By PJ Parrish
This is a story about treasure hunting.
I am a sucker for estate sales. We have a lot of them in summer up here in northern Michigan. My town, Traverse City, is awash in splendid old Victorians left over from the days of the logger barons. And we have hundreds of listing barns crammed with family flotsam.
Among the cool stuff I’ve gathered: A set of ten Baccarat champagne coups (eight bucks) Two circa-Forties prints of gaudy cockatoos from a Miami Beach hotel (how they got in a Michigan basement I can’t guess). A Paint-by-Numbers of a naughty can-can dancer. A pathetic sock monkey (I have a huge collection, the uglier the monkey the better). And a dirt-encrusted mantel clock from the Fifites that keeps perfect time.
But yesterday, I struck gold. An old antique store was going out of business here. You know the place — an old barn stuffed rafters-to-basement with jade jewelry, molting hats, rusty New Era potato chip tins, lethal looking pitchforks and creepy one-armed baby dolls.
I spotted a handsome looking leather book. It had heft and smelled like rotting candy.
A digression: That great old book smell? You’re not imagining it. It comes from the chemical breakdown of the books after they’re exposed to light and heat for a long time. The break down releases volatile organic compounds that create a palette of those old book smells — mainly almonds and vanilla but also toluene, which produces coffee overtones.
That old book smell has an official name — bibliosmia. In other words, what you’re smelling is the scent of a book slowly dying.
I had to save this one. The title on the spine was The Omnibus of Crime. The name was Dorothy Sayers. It is a compilation of detective stories she gathered together. It is pristine, first edition. I Googled it on my phone and it goes for about $300 among collectors. It bought it for $20.
It wasn’t until I got home that I found a leaflet stuck inside. It is the original Book-of-the-Month Club News. Sayers’ anthology was the August 1929 selection. Its price was $3. I think I got a bargain.
The book is over 1,200 pages and many of the stories are by names lost in the haze of our genre’s history. But there are some famous folks — Poe, Doyle, Stoker, Dickens, H.G. Wells, Joseph Conrad, Ambrose Bierce. Did you know Aldous Huxley wrote a short story called “The Giocanda Smile”? From that story:
Whatever she said was always said with intensity. She leaned forward, aimed, so to speak, like a gun, and fired her words. Bang! the charge in her soul was ignited, the words whizzed forth from the narrow barrel of her mouth. She was a machine-gun, riddling her hostess with sympathy.
The book is arranged historically, from the seminal roots of our genre in Latin, Greek and “oriental” primitives, logs through the “modern” contributions of Poe and Doyle, lurks through the shadows of vampires, witches and ghosts and ends with a section titled “Tales of Cruelty and Blood.”
Can’t wait to get to that part.
But I’ve just cracked the book, and first lingered in Sayer’s inspired introduction. I have to share my favorite passage from that intro, wherein Sayers argues why detective stories are, in the words of the Book of the Month Club editors, “sufficiently dignified”:
There is one respect, at least, in which the detective story has an advantage over every other kind of novel. It possesses an Aristotelian perfection of beginning, middle and end. A definite and single problem is set, worked out, and solved; its conclusion is not arbitrarily conditioned by marriage or death. It has the rounded (although limited) perfection of a troilet.
Okay, I looked up a couple words for you:
Aristotelian: Coming from the philosophy of Aristotle, an emphasis upon deduction and upon investigation of concrete and particular things and situations.
No argument from us on that, right?
Troilet: A poem form, invented by 13th century French minstrels. It has — get ready folks — eight lines, with the first line being repeated as the fourth and seventh lines and rhyming with third and fifth, while the second line serves as a refrain in the eighth and final line and rhymes with the sixth. Most commonly written in iambic tetrameter but almost as often in iambic pentameter.
Let’s just say that Sayers is trying to tell us that a good detective story has a nice structure.
I can’t tell you much more about my book yet. The editors of the Book-of-the-Month-Club news are sort of stuffy and borderline snide in their introduction, burbling on about how the English write better detective stories than Americans, that the Russians had a влюбился on Sherlock Holmes and that Sayer’s collection is “an agreeable summer’s afternoon reading.” (Is that like a Beach book?). They finally, at the end, loosen their man buns and concede:
“But come! The Omnibus of Crime is intended to be enjoyed. We can think of no book that offers so sure and innocent a nirvana for an active mind.”
I guess that means they thought it was sorta kinda okay to like detective stories. I’d rather you listen to what Dorothy Sayers has to say about our genre. Her words are as relevant today as they were in 1929.
Man, not satisfied with the mental confusion and unhappiness to be derived from contemplating the cruelties of life and the riddle of the universe, delights to occupy his leisure moments with puzzles and bugaboos….The fact remains that if you search the second-hand book stalls for cast-off literature, you will find fewer mystery stories than any other kind of book. Theology and poetry, philosophy and numismatics, love-stories and biography, [man] discards [these books] as easily as his old razor blades. But Sherlock Holmes is cherished and read and re-read, till the covers fall off and the pages crumble to fragments.
Keep searching those second-hand book stalls. We endure, crime dogs.
влюбился = Russian for man crush
Nice, Kris. I have that same book, left by my English MIL, a devout and dedicated mystery reader.
It looks pretty intimidating to read, but I’m gonna give it a try, one small bite at a time.
That’s quite the find, Kris. I love story omnibus collections which span the history of a genre. Thanks for giving us a taste today. Enjoy!
What a fun treasure, Kris. Thanks for sharing the quotes, esp. the look-down-the-nose, grudging compliment from the pretentious BMOC snob.
The reason for the old book smell is fascinating. Thanks.
I love Dorothy Sayers’ mysteries, not just for the whodunits themselves, but for Harriet Vane and Peter Wimsey, two complicated, nuanced individuals. Their relationship ebbed, flowed, and eventually blossomed. For me to truly enjoy a mystery (or any book), I have to care about the characters–even love them–and Dorothy Sayers’ novels deliver two who are unforgettable. Thanks for sharing your find!
I am woefully under-read with Sayers. (Shoot, I have been catching up with the classics since I started writing). But her introduction was witty and charming.
I love old book sales. I have two treasures from the big annual book sale in St. Louis. One of the children was reading “Night” by Elie Wiesel in school. The school did not have enough copies for everyone.
“Used book sale!” There are usually a dozen school bound copies. I find an almost new copy of the Night Trilogy. $3.00. Maybe $5.00. Sold!
I get it home and go to take the price tag off. There is a blue squiggle on the title page. I bought an AUTOGRAPHED copy of the Night trilogy. Worth slightly more than $5.00.
Book two
I always look for Elaine Viets books at used book sales. I find one. It is autographed. I start to read the inscription. I realize the copy is from the estate of a dear friend of my father’s and a St. Louis treasure, Helen Weiss. Helen was a powerhouse. That book sits on my shelf right now as well.
Keep hunting!
More about Helen Weiss – https://stljewishlight.org/news/news-local/helen-weiss-called-pr-maven-face-of-famous-barr/
Oh wow, what great stories. I think all of us have great find stories. But not as touching as yours.
I had the pleasure to know Helen Weiss when I was just starting out as a young newspaper reporter. Such a dynamic woman.
I love this. Not only a great book find for you, but a wealth of new words for us. Bibliosmia — I could smell it as you described it.
But I think the thing I liked most was the quote by Sayers about the detective story. A definite and single problem is set, worked out, and solved; its conclusion is not arbitrarily conditioned by marriage or death. She said it perfectly.
Yeah, I know! Re the Sayers quote. So apt, so perfect, so tightly and rightly said.
Beautiful post, Kris!
Loved the quotes, the new words, your treasure find(s), and the sock monkey…took me back quite a few years.
And even though I don’t write crime stories per se (but it’s my fave genre to read), in my mind there’s crime in every story ever written. In every story, something wrong has to happen in order for something right to happen. It’s just the way humans are wired. Might be a simplistic POV, but I think I’ll stand by it.
🙂
We endure, crime dogs.
As many have pointed out here, with James carrying the standard, all good fiction departs from a disruption of some kind.
About sock monkeys. My first toy, that I can recall, was a sock monkey. I got him when I was about 3. I still have him. He got me started. I haunt antique stores for the really old ratty ones. I think I have about two hundred now. 🙂
This was a beautiful post, full of new (old) words. Every part of it spoke to me.
Thanks for dropping by, Patricia.
What a delightful post, Kris. Congratulations on your finds.
And then there’s the woman who comes up to you at a book club meeting, holding a copy of one of your books for an autograph, and as you’re signing, she says, “I finally found this for a dollar at a garage sale.”