Ask a Policeman, by Certain Members of the Detection Club [Anthony Berkeley, Milward Kennedy, Gladys Mitchell, John Rhode, Dorothy L. Sayers, & Helen Simpson] (1933)
An interesting experiment by Britain's famed Detection Club.*
First, Milward Kennedy asked John Rhode to posit a mystery based on a proposed title, Ask a Policeman.
Rhode responded by setting the scene. A wealthy and powerful newspaper tycoon is murdered in his study. If popular opinion was anything to go on, the culprit should have been given a medal and a parade, but murder is, alas, murder, and it must be solved. The many suspects -- all of whom had ample reason to off the publisher -- include an Archbishop, an MP, a Scotland Yard Commissioner, plus a private secretary, a butler, a cook, a chauffeur, a gardener, and a mystery woman. Complicating things is a very tight timeframe for the murder; it had to have happened within a few specific minutes. A rather unusual gun was found at the scene but it was not the gun that fired the fatal shot, although a similar weapon had to have been used. A second gun was found but it, too was mot the murder weapon. Was there a third, or even a fourth gun of the same make? Officials are flummoxed, with the situation made worse by having a Scotland Yard official as one of the suspects. It was decided to pull the police from the investigation and to leave the detecting to four proven amateurs.
The meat of the book involves the investigation of the four amateurs. Milward Kennedy asked four members of the detection club to chime in. Unfortunately, he got his requests a bit mixed up: Helen Simpson was asked to write about Mrs. Bradley (who was Gladys Mitchell's detective); Gladys Mitchell was asked to carry on with Sir John Saumarez, Helen Simpson's detective; Anthony Berkeley was tasked to have Lord Peter Wimsey investigate; while Dorothy L. Sayers was left to write about Berkeley's Roger Sheringham, A cute, interesting, and surprisingly effective ploy. But when you have four very different detectives, you end up with four very different solutions and murderers...It should be noted that each author wrote their part without consulting one another and using only Rhode's original story.
The final section has Milward Kennedy coming in to try to pull the entire thing together and come up with the true solution. Kennedy does have the private secretary to the Home Secretary bemoan the detectives chosen to investigate: "Mrs. Bradley, he argued, was possibly a murderess already; Mr. Sheringham was almost certainly an accomplice after the fact; Sir John Saumarez )'Not that that is his real name') was married to already who was found guilty of murder; and the Sunday papers had once linked the name of Lord Peter Wimsey...and, after all, his brother the Duke."
An amusing conceit allowing some of the best Golden Age of Mystery writers play in one another's sandbox. The only drawback, in my opinion, was the necessity of continuing to question the timeline in boring detail. (Yawn.)
* "The Detection Club is a private association of writers of detective fiction in Great Britain, existing chiefly for the purpose of eating dinner together at suitable intervals and of talking illuminating shop. It's membership is confined to those who have written genuine detective stories (not adventure tales or thrillers) and election is secured by a vote of the club on recommendation by two or more members and involves an undertaking of an oath" -- Dorothy L. Sayers
The club was formed in 1930 and members, in addition to those mentioned above, included Agatha Christie, Ronald Knox, Freeman Wills Crofts, Arthur Morrison, Hugh Walpole, Jessie Louisa Rickett, Baroness Orczy, R. Auston Freeman, G.D.H. Cole, M.I. Cole, E.C. Bentley, Henry Wade, Constance Lindsay Taylor, H.C. Bailey, Victor Whitechurch, J.J. Connington, Robert Eustace, Lord Gorell, Edgar Jepson, A.E.W. Mason, Ianthe Jerrold, A.A. Milne, and G.K. Chesterton. (For some reason, Josephine Tey was never invited, and Georgette Heyer turned down an invitation.)
The detection club is still going strong with Martin Edwards as the current president.
Detective Club publications include:
- The Scoop, and Behind the Screen, 1931 (round-robin novellas)
- The Floating Admiral, 1931-2 (round-robin novel)\
- Ask a Policeman, 1933
- The Anatomy of a Murder, 1936 (also published as Anatomy of Murder, and released in two volumes as Anatomy of Murder and More Anatomy of Murder; true crime essays)
- Detection Medley, edited by John Rhode, 1939 (also published as Line-Up; short story anthology)
- [Mystery Playhouse presents the Detection Club, January 1948; six half-hour mystery plays by club members; presented on BBC Light Programme, written in aid of club funds]
- No Flowers by Request, 1953 (round-robin novella; a reprint of the book included Crime on the Coast, a 1954 round-robin novella)
- Verdict of Thirteen, edited by Julian Symons, 1978 (short story anthology)
- The Man Who..., edited by H.R.F. Keating, 1992 (original anthology to honor Julian Symons 80th birthday)
- The Detection Collection, edited by Simon Brett. 2005 (original anthology to mark the Club's 75th anniversary)
- The Verdict of Us All, edited by Peter Lovesey, 2006 (original anthology in honor of H.F.R. Keating's 80th birthday)
- The Sinking Admiral, 2016 (round-robin novel)
- Motives for Murder, edited by Martin Edwards, 2016 (original anthology in honor of Peter Lovesey's 80th birthday)
- Howdunit: A Masterclass in Crime Writing by Members of The Detection Club, edited by Martin Edwards, 2020
- [Eric the Skull, by Simon Brett. 2020; a 45-minute BBC Radio 4 play, fictionalizing the setting up of The Detection Club; produced by Liz Anstee]
- Playing Dead, edited by Martin Edwards, 2025 (original anthology honoring Simon Brett's 80th birthday)