Monday, February 23, 2026

"Nothing in This Modern Life of Ours Is More Remarkable Than the Way in Which the Mystery Novel Has Gripped the Public."

THE MULLINERS have had more than their share of adventures in an unsuspecting society, but for the sheer number of thrills, chills, and boudoir incursions none of them can top . . .

"Strychnine in the Soup."
By P. G. Wodehouse (1881-1975; Wikipedia HERE; the ISFDb HERE; the SFE HERE; and WARNING! SPOILERS! the IMDb HERE). 
First appearance: The American Magazine, December 1931, as "The Missing Mystery" (WARNING! SPOILERS! Wikipedia HERE).
Reprinted in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, February 1952 (today's text).
Filmed for TV in 1976 (IMDb HERE).
Other reprints:
  The Strand Magazine, March 1932
  Mulliner Nights, 1933
  The Best of Wodehouse, 1949
  Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine (Australia) #58, April 1952
  The World of Mr. Mulliner, 1972
  Wodehouse on Crime, 1981 (about which HERE)
  Murder at Teatime, 1996.
Short story (16 pages).
Online at The Luminist Archives (HERE; go to text page 81).

   "Your true enthusiast, deprived of his favorite reading, will stop at nothing in order to get it. He is like a victim of the drug habit when withheld from cocaine."

. . . and with this pronouncement Mr. Mulliner prefaces the thrilling account of how his nephew Cyril crossed swords with his true love's mother not only over a copy of the latest detective thriller but also over his unquenchable desire to marry her daughter; and of how, despite tremendous odds, the two situations coincided . . . no, make that collided . . .

Main characters:
~ The Draught Stout, Mr. Mulliner, the Small Lager, Cyril Mulliner, Amelia Bassett, Lady Bassett, Sir Mortimer and Lady Wingham, the Simpson couple, Lester Mapledurham, and the butler (who didn't do it).

References:
- "Strychnine" (Wikipedia HERE).
- "She reminded Cyril of Wallace Beery":
  A great actor who went amazingly far in movies without possessing the requisite leading man looks. (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "the chief of the lower Isisi":
  No particular tribe that we can locate.
- "he had once met Dorothy L. Sayers" (Wikipedia HERE) and (ONTOS HERE).
- "this isn't the Victorian Age" (Wikipedia HERE and HERE):
  "In Great Britain, elsewhere in Europe, and in the United States, the notion that marriage should be based on romantic love and companionship rather than convenience, money, or other strategic considerations grew in popularity during the Victorian period."
- "patent medicines":
  "The term is sometimes still used to describe quack remedies of unproven effectiveness and questionable safety sold especially by peddlers in past centuries, who often also called them elixirs, tonics, or liniments. Current examples of quack remedies are sometimes called nostrums or panaceas, but easier-to-understand terms like scam cure-all, or pseudoscience are more common." (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "a distinct suggestion of Victor McLaglen":
  "His film career spanned from the early 1920s through the 1950s, initially as a leading man, though he was better known for his character acting." (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "to put on any dog":
  An expression that's quickly fading away. (Wiktionary HERE.)
- "playing This Little Pig Went to Market":
  "It was the eighth most popular nursery rhyme in a 2009 survey in the United Kingdom." (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "books of Ba-ha-ism":
  "Baháʼís regard the world's major religions as fundamentally unified in their purpose, but divergent in their social practices and interpretations." (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "the Lesser Iguanodon":
  Wodehouse almost certainly knew that this lizard only existed in fossil rocks.
  "Iguanodon was a large, bulky herbivore, measuring up to 9–11 metres (30–36 ft) in length and 4.5 metric tons (5.0 short tons) in body mass. Distinctive features include large thumb spikes, which were possibly used for defense against predators, combined with long prehensile fifth fingers able to forage for food." (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "the Lower Zambezi":
  "The Zambezi (also spelled Zambeze and Zambesi) is the fourth-longest river in Africa, the longest east-flowing river in Africa and the largest flowing into the Indian Ocean from Africa." (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "a charging rhinoceros":
  "Rhinoceroses are among the largest living land animals, with living species ranging in average weight from 775 kilograms (1,709 lb) in the Sumatran rhinoceros, to 2,300 kilograms (5,100 lb) in the white rhinoceros." (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "a distinct look of George Bancroft":
  "George Bancroft (1882-1956) was an American film actor, whose career spanned seventeen years from 1925 to 1942. A star of pre-Code Hollywood, he is best known as the tough guy lead in four Josef von Sternberg films . . ." (Wikipedia HERE.) 
- "a crouching zebu":
  "Zebu, as well as many Sanga cattle, have humps on the shoulders, large dewlaps and droopy ears. Compared to taurine cattle, the zebu is well adapted to the hot tropical savanna climate and steppe environments. These adaptations result in higher tolerance for drought, heat and sunlight exposure." (Wikipedia HERE.)

Resources:
- We encountered P. G. Wodehouse several times early on in this weblog (HERE), (HERE), and (HERE).

The bottom line:

Unless otherwise noted, all bibliographical data are derived from The FictionMags Index created by William G. Contento & edited by Phil Stephensen-Payne.
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Friday, February 20, 2026

"There Was No Paradox at All"

"Two Timer."
Comprised of "Experiment" and "Sentry."
By Fredric Brown (1906-72; Wikipedia HERE; the ISFDb HERE; and the SFE HERE).
First appearance: Galaxy, February 1954.
Illustrated by (David K.) Stone (1922-2001; ISFDb HERE).
Reprints pages:
 "Experiment" (ISFDb HERE)
 "Sentry" (ISFDb HERE).
Short short short stories (2 pages each).
Online at SFFAudio (HERE).

   "The aliens, the only other intelligent race in the Galaxy . . . cruel, hideous and repulsive monsters."

Principal characters:
~ "Experiment": Professor Johnson and his two colleagues.
~ "Sentry": The sentry and the alien.

Resources:
- "Arena" (1944), another, longer, Fredric Brown story, was adapted for television in the sixties (WARNING! SPOILERS! Wikipedia HERE and HERE). The original story is (HERE; SFFAudio).
- Our latest contact with Fredric Brown's oeuvre was "The Last Martian" (HERE).

The bottom line:

Unless otherwise noted, all bibliographical data are derived from The FictionMags Index created by William G. Contento & edited by Phil Stephensen-Payne.
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Tuesday, February 17, 2026

"Before He Could Rise, I Whirled, Seized a Heavy Rustic Chair and Whanged Him Over the Head with It. That Did It."

"Oh Gargie!"
By Ray Cummings (1887-1957; Wikipedia HERE; the ISFDb HERE; and the SFE HERE).
First appearance: Crack Detective Stories, April 1947.
Short short story (7 pages).
Online at Fadedpage (HERE).

   "A stack of dishes on the lunch counter crashed; an iron saucepan on the stove was drilled so that it let out a clang like a bell."

IT doesn't happen often, but once in a long while somebody comes along to save the day who had no intention of saving anything . . .

Main characters:
~ Alan Trimble, Mary Trimble, Pete and Sandy, Johnny Peters, the burly thug, and Gargie.

References (all from Wikipedia):
- "he ain't exactly Gargantua, is he?":
  Before it became the name of a famous circus animal, which our author probably has in mind (HERE), "Gargantua" was an outsized character in the works of François Rabelais (HERE and HERE).
- "a rhesus monkey":
  "The rhesus macaque is well known to science. Due to its relatively easy upkeep in captivity, wide availability, and closeness to humans anatomically and physiologically, it has been used extensively in medical and biological research on human and animal health-related topics. It has given its name to the Rh factor, one of the elements of a person's blood group, by the discoverers of the factor, Karl Landsteiner and Alexander Wiener." (HERE).

Resource:
- Our latest regular appointment with Raymond King Cummings's fiction was "Death Trail" (HERE).

The bottom line:
The three wise monkeys over the Tōshō-gū shrine in Nikkō, Japan

Unless otherwise noted, all bibliographical data are derived from The FictionMags Index created by William G. Contento & edited by Phil Stephensen-Payne.
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Saturday, February 14, 2026

"A Policeman Always Keeps His Eyes Open"

IT'S not that easy to commit . . .

"Crime on Mars."
(a.k.a. "Trouble with Time").
By Arthur C. Clarke (1917-2008; Wikipedia HERE; the ISFDb HERE; and the SFE HERE).
Reprints page as "Crime on Mars" (ISFDb HERE).
Reprints page as "Trouble with Time" (ISFDb HERE).
First appearance: Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, July 1960.
Short short short story (5 pages).
Online at SFFAudio (HERE) and (HERE).

   "No wonder the Goddess is the Solar System's Number One mystery."

HOW do you get away with stealing something when you're 140 million miles from Earth and there's only one way out? A pretty problem for our would-be thief . . .

Principal characters:
~ Detective-Inspector Rawlings, Mr. Maccar, Danny Weaver, and the unnamed narrator.

Typo: "near vaccum".

References (all are from Wikipedia):
- "Phobos" (HERE)
- "Meridian" (HERE); "International Date Line" (HERE)
- "you might as well steal the Mona Lisa" (HERE); "That's happened too" (HERE)
- "Late Canal Period" (HERE)
Sorry. No canals here.
- "a man will die in seconds without protection" (HERE)
- "the Syrtis Major" (HERE)
- "Mars Years" (HERE)
- "the Yard" (HERE).

Resources:
- Here is FictionMags's list of reprints for "Crime on Mars"/"Trouble with Time":
  Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine (Australia) #159, September 1960
  Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine (U.K.) #92, September 1960
  Ellery Queen’s 16th Mystery Annual, 1961
  The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1961
  The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (U.K.), October 1961
  Tales of Ten Worlds, 1962, as "Trouble with Time"
  Introducing SF: A Science Fiction Anthology, 1964, as "Trouble with Time"
  The Nine Billion Names of God, 1967, as "Trouble with Time"
  Ellery Queen’s Minimysteries, 1969
  Quickie Thrillers, 1975
  The Gourmet Crook Book, 1976
  Masterpieces of Mystery: The Sixties, 1978
  The Evening News Collection (2), 1991, as "Trouble with Time"
  More Than One Universe, 1991, as "Trouble with Time"
  Cyber-Killers, 1997
  Cyber-Killers, 1998
  The Collected Stories, 2001, as "Trouble with Time"
  Fourth Planet from the Sun, 2005.
- One of Arthur C. Clarke's stories was, mirabile dictu, performed on live TV, no less, back in the fifties; see Mystery*File (HERE).

The bottom line:

Unless otherwise noted, all bibliographical data are derived from The FictionMags Index created by William G. Contento & edited by Phil Stephensen-Payne.
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Wednesday, February 11, 2026

"You Can't Prove Anything from a Score Card or the Fingerprints on a Golf Club."

"Tee Shot."
By Tom Robertson (?-?).
First appearance: Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, July 1960.
Short short short story (3 pages).
Online at SFFAudio (HERE).

   "Only now every move he made to finish this game took me that much nearer to disaster."

"GOLF," Winston Churchill once observed, "is a game whose aim is to hit a very small ball into an ever smaller hole, with weapons singularly ill-designed for the purpose." "Weapons," he says. Hmmm . . .

Main characters:
~ Graybow, Harry Jackson, Johnny Taliferro, Lorene, and Abe Joseph.

References (all are from Wikipedia):
- "the long fairway" (HERE)
- "Embezzlement" (HERE).

Resources:
- "Tee Shot" is Tom Robertson's only story on the FictionMags list.
- There's one particular Agatha Christie Hercule Poirot short story that also involves factors which figure into today's tale (WARNING! SPOILERS! The IMDb HERE) and (Archive.org HERE).

The bottom line:
Unless otherwise noted, all bibliographical data are derived from The FictionMags Index created by William G. Contento & edited by Phil Stephensen-Payne.
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