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Le Cafe Singe Bleu Serving generous portions of history and mystery from our monthly menu Volume 1, Issue 2: February 1, 2003 |
| Charlie Chan Returns Dennis Lynds 1974
Detective: Charlie Chan
Should you read this book? Non | Buy Charlie Chan books from used book sellers at www.abe.com |
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Reviewed by Dot Emm
The Young Man
The Young Woman
The Victim
The Suspects
The Police
Victor Cosmo, noted philanthropist, has made a lot of enemies in his time. But when he receives a tape recorded message: ''Dear-Victor-for-all-the-pain-which-you-have-delighted-in-inflicting-upon-others-you-are-going-to-die-it-will-be-very-soon-wait-to-die-Victor,'' he decides that there are only four people in the world that would hate him enough to murder him. So he invites them to dinner at his penthouse. He also invites Charlie Chan, who is vacationing in New York City. ''..I have thought it over in great detail. There are only you four with enough motive or hate to kill me. I have helped greatly to make each of you a success, I can ruin each of you just as easily, and I have outlived my usefulness to you.'' It's an unpleasant dinner party. Cosmo tells each of the guests exactly what he has on them, and he does this in front of two witnesses (Inspector Chan and his 'associate' Natalie). ''I have recorded my transactions with each of you in a ledger. Should its contents be made public, everyone of you would be ruined before nightfall - finished!'' He also has kind words to say about Charlie Chan. ''You know his reputation, you know that it would be impossible to evade him.'' Cosmo thinks this will make him safe, but of course it doesn't. Someone who was not at the dinner party, the man we meet at the beginning with the acne-scarred face and the two hand grenades, arranges his death that very night. Two hand-grenades....and that second hand grenade is reserved for Charlie Chan....
It is the novelization of a screenplay by Ed Spielman and Howard Friedlander (two men who wrote for the Kung Fu television series among other accomplishments). However, that screenplay never made it to production. (Charlie Chan Returns aka Happiness Is A Warm Clue starring Ross Martin (filmed 1971, shelved, released in Europe 1973, released in the USA 1979, has an entirely different plot and was written by Gene R. Kearney and Simon Last). The problem with Charlie Chan Returns is that its plot is simply not a 'Charlie Chan' type of plot. The typical 'Charlie Chan' features a young man, involved in a mystery in some way, who falls in love with a woman, and Charlie Chan spends almost as much time smoothing the course of true love as he does investigating the mystery. Readers care about this couple, and want to see them 'live happily every after' just as much as they want to see Charlie Chan solve the case. It's a formula but it's a formula that worked. Charlie Chan Returns abandons that formula, only to replace it with another formula - that of the hard-boiled detective novel. Victor Cosmo is an unpleasant character and nobody is sorry that he's dead, least of all the reader. The problem is, none of the suspects are the least bit sympathetic, either. And since there is no likeable character who is wrongly suspected, there's no urgency to discover the murderer. We simply don't care whodunit. Charlie Chan is the main character, and Manhattan police detective Jimmy assists him (saving his life at one point) but we are never shown the inside of Charlie's mind, let alone Jimmy's. Earl Derr Biggers' Charlie Chan often thought about his place as a Chinese in America, and the place of his children. No such thoughts seem to occur to him this time around, nor to Jimmy. They are simply cardboard characters. Dennis Lynds is most famous for his books about Private Eye Dan Fortune, written under the pseudonym Michael Collins. He also wrote a few Shadow novels, under the pseudonym Maxwell Grant. And that's what Charlie Chan Returns really is, a piece of pulp fiction with a Chinese guy walking around spouting aphorisms like Charlie Chan, but with none of Charlie's charm or personality. Samples of his prose:
Wildside Press is reprinting Lynds' Charlie Chan in The Temple of the Golden Horde, and it is a vast improvement.
Read A Proverb For Every Occasion This review uploaded January 25, 2003. |
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