Basil Thomson
(1861-1939) had more professional lives than one could almost imagine. As a
young man, he held a number of positions in Britain’s Colonial Office, most of
them connected to posts in British Oceania like Fiji and Tonga. Because of his
wife failing health, he returned to Britain in 1893, read for the bar
examinations, and was admitted. But instead of practicing as an attorney (or
barrister), he joined Britain’s prison administration. For 12 years, he served
as deputy governor and then governor of several prisons, including Dartmoor.
Then he became secretary of the Prison Commission.
In 1913, Thomson
joined the Metropolitan Police as an Assistant Commissioner of Crime, which
made him head of the Criminal Investigation Department of New Scotland Yard.
When World War I broke out, he was called upon to expand his role to include military
intelligence – which meant he set about catching spies. One of the spies he
interviewed but did not apprehend was Mata Hari.
Knighted in
1919, Thomson continued his CID and intelligence roles until 1921, when he was
forced to resign by Prime Minister Lloyd George (no one knows why). In 1925, he
was arrested in Hyde Park for alleged indecent acts with a young woman. He
claimed it was a set-up and that he was interviewing her for a book. But Thomson
paid his fine of five pounds.
And he was a
writer. He published novels, books on diplomacy, colonial service, and related
matters. And then in the 1930s, he put his hand to writing mysteries – and it
is these
eight “Inspector Richardson” books for which he’s best remembered.
The series
chronicles the rapid rise of a young, ambitious constable. In Richardson’s
First Case, PC Richardson (we don’t know his first name) is standing on
duty late one afternoon on (where else?) Baker Street in the Marylebone
district of London when an elderly man is struck by an automobile. It appears
to be an accident. The victim dies at the hospital. And then it’s discovered
that the victim’s estranged wife is missing.
Basil Thomson |
In this first
Richardson novel, the constable plays a small but pivotal role. He catches the
eye of one of the investigation leads and is assigned to the help on the case.
Richardson is resourceful and unorthodox, and he’s able to suggest motives and
reasons for witnesses who lie that doesn’t occur to the regular investigating
officers.
The estranged
wife is found dead at her husband’s business, and an inheritance turns on which
of the two died first.
The novel was
first published in 1933. This new e-book edition is introduced by mystery writer
Martin Edwards, who provides an
in-depth overview of Thomson and the Inspector Richardson mysteries and their
place in the Golden Age of mystery writing.
Richardson’s First Case is action-packed, entertaining, and
keeps the reader guessing until the end.
Photograph: The buildings that were New
Scotland Yard in the 1930s, by Anthony O’Neil via Wikimedia.
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