The
other day, I browsed a Spanish bookshop – they stock a wall of books in English
– and stumbled upon a series published by Wordsworth – Tales of Mystery and the Supernatural, edited by David Stuart
Davies. [I already possess his Wordsworth anthology, The Shadows of Sherlock Holmes (1998)]
So
I was really pleased to buy Night Shivers
(The ghost stories of J.H. Riddell, Sweeney
Todd: or The String of Pearls (1846), and Varney, the Vampire (1845) both serialised penny-dreadful tales by
James Malcolm Rymer, and The Casefiles of
Mr J.G. Reeder, which comprises two novels, Room 13 (1924) and Terror
Keep (1927) and a collection of stories, The Mind of J.G. Reeder (1925), all by Edgar Wallace. Other authors
in this series include Sheridan La Fanu, Ambrose Bierce and Rudyard Kipling. See the full list here http://www.wordsworthclassics.com/wordsworth/wordsworth.aspx?id=mystery
Edgar
Richard Horatio Wallace (1875-1922) produced 173 books (the majority crime and
mystery) and 17 plays. He was the illegitimate son of two actors who passed him
on for adoption when he was nine days’ old. A fish porter, George Freeman
brought him up with his other ten children. Wallace found out about his past
when he was eleven.
In
the Boer War he worked for Reuters and South African and London newspapers. He
then tried his hand at a mystery novel about four respectable but ruthless
vigilantes who find pleasure in administering justice when the law is incapable
or unwilling to do so. Alas, no publisher expressed an interested in The Four Just Men, so Wallace founded
the Tallis Press and published the novel in 1905. The book was a big success
and made his name. He soon became prolific. It is said he dictated a play in
four days and a novel over a weekend. Apparently, in the 1920s and 1930s, one
in every four books read in Britain was written by Wallace. He created Sanders of the River, about the
adventures of a British commissioner in Africa; The Ringer, an underworld
avenger; Derrick Yale, ‘the amazing psychometrical detective’; and Mr J.G.
Reeder.
Reeder
exhibits brilliant detective work, with a remarkable memory for faces, plus he
has the ability to think like a criminal; indeed, he encounters many colourful
criminal characters; and Wallace does it all with a slice of humour.
The
Reeder character appeared in the 1929 film Red
Aces, written and directed by Wallace. Other films followed – Mr Reeder in Room 13 (1938), The Mind of Mr Reeder, and The Missing People (1939). A British TV
series The Mind of Mr J.G. Reeder
(1969-1971) featured Hugh Burden in the starring role, based on the short
stories.
Like usual an excellent piece, Nik. The story about Edgar Wallace’s personal life is fascinating. I thought it ironic that I came across this today as I’m trying to gather information about old/vintage/antique books.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kathleen. Serendipity, indeed.
ReplyDelete