Title: Danger Calling (Benbow Smith #2)
Author: Patricia Wentworth
Author: Patricia Wentworth
Publication:
J.B Lippincott Company, hardcover, 1931
Genre: Mystery Setting: England and Paris
Plot: When Marian
Rayne breaks her engagement to Lindsay Trevor a few days before the wedding, he
is devastated. Everything is suddenly meaningless, including his job at a
respected publishing house, which means it’s exactly the right moment for the
mysterious Benbow Collingwood Horatio Smith to ask, “How would you like to die
for your country?” Wentworth fans know
that Mr. Smith works discreetly in espionage for Britain and plays an important
deus ex machina role in four
books. Here, he persuades Lindsay to disguise himself
to take a job as private secretary to a flamboyant millionare, Algerius Restow,
suspected of organizing a subversive movement to cause a war. Just when Lindsay thinks Marian is gone from
his life forever, he learns she is being blackmailed – but how can that be
related to his investigation?
What I liked: Lindsay Trevor is young
and relatively serious; he served his country in the War and has written a well-regarded book. When Mr. Smith first
propositions him, Lindsay is intrigued:
The whole business had a lure, and in other circumstances
he would probably have jumped at it. As
it was –
“You’re offering me a job of some sort – a dangerous
job?”
“Well—“ said Mr. Smith in non-committal tones….
“I’m afraid, sir, that I have got a previous engagement”…. Lindsay hesitated, and then put himself out
of temptation’s way. “I’m being married next week, sir.”
A newly married man is not expected to risk his life for God
and country but after the painful breakup with Marian is properly announced in
the newspaper (now, I suppose the bride could merely change her Facebook
status), Mr. Smith reaches out to Lindsay again and this time he accepts the
assignment.
Lindsay’s finances are never mentioned but Marian is the heiress
to an affluent uncle so he must be comfortably off or he would surely have been
considered a fortune hunter.
What I disliked:
Well, it’s hard to like a hero named Lindsay, but how was Wentworth to
know it would become primarily a female name?
The actual plot of this book is kind of silly, and Marian never comes to
life as a character. Even Lindsay does
not have the sparkle of some of Wentworth’s later male characters – this book
was written quite early in her career.
It is primarily the Miss Silver books that have been reprinted many
times which is why this one is impossible to find. Or is it because the story is so weak it was
seldom reprinted? Finally, I disliked
all the snakes in the book.
Source: I got this from the library while on vacation; I think it is one of the last copies in the country. Thank you, CLAMS!
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