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Ngaio Marsh: A True Example of a
Great Mystery Author by Taylor Martinerin
Ngaio Marsh is one of the best examples of a great mystery author. Her books
span from the early 1930s to the early 1980s, with all of them being
exceptionally good. Too many times, an author loses steam after writing several
books in a series, but still continues to publish books almost on automatic
pilot. Not so with Ngaio Marsh!
Who Was Ngaio Marsh?
Ngaio Marsh's mother was a New Zealander and her father came from London. She
was born in 1895 as Edith Ngaio Marsh and had aspirations of a theatrical life.
She was described as being very tall (5'10") which might have been one of the
factors that contributed to her not becoming a leading lady. Lucky for us that
she became a leading mystery author instead!
Ngaio Marsh's Early Life
Marsh was an only child and described herself as having been introverted. She
was a great lover of books, and her family was very interested in the theater.
She went to college to study painting but later found that she was more suited
to writing.
She joined a theater troupe but had to resign when they went overseas.
Ngaio's mother didn't think it would be fitting for a single woman to travel
without a chaperon. It was then that Marsh focused on her painting, tutoring,
and writing plays. She became a regular of high society. (Ngaio Marsh never
married nor had children.)
Chief Superintendent Roderick Alleyn
In 1931 she took a stab at writing a mystery. Her first novel in the series
"A Man Lay Dead" introduced the world to London's Chief Superintendent Roderick
Alleyn. Alleyn comes from the very upper crust of England's society. His brother
(obviously older brother) is a Lord.
Ngaio Marsh is Timeless
Ngaio Marsh's books truly do seem quite timeless. She wrote mysteries that
are consistently good, with characters that seem real. Even when reading one of
Marsh's books in the early 21st century, you find that you can connect with the
action. The characters do not seem faded with time.
Her mysteries are true puzzles. She didn't spring last minute details into
her plots, making it possible for the reader to play detective while reading the
books.
Ngaio Marsh's Attention to the Reader
Chief Superintendent Alleyn and his sergeant (Detective Fox) discuss theories
using facts that the reader is aware of, rather than hiding important facts from
the reader. How many times can you recall when an author has action taking place
outside of the mystery reader's realm of facts? That is quite frustrating for
the mystery reader. That does not happen in Ngaio Marsh's mysteries. The reader
is aware of all of the facts.
Inspector Alleyn's love interest is Agatha Troy. Troy is a very
modern-thinking woman who happens to be an artist. (No small coincidence that
Marsh was also an artist!) Marsh used some of her favorite subjects in her
novels: the theater and painting.
Location of Ngaio Marsh's Mysteries
Marsh set most of her novels in England. A few of her novels, however, had
Inspector Alleyn traveling to New Zealand. Very fitting locales since Marsh
spent her life traveling back and forth between England and New Zealand.
Ngaio Marsh's Accomplishments
Marsh established a theater company that traveled throughout the British
Commonwealth in the 1950s. In 1966 she was made a Dame in Great Britain. She
continued writing her mystery novels all of her life. In 1978 the Mystery
Writers of America made her a Grand Master for her contribution to the mystery
genre.
Ngaio Marsh is touted as one of the Queens of Crime from the Golden Age. The
other three are Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, and Margery Allingham. Not
bad company! |