      • Reviews
      • CNQ Abroad
      • Poetry
      • Short Fiction
      • The North Wing
      • The Dusty Bookcase
      • Profiles in Bookselling
      • Used and Rare
    CNQ

    The Mystery-Anthology Mystery Solved?
    By Brian Busby

    0
    By CNQ Team on April 7, 2019 The Dusty Bookcase
    Canadian Mystery Stories
    Alberto Manguel ed., 
    Toronto: Oxford U Press, 1991; 288 pages.

    Alberto Manguel is a well-respected figure in Canadian and Argentinian letters. I’ve always enjoyed hearing him speak on CBC Radio; last year’s Ideas two-parter, “Borges’ Buenos Aires: The Imaginary City,” is recommended listening. Manguel has a precise manner of speech, which, combined with his previous position as director of the National Library of Argentina, has led me to think of him as a meticulous man. So why is this 1991 anthology such a dog’s breakfast?

    The table of contents provides the first clue:

    Note the forty-six-year gap between the births of Stephen Leacock and Margaret Millar. Note also that the majority of authors were born in the thirties and forties; three in 1931 alone.

    Next, consider Manguel’s introduction. The first of its three-and-a-bit pages is an overview of the evolution of “the detective story—a.k.a mystery, thriller, whodunnit.” All the expected touchstones are there: Edgar Allen Poe, Wilkie Collins, The Mystery of Edmund Drood and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. It ends with a leap, noting that Doyle’s last Sherlock Holmes story was published the very same year as Agatha Christie’s The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, thereby heralding the dawn of the “golden era of the mystery story.”

    The Murder of Roger Ackroyd was Agatha Christie’s sixth novel. It was published in 1926; Doyle’s final Sherlock Holmes story was published in 1927.

    “In Canada, the development of the genre was slower and frankly derivative of the British model,” Manguel writes. He allows that “in the English-Canadian provinces and Quebec there are early examples of popular fiction that can, up to a point, be classified as ‘mystery stories,’” but adds, “at the time these texts lacked a public in the reading method required by the genre”; an odd assertion, given the popularity of Poe, Collins, Dickens, and Doyle amongst those very same Canadian readers.

    Manguel’s opinion of early Canadian mysteries is equally dismissive. He mentions only three—fleetingly—relying on others in doing so:

    Michael Richardson, in Maddened by Mystery, proposes James De Mille’s “fine Victorian Mystery” The Cryptogram (1871), as the first true Canadian detective story. Professor J. Hare suggests, for French Canada, Georges de Boucherville’s gothic tale “La Tour de Trafalgar” (1835) or Pamphile Le May’s short story “Sang et or” in Contes varies (1899).

    The De Mille and Le May mysteries do not feature in Canadian Mystery Stories, nor does the de Boucherville. This last omission is remarkable when one considers that “La Tour de Trafalgar” pre-dates the Poe stories that Manguel cites as the earliest in the genre. The discrepancy is not addressed.

    The oldest “story” in this anthology, “The Episode of the Mexican Seer,” is in fact the first chapter in Grant Allen’s novel An African Millionaire (1897). The second, “The Chemistry of Anarchy” (1894), by Robert Barr, is not a mystery at all. One of the author’s comedic stories, it concerns a man’s successful effort to frighten a league of anarchists. An example of Barr at his finest, it has aged well, but one wonders what it’s doing here, particularly when one considers his Eugène Valmont detective stories and the mysteries included in his 1896 collection Revenge! Stephen Leacock’s much-anthologized satire “Maddened by Mystery or the Defective Detective”(1911) is next, after which Manguel moves on to Margaret Millar’s “McGowney’s Miracle” (1954). In doing so, he turns a blind eye to W.A. Fraser, Alan Sullivan, Arthur Stringer, Frank L. Packard, Vincent Starrett, H. Bedford-Jones, Frances Shelley Wees, and Kenneth Millar (a.k.a. Ross MacDonald). No explanation is offered for these exclusions—and not one of these authors is recognized in the introduction—so I’m left only to speculate that it may have something to do with the spreading of this falsehood from Malcolm Douglas (Books in Canada, “Blood on the Snow,” June-July 1988), which Manguel quotes:

    Canada has always had its fair share of murder, arson, robbery, assault, fraud and assorted other crimes. We’ve even had the occasional case of espionage. But despite all this bona fide criminal activity, Canada until the 1970s was empty as a Liberal gathering in Alberta when it came to crime fiction.

    This is no more true than Manguel’s contention that Allen and Barr never set their stories in Canada. Still, the anthologist runs with it, writing that “in the following years, the genre seemed to take root and flourish.” Credit, he says, goes to writers like Hugh MacLennan, Margaret Laurence, and Robertson Davies for tilling the soil, making us aware that Canada is “a place of mystery—the country of Manawaka and Deptford.” To prove himself right, sixteen of the twenty stories the anthologist selects for Canadian Mystery Stories were written in the twenty years leading to its 1991 publication. Some take place in Canada; some do not. One of the very best is Gilles Archambault’s “Mother Love” (“Amour maternel“), in which a gigolo is dispatched to New Orleans with the task of retrieving an estranged son. Archambault has a great talent for writing dialogue, and translator Sally Livingston tackles the colloquialisms with ease. Less effective is Timothy Findley’s “Memorial Day,” concerning a landscape architect who is commissioned to redesign a family estate in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

    There is a small mystery at the heart of Findley’s story; which cannot be said for “Mother Love.” In fact, most of the selections in Canadian Mystery Stories aren’t mystery stories at all. “Big Time,” by Lawrence Gough, is the straightforward tale of a couple of crooks who plan an armed-car robbery, only to be betrayed by a publicity-seeking girlfriend. Alice Munro’s “Fits” involves a murder-suicide and its impact on the family living next door. In Chrystine Brouillet’s “First Love” (“Premier amour“), another Livingston translation, the reader is carried along as a Catholic schoolgirl’s secret crush on a male teacher culminates in the murder of a nun. There are no suspects; the crimes need no solving.

    “Riddles are at the core of most fiction,” Manguel writes at the end of his introduction. “Nothing carries a reader from page to page with more force than a question—especially a question whose answer seems unobtainable, but isn’t; seems mad, but is, on close inspection, quite reasonable. Because of this, the detective story will continue, in whatever guise it may take in the future, to serve the purpose of giving confidence in the ultimate sanity of the universe.”

    Not all of Manguel’s selections tie-up quite so neatly as he suggests. And then there’s that use of the “detective story,” again. Anyone at all familiar with the sub-genre knows that the detective story is not “a.k.a. mystery, thriller, whodunnit,” as is stated earlier in the introduction. It’s an amateur’s mistake. That a majority of stories in this anthology do not feature a detective and require no detection skills should have provided the anthologist with a clue that more investigation was warranted.

    This is not to say that Alberto Manguel didn’t have help; the introduction is followed by the book’s acknowledgements. Professor Hare is recognized for “unofficial research,” as is J.D. Singh, co-proprietor of the Toronto mystery bookstore Sleuth of Baker Street. Margaret Cannon, Canada’s Grand Dame of mystery critics, is thanked for her “guidance.”

    So, why the mess of kibble, dog drool, and unwanted scrambled eggs?

    I point out that Canadian Mystery Stories is Alberto Manguel’s eleventh anthology. In the eight years that followed his first, Black Water: The Book of Fantastic Literature (1983), he came to dominate the field. In 1991, as in the decade that followed—he edited four anthologies in 1998 alone—when it came to anthologizing, Manguel was the go-to guy.

    Professor Hare would clearly have been a better choice, but I suppose he didn’t have the name recognition.

    —A CNQ Web Exclusive, April 2019

    Related Posts

    A Sop for Boredom
    By Brian Busby

    Weston to the World
    By Brian Busby

    Cold War, Warm Bed
    By Brian Busby

    Comments are closed.


    CNQ Issue 114:
    Fall/Winter 2023


    Subscribe & Save! Within Canada, with free shipping:

    Subscribe & Save! Outside Canada, with free shipping:

    Recent Articles
    June 30, 2023

    On Upstart & Crow
    by Zoe Grams

    March 28, 2023

    Jana Prikryl’s Midwood
    by Andreae Callanan

    March 20, 2023

    Spring Is Here
    by David Mason

    Recent Posts
    • On Upstart & Crow
      by Zoe Grams
    • Jana Prikryl’s Midwood
      by Andreae Callanan
    • Spring Is Here
      by David Mason
    • Where East Meets West
      by J R Patterson
    • Tolu Oloruntoba’s Each One a Furnace
      by Kevin Spenst
    Recent Comments
    • theresa on Don Coles’ A Serious Call
      by David Godkin
    • Mother, Wife, Author and Professor – O'Niel Barrington Blair on Meaghan Strimas
    • Vol. 1 Brooklyn | Afternoon Bites: Yaa Gyasi Interviewed, Justin Torres Nonfiction, Janice Lee on Fritters, Karen Russell, and More on Amy Jones interviewed
      by Brad de Roo
    • Pinball: A Walking Tour by Emily Donaldson – CNQ | Fun With Bonus on Pinball: A Walking Tour
      by Emily Donaldson
    • admin on Interview with Helen Kahn
      by Jason Dickson
    Archives
    • June 2023
    • March 2023
    • February 2023
    • January 2023
    • December 2022
    • November 2022
    • October 2022
    • September 2022
    • August 2022
    • July 2022
    • June 2022
    • April 2022
    • January 2022
    • November 2021
    • June 2021
    • May 2021
    • April 2021
    • February 2021
    • January 2021
    • November 2020
    • August 2020
    • April 2020
    • March 2020
    • February 2020
    • June 2019
    • May 2019
    • April 2019
    • March 2019
    • January 2019
    • November 2018
    • October 2018
    • September 2018
    • August 2018
    • July 2018
    • June 2018
    • May 2018
    • April 2018
    • March 2018
    • February 2018
    • January 2018
    • December 2017
    • November 2017
    • October 2017
    • September 2017
    • August 2017
    • July 2017
    • June 2017
    • May 2017
    • April 2017
    • March 2017
    • February 2017
    • January 2017
    • December 2016
    • November 2016
    • October 2016
    • September 2016
    • August 2016
    • July 2016
    • June 2016
    • May 2016
    • April 2016
    • March 2016
    • February 2016
    • December 2015
    • November 2015
    • July 2015
    • June 2015
    • May 2015
    • April 2015
    • March 2015
    • February 2015
    • January 2015
    • December 2014
    • November 2014
    • October 2014
    • September 2014
    • July 2014
    • May 2014
    • February 2014
    Categories
    • Archives
    • Blog
    • CanLitCrit Essay Contest
    • CNQ Abroad
    • CNQ Timeline
    • Essays
    • Exhumations
    • Features
    • First Reading
    • Interviews
    • Poetry
    • Profiles in Bookselling
    • Rereading
    • Reviews
    • Short Fiction
    • The Antiquarium
    • The Dusty Bookcase
    • The North Wing
    • Uncategorized
    • Used and Rare
    • Web Exclusive
    Meta
    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org
    CNQ: Canadian Notes and Queries
    1686 Ottawa St.
    Windsor, ON
    N8Y 1R1
    Phone: 519-915-3930
    Email: info [at] notesandqueries [dot] ca
    Instagram: @cnandq

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.