It
is England the early 1950s. The ravages, personal and national, of World War II
are still visible and felt. A young bachelor canon is assigned to the small
parish of Grantchester , near Cambridge. He still experiences flashbacks to the
war, where he served with distinction. He finds a bit too much solace in the bottle.
His sermons tend to be largely about love, trust and forgiveness, but he seems
to have trouble trusting and forgiving himself.
Unexpectedly,
he finds himself embroiled in murder, and discovers he can go places and talk
to people in ways the police cannot.
If
you’re a fan of The Grantchester Mysteries, you
will recognize the story line. The first series has shown on PBS here in the
United States; the second has recently completed filming in the U.K. and will
be aired in 2016 on ITV and (it’s hoped) PBS. Actor James Norton plays the
title character of Canon Sidney Chambers.
The
series is based on the short story collections of author and film producer James Runcie. The first book in the
series is Sidney
Chambers and the Shadow of Death, a collection of six mystery stories
featuring the canon, four of which were filmed as episodes in the PBS series.
In
“The Shadow of Death,” what looks like an obvious suicide turns out to be something
else entirely. In “A Question of Trust,” an expensive engagement ring goes
missing at an engagement party. “First, Do No Harm” concerns the suspicions of
the local coroner about elderly people dying a little too soon before their
times. In “A Matter of Time,” a young woman is strangled in a London nightclub
in Soho, apparently in full view of everyone there (including Sidney, who loves
jazz). “The Lost Holbein” concerns the forgery and theft of a valuable painting
of Anne Boleyn. And in “Honourable Men,” a local aristocrat is killed during a
performance of Shakespeare’s Julius
Casear.
In
the first story, Chambers develops a friendship with the local police
inspector, Geordie Keating, a friendship that becomes a central feature of each
of the stories.
The
first four stories formed the basis of the four television episodes of The Grantchester Mysteries, but as
television producers tend to do, a number of liberties were taken with the
written stories. Relationships were condensed and combined; story lines were
greatly simplified. And few of Sidney’s occasional spiritual ruminations are
included on television. While a fan of the TV series, I found myself liking
Runcie’s stories more – they’re more thoughtful, more nuanced, and a bit more
provocative. And a one-night stand between Sidney and a jazz singer in London
that is featured in one of the television episodes is nowhere to be found in
the written stories.
James Runcie |
Runcie
has published two other Sidney Chambers mysteries – The Perils of Night (2013) and The
Problem of Evil (2014), with the fourth in the series, The Forgiveness of Sins, being published this year. He’s also written
four novels. In 2014, he explained in an
article for the Telegraph how the inspiration for Sidney Chambers came from
his father, the late Robert Runcie, the former archbishop of Canterbury.
If
you’re familiar with the format of John Mortimer’s Rumpole
of the Bailey stories, you’ll be comfortable with the format of The Grantchester Mysteries – a collection
of short stories that share characters and themes and come to seem like a
novel.
Related: The trailer
from Grantchester’s introduction in
2014:
Top photograph: James Norton as Canon Sidney Chambers in The Shadow of Death.
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