Mon 14 Aug 2023
A Mystery Review by David Vineyard: DONALD HENDERSON – A Voice Like Velvet.
Posted by Steve under Reviews[5] Comments
DONALD HENDERSON – A Voice Like Velvet. Random House, US, hardcover, 1946. Previously published in the UK as The Announcer (Hurst, 1944), as by D. H. Landels. The Detective Club [Collins], UK, hardcover/paperback, 2018/2021, with the inclusion of the short story, “The Alarm Bell.” Introduction by Martin Edwards.
Ernest Bisham is a cat burglar, a second story man, known by Scotland Yard as “the Man in the Mask.†He is not quite Raffles or the Baron, being middle aged, married, and a bit heavier than he was when he was younger. He lives with his wife Marjorie and his sister Bess, and is both highly respected, and a fixture in every home within the broadcasting range of the Broadcasting House (think BBC which Henderson wrote for creating the first soap opera broadcast, Front Line Family, later known as The Robinsons, and the radio play The Trial of Lizzie Borden among others) as the voice of Broadcasting House, Ernest Bisham, the Announcer, newsreader, famed for his closing, “… and this is Ernest Bisham reading it,†in a voice compared to velvet.
For Americans unfamiliar with the UK and the BBC (*) it is hard to comprehend the role the legendary voice of the BBC played in dominating a culture and a way of life, From Buckingham to Whitechapel from the South of England to the Midlands and the North the voice of the BBC was a fixture, a respected and admired figure, the calm assured vaguely upper class sounding voice of a nation, particularly during the War years.
And in Ernest Bisham’s case that voice belongs to a thief.
Without berating the point, the novel quietly puts the reader into the mind and ego of Mr. Bisham but never bores with heavy-handed psychological breast beating. Finding that balance between the melodrama of a thriller (the realm of most gentleman cracksmen) and the dark near Gothic brocade of the serious crime novel Henderson manages to walk a tightrope never making a misstep. Though not as dark as Gerald Kersh’s Prelude to Midnight and Night and the City, Henderson is in the same vein of sharply observed recognizable humans in crisis.
Henderson was an admirer of John Dickson Carr, but he began writing in the shadow of Francis Iles (Anthony Berkeley) and his work is informed by the Iles’ books Malice Aforethought and Before the Fact, two works that freed the British crime novel from the Golden Age mode of the detective story and aristocrats dying in vast manor houses on isolated weekends.
Most writers are lucky to write one classic genre novel over long careers. Some have more, but they are scattered over years of writing and working in the field, and some few like Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler have their whole output considered classics.
But it is a rarity to find a writer who only wrote three books, two in the genre of crime fiction, and those two books both classics in the field.
Mr. Bowling Buys a Newspaper was Henderson’s first book, and the better known of the two, the story of a serial killer who only reads the paper after a kill in hope that the police are going to stop him before he kills again. That book was highly praised by critics and writers including Raymond Chandler (who claimed to have read it three times) and Ian Fleming.
A Voice Like Velvet took a more torturous route to its stature as a classic of the crime genre.In fact the book was first published in the UK in 1944 during the War as a mainstream novel as The Announcer, and it was not until its American publication that it was recognized as a classic of the crime genre under the better known American title by Random House.
Driven by the compulsion to spice his life with excitement, Bisham’s chosen manner is cat burglary, he is well aware that he risking everything he has earned, that his marriage, his life, his prestige, are all endangered by his recklessness, and now Chief Inspector Hood has Bisham in his sights and is having him followed, which makes the game even more exciting. As Hood assures him cat to potential mouse:
While there is suspense and action in the book it is not a thriller. Like Iles, whose work inspired it, the suspense rises from the thoughts and actions of the protagonist, his compulsion, his quick wits, and his inevitable mistakes, but unlike Iles, A Voice Like Velvet would make a delightfully dark Ealing comedy
This was Henderson’s best reviewed novel despite its first small print run. He died at age 41 shortly after it was published in the States under its better known title, and was recently brought back in print in the UK as Velvet by the Detective Club with an attractive jacket, and introduction by genre writer, historian, and editor Martin Edwards, and with “The Alarm Bell†a powerful short by Henderson.
A Voice Like Velvet is well worth your time, a classic of British crime fiction both charming, suspenseful, and ironic.
(*) For anyone interested there is another classic of BBC crime fiction, Death at Broadcasting House (1934) by Val Gielgud and Eric Maschiwitz as Holt Marvell, which was filmed and could recently be seen on YouTube.
August 15th, 2023 at 8:05 am
Mr. Bowling Buys a Newspaper is currently available at the internet archive:
https://archive.org/details/mr-bowling-buys-a-newspaper-donald-henderson/page/n15/mode/2up
August 15th, 2023 at 11:58 am
David,
It looks to me like all three of Henderson’s novels were criminous…the two you mention, and the third being Goodbye to Murder, described here:
https://www.kobo.com/au/en/ebook/goodbye-to-murder
August 15th, 2023 at 4:57 pm
Here’s his entry in Al Hubin’s CRIMEFICTION IV:
HENDERSON, DONALD (Landels) (1905-1947); see pseudonym D. H. Landels,
[] *Goodbye to Murder (Constable, 1946, hc) [London]
[] *Mr. Bowling Buys a Newspaper (Constable, 1943, hc) [England] Random, 1944.
[] *Murderer at Large (Paul, 1936, hc) [England]
[] *Procession-to Prison (Paul, 1937, hc) [England]
[] *The Trial of Lizzie Borden and other radio plays (Hurst, 1946, hc) Collection of plays. (Contents)
[] _A Voice Like Velvet (Random, 1946, hc) See: The Announcer (Hurst 1944), as by D. H. Landels.
This adds MURDERER AT LARGE and PROCESSION TO PRISON as two more crime fiction novels, for a total of five.
August 15th, 2023 at 9:21 pm
I notice at one point I referred to Henderson as Bisham, “This was Bisham’s best reviewed…”
Thanks for the update on his other criminous work. The only other work I knew of was the autobiographical THE BRINK.
Henderson, as I said was influenced by Iles as were Richard Hull (THE MURDER OF MY AUNT), Bruce Hamilton, and C. E. Vulliamy.
There was a time not so long ago that the Random House edition of VELVET was fairly easy to find. This new Detective Club edition is fairly inexpensive on ebay in good shape, and the publisher lists several other interesting titles.
This is a bit of a historical entry, but the book really is worth a read for its entertainment value, and the end is a delight.
One of my favored sub genres is the mystery set against the background of radio or television.
DEATH AT BROADCASTING HOUSE was available on Internet Archive in a less than perfect PDF.
Val Gielgud, who wrote several mystery novels and was a producer and director for the BBC, was related to actor John, but I’m not sure of the exact relationship. He wrote some twenty or so mystery novels, several plays, and directed and acted in many plays including appearing as a suspect in DEATH AT BROADCAST HOUSE.
His series sleuths were Anthony Haviland, and Inspector Gregory Pellew and Viscount Clymping. His other best-known mystery title was probably CAT.
He attempted to recreate the success of DEATH AT BROADCASTING HOUSE with another mystery with a Television background but was less successful. His career as a mystery writer while not spectacular was successful and ran from 1931 to 1975.
August 16th, 2023 at 4:55 am
John and Val Gielgud were brothers. Whereas John was famously gay, Val was not – he married five times. He was also involved in early television in the 1930s.