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Bezig met laden... Murder in Cameradoor W. A. Ballinger
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Onderdeel van de reeks(en)The Sexton Blake Library (4 / 522)
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Having previously written one or two Blakes, Baker became editor in the late `50s and is credited with having rescued the then-flagging SBL from possible extinction, attracting new writers like Jack Trevor Story and Martin Thomas and incorporating new characters into the stories.
By the time this story appeared in 1963, publishers and copyright holders Fleetway were getting ready to abandon the SBL. Baker must have been a worried man, but there`s nothing in this story to give that away.
The story is reminiscent to his earlier Walk in Fear (aka Every Man an Enemy), except that in this instance, Blake is brought into contact with the movie world rather than the publishing industry.
Although there is an element of satire, this one falls more firmly into `traditional whodunnit` category, but is a pretty good example of that genre nonetheless.
There are some good lines, particularly when Blake assures one character that he doesn`t as the other imagined, think of him as " a shark", then stands back to allow him through a doorway "Now you swim ahead" he says, courteously.
There are one or two good pen-portraits ;
"Geoffrey Tithe had lank, thinning grey hair and a face like a camel : haughty eyes, proud nose, and lips seemingly ready to spit.
He wore a faded green jacket and a derelict pair of corduroy trousers like twin badges of virtue."
Baker`s work seems to be a mixed bag. This is not quite as good as his very best stories, but still streets ahead of his worst. The writing has pace, and carries the reader along very agreeably, and the eventual solution is a surprise (or was to me at any rate).
Overall, a pretty formidable effort. ( )