Speedy Death by Gladys Mitchell – #1929Club

I’ve been meaning to read some Gladys Mitchell for years, and have had a couple on my shelves for at least eight years – what better opportunity than the 1929 Club, where I can encounter her detective Mrs Bradley in her first mystery.

I am familiar with some of the many Mrs Bradley mysteries through the TV series of them, starring Diana Rigg, that was on in the late 1990s. I see from the Wikipedia page that there were only five episodes made, which is odd as I remember there being far more. The first of them was, indeed, Speedy Death – though I don’t remember how accurately the script follows the original text. Something that definitely isn’t accurate is the casting. Here is the description of her, given by one of the characters:

Then there is Mrs Bradley. Know her? Little, old, shrivelled, clever, sarcastic sort of dame. Would have been smelt out as a witch in a less tolerant age. I believe she is one. Good little old sport, though.

Elsewhere she is described as a ‘playful alligator’. And every time she is mentioned, the narrative mentions her ugliness, her appalling outfits, her witchlikeness. Not necessarily somebody you’d naturally think noted beauty Diana Rigg should play?

Besides her looks, Mrs Bradley is chiefly notable for her love of psychoanalysis – very much on-brand for 1929, where Freudianism was discussed everywhere, even if it wasn’t believed by all that many people. ‘The Oedipus complex was a household word, the incest motive a commonplace of tea-time chat,’ as D.H. Lawrence wrote in 1923. Mrs Bradley is an author of books on this topic, and cheerfully cynical about human nature.

“We are all murderers, my friend,” said Mrs Bradley lugubriously. “Some in deed and some in thought. That’s the only difference, though.”

I haven’t mentioned this particular murder. It’s your classic mansion set up – a family have invited various notables to come and stay for a house party. Among them is the groom-to-be of the daughter of the house, who is also a noted explorer. Not long after everyone descends on the house, he is found dead in his bath – only it turns out that he is, in fact, a woman.

From here, things follow much as you might imagine from a Golden Age detective novel – at least in terms of plot. There are numerous suspects, there are police questionings, there is at least the possibility of more corpses along the way.

I actually found the plot a little flimsy and frenetic – things dart from one crisis to another, with not much in the way of detection happening between them. Many of the characters are similarly flimsy, though no more so than you’d encounter in many different novels. While the solution is a bit haphazard, and Mrs Bradley’s detection techniques are unorthodox, what made me really enjoy Speedy Death was undoubtedly Mrs Bradley herself. I can certainly see why Mitchell thought she should keep going with this detective, and indeed keep going for many more decades. She is larger than life, but Mitchell is brilliant at controlling that largeness – she is exuberant, ridiculous, confident but always consistent. Mitchell knows exactly what she’s doing, and deploys this bombastic character to best effect.

Perhaps later Mrs Bradley novels have a slightly more sophisticated plot, and less of a feeling that everything has been flung at it – even Agatha Christie put far too much into her debut detective novel. I’m looking forward to finding out, and re-encountering the entertaining burlesque that is Mrs Bradley.

11 thoughts on “Speedy Death by Gladys Mitchell – #1929Club

  • October 26, 2022 at 9:06 am
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    Clearly, I must have been influenced by the Diana Rigg casting, as I never realised that Mrs Bradley was supposed to be ugly! I don’t think I’ve read this first one but I’ve read some in the series, couldn’t tell you which though.

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    • October 26, 2022 at 7:52 pm
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      I wonder if Mitchell decided to stop hammering that point home after a while :D

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  • October 26, 2022 at 9:46 am
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    I love Mrs Bradley but I never thought that Diana Rigg was right to play her…now, Miriam Margoyles on the other hand…!!!
    I do think the books get better as they appear, the plots tighten up more, so keep going.

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    • October 26, 2022 at 7:51 pm
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      Oh that’s good to know! I’m not sure quite where the others I have fall in the series, but will keep reading.

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  • October 26, 2022 at 10:19 am
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    I’ve only read a Christmas Mrs Bradley which I really enjoyed, but there must have not been much physical description because I was definitely picturing Diana Rigg! Like you, I do want to read more.

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    • October 26, 2022 at 7:51 pm
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      It definitely feels very different with a description of her – not least because of the way that other characters relate to her.

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  • October 26, 2022 at 7:00 pm
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    I’ve read a fair number of Mitchells, Simon, and I don’t recall this as necessarily being her best – she can be variable. But when she’s on top form, she’s brilliant. And yes – Rigg was far too beautiful to be Mrs. Bradley!!

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    • October 26, 2022 at 7:50 pm
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      Good to know! I will keep reading, because I definitely enjoyed it even with some minor reservations.

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  • October 27, 2022 at 10:29 am
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    So good to read about authors I haven’t experienced yet especially when they’ve written crime fiction. :)

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  • October 27, 2022 at 12:42 pm
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    The psychoanalysis thing is really interesting because Alice Campbell’s Water Weeds has some very advanced-seeming neuroses / practices for its time but I can see they ARE of its time. Handy for my review, which I’ve not yet finished!

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  • October 28, 2022 at 1:10 am
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    I read a Mrs. Bradley a couple of years ago (The Butcher’s Shop, the second in the series and also 1929) and wasn’t that taken with it. Yet I’ve heard good things and have been meaning to try another myself. It sounds like I should jump to later in the series!

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