“Easter Parade” by Rex Stout

To accompany my prompt on how photography can influence our writing, I’m recommending a mystery novella in which photography plays a major role, “Easter Parade” by Rex Stout from the collection, And Four to Go.

In 1950’s New York City, Nero Wolfe, 275 lbs. of gourmet tastes and detective genius, also cultivates ten thousand orchids in rooftop greenhouses on his brownstone. When he hears that another amateur orchid grower, Millard Bynoe, has achieved a Vanda orchid with pure pink coloring, he must see it. Now. Wolfe also learns that Mr. Bynoe won’t display the orchid until he enters it into an international flower show, but his wife is wearing several blossoms as her corsage for Easter Sunday services.

When Wolfe tells his right hand man, Archie Goodwin, about this, Archie tells Wolfe to take a camera to Fifth Avenue on Sunday morning with thousands of other photographers crammed together to take photos of wealthy people leaving church services on Easter. Archie knows Wolfe will never do this because his boss dislikes shaking hands with people, much less pressing up against strangers. But Archie states:

“Instead of scowling or growling, or both, he was merely nodding thoughtfully, as if the idea of rubbing elbows, not to mention other parts of his anatomy, with his fellow beings in the Fifth Avenue Easter mob wasn’t repellent at all. Envy broadens a man.”

Wolfe asks Archie to hire someone to steal the blossoms off Mrs. Bynoe as she leaves the church. Archie contacts a petty thief he knows, Tabby. Archie also attends the Easter Parade with a camera, positioning himself outside the Bynoe’s church with hundreds of other photographers. When Mrs. Bynoe has an attack on the sidewalk after leaving the church, Tabby moves in and swipes the flowers. Mrs. Bynoe dies, and the autopsy reveals its strychnine poisoning, delivered through a needle, possibly fired from a camera that had been altered to be a weapon.

Wolfe is desperate to uncover the murderer before the depths of his orchid envy are revealed and the cops figure out who hired Tabby.

Not only is a camera suspected of being the murder weapon, the photographs Archie takes Easter morning become the key clue to solving the mystery. The novella includes four photos readers can study to see if they can spot what Wolfe notices.

I always enjoy reading mysteries set at specific holidays. “Easter Parade” is the only one I’ve found that takes place during Easter and incorporates a unique feature of how Easter was celebrated long ago. Mr. Stout wrote the story in the 1950’s, so the description of the Easter Parade is from a person of that time. I love how the novella gives readers a peek into history.

What books have you read that uses photography as a key element?

For more prompts and tips from this month’s theme of using other arts in our writing, click here.

Writing Tip — Favorite Stories: Classics of Crime Fiction

nightw-578091_1280Trying to pick one favorite story to highlight this month’s theme proved impossible for me. There are so many stories in crime fiction I love. So I decided to select a variety of stories from the classics of crime fiction. Over the years, I have discussed these stories in more detail, so I’m putting links to those posts.

Sherlock Holmes

“The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton” from The Return of Sherlock Holmes — Holmes and Watson decide they are justified in committing burglary to save a woman from a professional blackmailer. I love this story because we get to see how much Watson enjoys his adventures with Holmes. He’s thrilled to the core to be sneaking through the night to commit a noble crime.

“The Illustrious Client” from The Casebook of Sherlock Holmes — I tend to like the stories where the superhuman reasoning machines are shown to be human after all. While trying to prevent a woman from marrying a sexual predator, Holmes is beat up, Watson is outraged, and once again, Holmes believes he needs to break the law to achieve justice.

“The Three Garridebs” from The Casebook of Sherlock Holmes — While trying to help a client who will receive a large bequest if three people with a rare last name are located, Holmes finally reveals the depth of his feelings for Watson. Watson’s description of seeing this side to his best friend’s nature is both touching and funny.

Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin

“Christmas Party” from And Four to Go — As with Sherlock Holmes, I like the stories that humanize Wolfe, who I find much less likable than his assistant/bodyguard Archie Goodwin. Wolfe becomes a suspect in a murder when he thinks Archie might be considering marriage.

“Black Orchids” and “Cordially Invited to Meet Death” from Black Orchids — The rare black orchid ties these two novellas together. The first concerns how Wolfe acquires the black orchid. It’s hilarious to read how he’s eaten up with envy when a rival orchid fancier cultivates it. This story also has a clever way of forcing a murderer to reveal himself. In the second story, a client meets a particularly nasty end. When Archie sees that Wolfe has sent a spray of black orchids for the funeral, he knows his boss is paying for than his condolences. But why?

Hercule Poirot and Jane Marple

Death on the Nile — Hercule Poirot has no shortage of suspects to consider when a beautiful young heiress is murdered on a boat cruising the Nile. I saw the movie of this book when I was in sixth grade, and the plotting blew me away. I think it’s one of Agatha Chrisities’ more clever puzzles, and the relationship between the two murderers is unusually complex.

Thirteen Problems — Miss Jane Marple solves a variety of mysteries in this short story collection. I’ve always like this characters because younger people and the authorities think the elderly spinster is too sheltered to know anything about real life. But because Miss Marple is a keen observer of human behavior in her small hometown, she understands people better than anyone.

And now for something really obscure …

The Third Omnibus of Crime, edited by Dorothy L. Sayers — I stumbled across this collections of mystery and horror short stories at my library when I was searching for titles by Dorothy L. Sayers. Compiled in the 1930’s, it features two mystery stories which are among my favorites. In “Wet Paint”, fishermen of the Pacific Northwest are disappearing from the boats while out fishing, leaving no clues. The sense of growing dread the fishermen feel is expertly conveyed. And the solution is perfectly reasonable and still perfectly surprising. “Inquest” has the most original motive for a murder I’ve ever read.

If you like classic crime fiction, what are some of your favorites?

 

 

 

 

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