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Murder at Cambridge by Q. Patrick

bev_reads_mysteries's review

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4.0

Murder at Cambridge has what I'm looking for in a British academic mystery: It's funny and witty. It's set at Cambridge. There are dons and students and proctors and an absent-minded Master. We see our characters at class and in Hall and in their lovely, old-fashioned 'varsity rooms (which are way better than the dorms I stayed in here in the States). We get to attend a cricket match and there's mention of punting on the river. Not to mention, we've got a pretty decent 1930s campus crime spree. Q. Patrick really has it going on.

Our narrator is Hilary Fenton, American student studying at Cambridge's All Saints College. He has never been great pals with the South African student across the hall, but when Julius Baumann calls on him for help, he can't refuse. Julius asks Fenton and another man to witness a document which he then seals in an envelope and makes Fenton promise to post in the event that Baumann should disappear from Cambridge. He tells Fenton that he may have to leave suddenly and may not be able post it himself.

That very night there is a dreadful storm, the lights go out, and when Fenton tries to check that all is well with Baumann he finds his fellow student dead from a gunshot wound. There is cleaner and a rag nearby and it looks like Baumann may have accidentally shot himself while cleaning his gun. "Death by Misadventure" will be the verdict at the inquest. But Inspector Horrocks doesn't believe it. Fenton knows it isn't true--but refuses to tell everything because there is evidence (he believes) that will implicate a certain Camilla Lathrop....light of his life and the girl he has just (that day as well) fallen head over heels in love with. Despite knowing that Fenton is holding back, Horrocks takes him into his confidence and between the two of them, they will bring the culprit to justice. But not before another death and an attempt on the beloved Camilla.

Q. Patrick is one of the several pen names used by various combinations of four writers (Patrick Quentin and Jonathan Stagge are two others whose mysteries I've sampled) and this is third novel using this particular nom de plume. Most of the Q. Patrick books are written by Richard Wilson Webb and MaryMott Kelley, but this one is the work of Webb only. Up till now, I have much preferred the Stagge novels to those written under the Quentin name and I was curious to see what I would think of the Patrick offerings.

If this one is anything to go by, I like them. I thoroughly enjoy Fenton's outsider point of view and his interactions with the traditional British characters. My favorite character, however, was the Master of the College, Dr. Martineau Hyssop--portrayed as the absent-minded professor, he is very quick on the uptake when the killer tries poison Camilla with a little prussic acid in her tea. It's clear that Dr. Hyssop still has it all together--even if he may not have all the names right. The clues are all there--and there are enough red herrings that I got distracted several times (just like Inspector Horrocks) before coming to the finish line just at the same time as Fenton. A good solid mystery plot with excellent characters and a nice peek at the 1930s university. Four stars.

This was first posted on my blog My Reader's Block. Please request permission before reposting. Thanks.

han_cat's review

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2.0

Awful beginning, good in patches in the middle and dreadful ending. One of those books that has not aged well, instead of being cute/charming it is embaressingly of its time. At points there's potential but overall not an exciting book.
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