It’s usually a good idea to pay attention when someone gives a warning. It might be something simple (e.g. ‘I’m just about to use the last of the milk’), or it could be really important (e.g. ‘I just saw your car; your tire’s really low.’). And yet, it’s interesting how often people don’t take warnings seriously. Or if they do, it’s too late. Of course, if people really did always heed warnings, crime fiction might be duller than it is because warnings of what’s to come play a big role in the genre.
For example, in Cornell Woolrich’s Night Has a Thousand Eyes, we meet wealthy and successful New York businessman Harlan Reid. He takes a business trip to San Francisco and, when he’s ready to return, plans to fly back to New York. Then, he gets a telegram warning him that there’s going to be a plane crash. For some reason, he takes the warning seriously and books another flight. When his original flight actually does crash, with all lives lost, Reid wants to find out who knew about the crash before it happened. He learns that a man named Jeremiah Tompkins foretold the crash and visits him. Tompkins sees his gift as a curse, but Reid persuades him to make other predictions, especially when Reid is faced with big decisions. Then, Tompkins predicts Reid’s death. Reid becomes so distraught that his daughter Jean nearly commits suicide. When she meets New York Homicide Bureau Detective Tom Shawn, she tells him her story. He tries to help Jean and her father as they await the fatal day. He also enlists his boss, who looks into Tompkins’ background to see if he’s a confidence trickster trying to take advantage of a wealthy man.
Agatha Christie’s The ABC Murders has a major plot point involving warnings. Hercule Poirot and Captain Hastings get involved with a series of murders, beginning with the killing of Alice Ascher, who owns a small newsstand. Before each murder, Poirot receives a cryptic warning note telling him where and when the death will occur. And an ABC railway guide is found near each body. Despite those warnings and clues, the killings continue to take place, and Poirot and Hastings work with the police to find out who’s responsible for them. I see you, fans of Sad Cypress.
Caroline Graham’s A Ghost in the Machine is in part the story of financial advisor Dennis Brinkley. One day, his friend Benny Frayle comes to visit him, as she often does. To her horror, she finds that he’s been killed. She alerts the police, and they make an investigation. Their conclusion is that Brinkley’s death was a tragic accident. Benny doesn’t believe it, though, and goes to visit Detective Inspector Tom Barnaby. He agrees to look the case over, but he can’t find any evidence that the police missed something or were sloppy. In fact, he draws the same conclusion that they did. Benny tries to warn him that this was murder, but at first, Barnaby doesn’t take her seriously. Then, a self-styled medium, Ava Garret, hosts a séance at which she says things about Brinkley’s death that only the murderer would know. When she herself is killed, it’s clear that Benny was right. Barnaby and his team now have two murder cases on their hands.
Douglas Lindsay’s We Are the Hanged Man sees Detective Chief Inspector (DCI) Robert Jericho taking on a distasteful new role. His boss has ‘volunteered’ him to take part in a reality/unscripted show called Britain’s Got Justice, where contestants compete as apprentice police officers. The show’s ratings have been sagging lately, and it’s hoped that having a real-life police detective on the panel will help the show. Jericho wants no part of it, but he has no choice. Then, Jericho receives a tarot card, The Hanged Man. He’s not sure if it’s a boast or a warning of murder to come, but he and Sergeant Haynes try to find out who sent the card. Then, Jericho gets another card; it’s clear now that someone is targeting him. He and Haynes are trying to work out who it is, when one of the contestants goes missing. As the story goes on, Jericho and Haynes work to find the link between the cards and the disappearance (and some deaths that take place).
In Charity Norman’s Remember Me, Emily Kirkland returns to her native New Zealand after many years in London. Her father, beloved doctor Felix Kirkland, has been diagnosed with dementia, and Emily has come back to help him. Local school bus driver Raewyn Parata lives next door to the Kirkland home and looks after Felix. In fact, it’s she who tells Emily about her father’s condition and who warns Emily of what to expect. When Emily returns, she goes through her father’s things to help him put everything in order. That’s how she finds a possible connection between her family and the Paralta family. And that drives Emily to solve a twenty-five-year-old mystery: the disappearance of Leah Paralta. No-one has seen or heard from her, but no-one ever found a body. Felix tries to warn Emily to leave it, and he’s not the only one. But Emily wants to put the pieces together.
Warnings can take a lot of forms (notes, verbal warnings, etc..). They can be well-intended or threatening. Whatever the case, warnings of what’s to come can add an interesting dimension and level of tension to a story.
NOTE: The title of this post is a line from Creedance Clearwater Revival’s Bad Moon Rising.
These all sound interesting! I really must try Cornell Woolrich one of these days, and I’m planning to listen to a few of the Caroline Graham books on audio. And I must catch up with Charity Norman… when I get time… *sighs*
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Oh, I know *just* what you mean, FictionFan! I have an impossibly long list of books I’d like to read, too, and there just isn’t time for them. It’s frustrating, but at the same time, I’d rather have more books than I could ever read, than not enough books… When you get to them, I’d be interested in what you think of Woolrich and Graham.
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Great post on a very interesting and under-explored theme, Margot! I especially like the sound of Charity Norman’s Remember Me.
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Thanks very much, Mrs. P.. Glad you enjoyed the post. Remember Me is, I think, an excellent book. It was the well-deserved winner of the 2023 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel. If you do read it, I hope you’ll be glad you did.
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Now on my TBR pile. Thanks, Margot!
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I hope you enjoy it, Mrs. P.!
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Some great choices there Margot – must remember to take heed of any warning that comes my way…
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Thanks, KBR – and yes, do heed any warnings you get…
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Warnings abound in mystery fiction. Let me add a couple of different warnings. In each of Sycamore Row by John Grisham and in The Wrong Side of Goodbye by Michael Connelly a letter is written and mailed to Jake Brigance and Harry Bosch respectively just before the death of the letter writer. Each writer encloses a will with a warning that the recipient can expect trouble with the will but to be resolute in upholding the will.
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Thanks, Bill, for those examples. They’re both fine examples of warning a character from the outset of what might happen. It’s interesting, too, how letters like that can also serve as examples of how those who’ve died can with the living in a way. That’s an interesting topic in itself.
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Your post, Margot, got me thinking about warnings in my own life. Like taking my car to the garage for a tire change and am warned that if I don’t fix the wheel part I risk having the wheel come off. It’s an expensive proposition but a warning I don’t want to ignore although I’m never certain if I’m being scammed!
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Thanks for that real-life example, Carol. I know exactly what you mean, too. In fact, a few months ago, I had my oil changed, and my mechanic suggested I needed brakes. Turns out he was exactly right, and I had them repaired in time to save me from an even more expensive repair. Sometimes warnings are worth heeding.
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I love it when your title is a line I recognize instantly, and will be singing (badly) for the rest of the day! Who would think those simple words can only be parsed one way…
And usual great collection of examples. I have read a few Caroline Graham books but not that one, and it sounds good,you have tempted me.
I’m going to put forward poison pen letters – those great favourites of Golden Age crime writers. they are a warning that someone is up to no good, and in many books the situation is going to boil over into murder. But of course, early on in the book someone will say ‘the best thing to do is to ignore it, and throw it on the fire.’ They ignore the warning!
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Ah, yes, poison pen letters! Those are great, aren’t they, Moira? They can warn of trouble, they can add tension, and so much more. Today’s online trolling can be a bit similar, but doesn’t have nearly the same impact, in my opinion. And you’re right, throwing a poison pen letter into the fire is almost always a mistake in GA novels….
If you get to reading more of Caroline Graham’s books, I hope you’ll enjoy them. I really do like Tom Barbaby!
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