Tue 3 Jun 2025
Impossible Crime Stories I’m Reading: WILLIAM BRITTAIN “The Zaretski Chain.”
Posted by Steve under Stories I'm Reading[5] Comments
WILLIAM BRITTAIN “The Zaretski Chain.” First published in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, June 1968. Not known to have been reprinted.
William Brittain, the author of this small rather obscure tale, was known for a long list of detective and mystery fiction published over the years, most of them appearing in EQMM. Many of them were locked room or impossible crime mysteries. A list of them, along with a good deal of in-depth analysis, can be found here:
https://mikegrost.com/laterimp.htm#Brittain
In “The Zaretski Chain,” a wealthy man with a fondness for the strange and unusual sets up a confrontation between a PI and a famous escape artist named Wrenn. The former has been on the trail of of the latter for a long time, as that gentleman may also have been responsible for many unusual thefts over the years.
The challenge presented is this: Wrenn is to be secured with his wrists in cuffed on either side of a flagpole, a chain connecting them on the other side, with a horizontal spar across the pole toward the top. With personal incentives offered to each party, the winner of the contest will be determined on whether Wrenn can escape his confinement within the hour, a captive to be left alone during the allotted time.
But before the hour is up, the man servant of their host announces that a robbery has taken place. Rushing to the scene of Wrenn’s captivity, he is still there, obviously having escaped and having come back to the place in which he had been trussed up.
I can think of few stories that take as much time to set up and explain as this one does, but Brittain was a good writer, and it is with some fascination that the devoted reader of such tales (such as I) follows along with quite a bit of interest.
Even more, the solution to this chronicle about the rather excessive need of someone who is a Problem Solver to unravel it (note the capital letters) is well worth the journey.
June 4th, 2025 at 8:49 am
I used to find issues of EQMM in thrift stores for a nickel or a dime. No more. Digest magazines of all sorts seem to have vanished. Just a glance at the cover of this issue has plenty of great writers listed: Christie, McGerr, Brand, Simenon, Kersh, and, of course, Ed Hoch. You can see why some consider the 1960s a Golden Age for fiction magazines.
June 4th, 2025 at 5:01 pm
There’s no promotion that says this is an All-Star issue, but it surely was. Those are all still recognizable names there on the front cover — at least to those of us of a certain age. Not so much any more, once you manage to find the magazines. That I find sad. Things change.
June 4th, 2025 at 10:47 am
He may be better known as Bill Brittain, the author of many popular children’s books, including the Newbery Honor Boook THE WISHGIVER. His ALL THE MONEY IN THE WORLD was the basis for a 1983 ABC WEEKEND SPECIAL.
His work in the mystery field, imcluding stories about teacher Mr. Strang and the “Man Who Read” series, is consistently entertaining.
June 4th, 2025 at 5:09 pm
All very true. Brittain was a writer of many talents, that’s for sure!
June 5th, 2025 at 8:21 pm
I recall this issue and the Brittain story. McGerr, Simenon, Kersh plus classic Christie and Hoch. Typical rich line up of the era.