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Beastly Murders
Volume 6, No. 4, Winter 1990
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Companions to Crime Solving by Barbara Richards Haugen
- Animals in Martha Grimes' Richard Jury Series by Carol Harper
- Cats and Other Beasts in the Novels Of D.B. Olsen by Maryell Cleary
- Die Like a Dog by Chris Vanderbroucke
- All That Distinguishes Us by Sue Feder
- Who Is "The Cat Who"? by Helen McCarthy
- The Cases of the Baffling Beasts by Barbara Richards Haugen
- Detective's Best Friend by Noemi Levine
- Beastly Murders: An English Selection by P.L. Scowcroft
- Keep On Purring by Marian Babson
- Why Cats? by Lilian Jackson Braun
- Birding and Twitching by Ann Cleeves
- Talking Dog by Dick Lochte
- Animals As They Come by Gwen Moffat
- The Beast in Me by Les Roberts
COLUMNS
- Reviews by Jim Doherty, William Deeck, Carol Harper, Dean James, Richard And Karen La Porte, Patricia Long, Mildred F. Mitchell, And Chris Vanderbroucke
- Mystery Viewers International by Jim Doherty
- In Short by Marvin Lachman
- Four Color Felonies by Jim Doherty
- Juvenile Beastly Mysteries by Nancy Roberts
- True Crime by Christine Corcos
- MRI Mayhem
- Letters to the Editor
Why Cats?
by Lilian Jackson Braun (Caseville, ME)
It was never my intention to write about cats... or to
write mysteries. In fact, I knew nothing much about either of them,
apart from an adolescent fascination with Baker Street. Little did I
know that my own Sherlock Holmes would be a cat, and my Doctor Watson
would be a journalist with a large moustache that twitches when he
encounters foul play.
Story-telling came to me naturally and early, and I wisely wrote
about things I know: Girl Scout camp-outs, high school baseball, the
eighteenth century French court. Strange to say, all my stories had
unhappy endings, and many tears were shed in my $15 typewriter,
prompting my mother to say, "Why don't you write something that makes
you laugh?" I tried, because I was brought up to believe that mother
knows best, but darned if I could think of anything funny! At that
time I was unaware how funny cats could be.
When I was an adult with a husband and a career in advertising and
an apartment in a high-rise building with a view, I finally acquired
my first pet. He was a Siamese kitten whom I named Koko after a
character in "The Mikado," and the two of us were on the same wave
length. He obviously knew what I was thinking, and I seemed to know
what made him tick. Such was our empathy that it became usual for
people to call me part-cat, a remark I accepted as a compliment.
Imagine my grief when, at the age of two, Koko was killed in a
fall from a tenth floor window! Imagine my horror when neighbors told
me he had been pushed! I began having nightmares about members of my
family falling from great heights, and I knew I had to write about
the episode in order to cope with my distress.
The result was a short story titled "The Sin of Madame Phloi," a
tale of crime and retribution told from the viewpoint of a Siamese
cat. It was published in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, and
the editors asked for more cat mysteries. Then a publisher asked for
a mystery novel involving a cat, and The Cat Who... series was
initiated. Many cats have since shared my life, providing inspiration
and ideas, but it was the original Koko who launched my fiction
career, and The Cat Who... series is a memorial to him.
Naturally the hero of the books is a Siamese named Koko, short for
Kao K'o Kung, who is smarter than people -- or at least smarter than
the journalist with whom he lives. Koko is no supercat; he neither
flies nor drives a car no speaks English. He merely sniffs and
scratches in the right place at the right time, enabling Jim
Qwilleran to uncover clues.
Mother was right. I laugh a lot while writing these catly spoofs.
As subjects for mysteries, cats are clever, funny, independent,
subtle, wily, profound, inscrutable and -- yes -- mysterious. And
there are no two alike. But if you're going to write about them, it
helps to be part-cat.
Birding and Twitching
by Ann Cleeves (Hoywell, England)
I came to birding through my husband. With our
marriage, I acquired two malodorous suitcases of rotting skulls and
birdwings and the information that he had given up a secure job in
industry to work a three month contract for the Royal Society for the
Protection of Birds, the conservation charity. It was an education. I
had thought all birdwatchers were spotty school boys or strange old
men. This was, after all, before it was fashionable to be green.
Suddenly I was introduced to a whole world of birders. I discovered
there was a social hierarchy, a system of etiquette, even a language.
I discovered that we all had lists.
A birdwatcher's list is the number of species he has seen in his
country of origin and people whose sole object in birdwatching is to
extend their lists are known as twitchers (listers in the States).
They chase rare birds from the Scilly Islands in the southwest to
Shetland in the north and keep in touch with up to date news through
a telephone answering service called Bird Line. It was the obsessive
quality of this form of birdwatching which fascinated me. What drove
people to such extraordinary lengths to glimpse a bird, perhaps only
for a second? In an attempt to explore this obsession my first novel,
A Bird in the Hand, was written.
Soon after our marriage we moved to Hilbre, an otherwise
uninhabited tidal island close to the Wirral peninsula on the west
coast of England. The island was a nature reserve and my husband was
made warden. We lived in an old light-keepers cottage, without main
water or electricity but with magnificent views of the waders which
roosted on the rocks at high tide and a seal colony which hauled out
onto a nearby sand bank. During our time on Hilbre, Tim trained to be
a ringer (known as a bander in the States). Birds are caught in traps
or nets. They are weighed, measured and a tiny, numbered ring is
fitted to one leg, then they are released. The pattern of retraps has
helped scientists to discover the main routes of bird migration.
Volunteer ringers came across the sand each weekend to man the bird
observatory and we soon got caught up with the pattern of observatory
life, watching for the south westerly winds which would bring small
migrants to the island. While we were there I started writing -- what
better setting for a traditional detective story? -- and the result
was Come Death and High Water.
My third book, Murder in Paradise, is set on an island too,
but Kinness is far more remote than Hilbre. In Murder in
Paradise I use the experience of having lived for a while on Fair
Isle, one of the Shetland Isles. Although bird-watching plays less of
a central role than in the other Palmer-Jones books, I hope that the
natural history of the place adds to a sense of its wildness and
provides an interesting background to the story of an enclosed
community.
My husband's first job for the RSPB was to help protect birds of
prey in Wales. We spend an idyllic summer there, walking the coastal
path to check if peregrine falcons had returned to their traditional
eyries, working with volunteers who looked after the birds on their
land. Yet there were a disturbing number of thefts. Egg collectors
stole the eggs of the rare red kites and unscrupulous falconers took
the young peregrines for use in their sport. In A Prey to
Murder I look at the trade in wild birds of prey and the measures
which are taken to save them.
I am not a birdwatcher. I would not spend all day in the rain
waiting for a rare warbler to emerge from a hawthorn hedge, or get up
at dawn every morning in the hope of trapping a bird which has been
ringed thousands of miles away. But I love the exposed and beautiful
places where birdwatchers congregate and I'm amazed by their
enthusiasm. In the same way I hope that even those readers with no
interest in ornithology may enjoy these books.
Talking Dog
by Dick Lochte (Santa Monica, CA)
Have you ever wondered why, in Walt Disney cartoons,
Mickey Mouse can talk and Donald Duck mouths off continuously and
even Goofy (whatever the hell he is) has the power of speech, but
poor old Pluto can only make dog noise? So much for equal rights in
the Magic Kingdom.
Up until five years ago, that sort of anti-cur prejudice would not
have raised my hackles. Then, I held no brief for man's best friend.
Nor had I any first-hand knowledge of the beast. The change occurred
when I published my first mystery novel, Sleeping Dog (not to
be confused with Let Sleeping Dogs Lie, Sleeping Dogs
Die, Let Sleeping Afghans Lie and the myriad of other
similar titles that have appeared since). Because of that, everybody
assumed I'd been a member of the kennel club for years. I was asked
for my advice on flea allergies, incontinence in senior mutts,
mastiff mating techniques. I would patiently explain that I hadn't
owned a dog since I was seven years old, and that one passed away
from distemper before I really got to know her.
The title refers to a missing bull terrier owned by a precocious
14-year-old girl who hires a middle-aged private eye to find it. The
terrier doesn't appear in the book, exactly. And I suppose the point
might be made that the title may actually refer to the detective, a
specialist in missing persons who is known as Leo "The Bloodhound"
Bloodworth. Nick Charles was never "the Thin Man," but Leo does
quite a bit of sleeping in the book. (Did anyone ever ask Hammett
questions about diet and weight loss, I wonder?)
The dog dilemma deepened with the second Bloodworth-Dahlquist
adventure, Laughing Dog. The titular reference here was to a
work of pop art -- a parody of "The Laughing Cavalier," with a
spaniel's face. (This distinction was apparently lost on my
publisher, since the art motif on the cover was an ominous studded
dog collar curved in the shape of a smile.) It was at this period --
several months prior to publication of Laughing -- with
visions of sequels named Dancing Dog, Barking Dog, and
maybe even Saratoga Dog racing through my noggin, that I began
to think I really should get to know a little more about canines. So
I went to the animal shelter and found one. His placid face may be
seen on the dust jacket of Laughing Dog's hardcover -- a
75-pound Bouvier, a magnificent black sheep dog indigenous to Hercule
Poirot's part of the globe, who answers to the name of Beau.
Genial but territorial, Beau has gradually taken over most of our
home, gleefully chasing away salespeople and friends alike as they
arrive at our door unbidden. While I finished my third book, the
forthcoming The Burial Society (which follows a character from
Laughing Dog back to his home in New Orleans), Beau worked on
his projects -- digging holes in the garden, terrorizing the
neighborhood cats and perfecting an exercise that consists of his
rolling on his back and wiggling his feet in the air. It's very
similar to a dance they do in Louisiana's Cajun Country called The
Gator. I don't know where Beau picked it up, probably from watching
TV.
In any case, Beau will be a major character in the next
Bloodworth-Dalhquist story, Devil Dog (which, if everything
goes as planned, will appear sometime in 1991). His name will be
changed to Hoagy, and he will assist the detective and Serendipity in
trying to locate a young woman who may or may not have been a member
of a Satanic cult.
The helpful hound has been a staple of detective literature at
least since Doyle's day, but Hoagy is not quite the loyal and eager
companion that Sherlock's Toby was. Which is to say, he may be
capable of saving the detective's life, but he will also insist on
eating Bloodworth's favorite slippers.
My initial idea for writing Sleeping Dog was to see if I
could come up with a reasonably hardboiled novel even though one of
the protagonists was a descendent of Nancy Drew. The addition of a
black sheepdog might push Devil Dog over into the cozy
category, but I don't think that will happen. It's not that kind of
story. And, just as Serendipity is not at all similar to Nancy Drew,
Hoagy is not a Disney dog. He may be amusing at times, but he's just
as apt to be cranky and obstinate. He may not be able to talk, but he
has bite.
Buy this back issue!
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