I have read only one Ngaio Marsh novel to date, and that was
Death of a Fool/Off With His Head. It had a lot of good things in its favour—particularly
an intriguing impossible crime—but the book was pretty uneven as a whole. Much
of it was good but other parts were laughably obvious or just not very
interesting. The detective, Roderick Alleyn, wasn’t repulsive, but he wasn’t
particularly memorable, either. In fact, the most memorable point of the book
was the work that went into the production of a traditional English dance. The
question is, could Marsh improve when I approached her for my second dose of
Alleyn, in the late book Tied up in
Tinsel?
Tied up in Tinsel
is a book about a very rich man, Hilary Bill-Tasman, who has an obsession for
the past. He repurchases the old family home, tracks down old furniture and
paintings and repurchases them, and plans to restore the house in general. But
to do that and to maintain it, he needs servants. But where is one to find
servants in the 1970s? Why prison, of course! More specifically, the entire
staff is composed of murderers who have left their penitentiaries behind. This
is seen as a form of rehabilitation… but things get very awkward when somebody
begins to play malicious pranks recalling the murders that the staff had
committed years ago! And it’s even worse when an unpleasant butler disappears
after having played the role of The Druid (aka Santa) for the local children at
Christmastime…