Friday, July 26, 2024

Allison Montclair--Murder at the White Palace

DEBORAH CROMBIE: Such a treat today to have Allison Gordon, whose Sparks and Bainbridge series is one of my absolute favorites of the last few years! In the novels, Iris Sparks, a former intelligence operative, and Gwendolyn Bainbridge, a widow with a six-year-old son, open a marriage bureau in 1946 London, and it turns out that they have a talent for solving crimes as well as making matches. Allison, who you may know from previous posts is actually the always entertaining Alan Gordon, is here to tell us what they are up to in their latest adventure, MURDER AT THE WHITE PALACE.



"When The Underlying Story Meets The Standalone"

Allison Montclair 

 
  When I began writing the Sparks and Bainbridge series, I had the benefit of learning from writing another historical series, my Fools' Guild mysteries. I now had a veteran writer's perspective on creating backstories and needs for the characters to drive the books beyond the immediate needs of the body on their doorstep.
  So I made sure that I had enough to complicate the lives of Gwen Bainbridge and Iris Sparks to hopefully make the reader care about their lives. I was interested in writing about the traumatic impact of WWII on two British women in different economic and social situations. Gwen, the daughter of the aristocracy whose perfect marriage and life were shattered with the death of her husband, leading to her suicide attempt and commitment to a sanatarium and Iris, whose intellect and abilities propelled her from Cambridge into British Intelligence operations, where she was forced to do things that destroyed much of her life and her sense of self.
  The Right Sort Marriage Bureau, the setting for the series, was meant to reflect the healing process that was needed, both by the two women, but also symbolizing the recovery of London after the war.
  And I may have done too good a job, because once they were living full time inside my head, I needed to know what was going to happen with their lives as much as anyone.  But this is a mystery series, which meant that in order for me to write the underlying stories and progress for the two, I would have to keep having them jump into murder investigations. So the bodies started piling up. The first book starts in June, 1946, and it's been virtually Murder By The Month ever since.
  I like to call this Jessica Fletcher Syndrome, where you have to keep inventing plausible scenarios for your protagonist to be investigating. Yet I am trying to avoid repetition and cliches. It ain't easy. I learned this lesson early as a kid watching "Mannix," and realizing that reunions of old school chums is a situation fraught with danger.
  With the latest book, MURDER AT THE WHITE PALACE, I am tying up some storylines set up from the beginning. Gwen is finally free of the restrictions of the Court of Lunacy and her controlling in-laws, while Iris is ready to move forward with her relationship with her gangster boyfriend, Archie, planning on finally introducing him to her MP mother while going public with him at his nephew's wedding. The Right Sort is organizing a New Year's dance for their unmatched clients, and Archie has a night club undergoing renovation that may do the trick.

In the immediate post-war days of London, two unlikely partners have undertaken an even more unlikely, if necessary, business venture—The Right Sort Marriage Bureau. The two partners are Miss Iris Sparks, a woman with a dangerous—and never discussed—past in British intelligence and Mrs. Gwendolyn Bainbridge, a genteel war widow with a young son entangled in a complicated aristocratic family. Looking to throw a New Year’s Eve soiree for their clients, Sparks and Bainbridge scout an empty building—only to find a body contained in the walls. What they initially assume is a victim of the recent Blitz is uncovered instead to be a murder victim—stabbed several times.

To make matters worse, the owner of the building is Sparks’ beau, Archie Spelling, who has ties to a variety of enterprises on the right and wrong sides of the law, and the main investigator for the police is her ex-fiancĂ©e. Gwen, too, is dealing with her own complicated love life, as she tentatively steps back into the dating pool for the first time since her husband’s death. Murder is not something they want to add to their plates, but the murderer may be closer to home than is comfortable, and they must do all they can to protect their clients, their business and themselves. 

Allison Montclair is the pseudonym of Alan Gordon. As Allison, she writes the Sparks and Bainbridge mysteries, beginning with THE RIGHT SORT OF MAN (The ALA Reading List Council’s Best Mystery of 2019). Set in 1946 London, the books detail the adventures and struggles of two women trying to run a licensed marriage bureau. The fifth book, THE LADY FROM BURMA, was released this past July. 

DEBS: Readers, does the Jessica Fletcher syndrome worry you when you read novels with amateur detectives?

47 comments:

  1. Congratulations on your newest book, Allison . . . it does sound aa if Iris and Gwen have their hands full! I'm looking forward to discovering how it all works out . . . .

    As for that Jessica Fletcher syndrome, it never bothers me at all . . . I love seeing how the amateur detectives figure it all out . . .

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  2. Honestly, I generally accept the Jessica Fletcher syndrome as part of the amateur sleuth play book, so it doesn't bother me at all.

    Congrats on the new book. I'm a bit behind...hoping to get to book two in the next few weeks.

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  3. ALLISON: Welcome back to JRW and congratulations on your newest Sparks & Bainbridge book!
    I do like reading about how these 2 different women are collaborating to move forward professionally and personally.

    As for the Jessica Fletcher syndrome, I pretty much accept the improbability of the amateur sleuths finding body after body in such a short time frame & in their locale.

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  4. I completely understand the problem, Alan. It exists for me, too, even though I write police procedurals, since mine are set in Bern, Switzerland, a city with very few murders! I can see that two regular women falling over bodies right and left creates a much bigger challenge, though. Luckily, as a reader, I'm happy to suspend disbelief and just accept the characters' world, like Joan and Mark.

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  5. Congratulations, Allison! As I write three amateur sleuth series, the syndrome worries me a lot - how can I make this new story plausible? Every book is a challenge.

    I love the premise for your series and somehow have missed it - looking forward to catching up!

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  6. Yes, it worries me but it doesn't stop me if I like the characters. You and yours are new to me, Allison, and, like Edith, I'm looking forward to catching up.

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  7. Allison, I eagerly await your new book! The Sparks and Bainbridge series is one of my very favorites. I adore your complex and compelling characters. I marvel at where your ideas came from for their personalities, their situations and the setting in post WWII London. I never think of you puzzling over how to introduce a plausible new mystery for them to solve. I refuse to do that. Nope. I am going to continue to think of these brilliant characters facing life's challenges, the pages flowing with sparkling dialogue, and me with a window to watch it through.
    ( Thanks Debs! You are my book guru!)

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  8. I'm with those who willingly suspend disbelief when it's a series that captures my interest--and this one grabbed me with the first book. The only downside to a series like this is not the number of murders that occur, but the wait for the next book to come out. Long live The Right Sort Marriage Bureau!

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    1. I was so excited when I saw that there was a new book coming out! Couldn't wait to share here!

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  9. Thank you all. It may be a problem that I overthink, given the nature of the genre, but I'm trying to ground the characters in a reality, if not actual reality. As I wrote the series, I truly came to appreciate Christie simply making Miss Marple a busybody and leaving it at that. My characters emphatically do not want to be investigating murders, but will jump in to help clients, friends, and each other.

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  10. Congratulations Alan/Allison! I love this series so much and can't wait to read the next one. I do shake my head when an amateur detective gets into dangerous situation after dangerous situation and finds bodies all over the place, but am willing to suspend disbelief for the sake of a great story.

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  11. Welcome back Allison. I just ordered Murder at the White Palace. This will be my introduction to Sparks and Bainbridge. Do you feel your books are good stand alones? As far as good the Jessica Fletcher trope, only when the sleuths joke about it. That reference pulls me out of the book. Like others have said, if I am reading a murder mystery, I accept something is going to be made 'undead'.

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    1. Each book is written to be a stand alone mystery, but there are continuing storylines for Gwen and Iris's personal lives. A large part of Gwen's stems from her having come under the jurisdiction of the Court of Lunacy (as it actually was called until 1947) after becoming a ward of the Crown as a result of her suicide attempt. Iris's history is learned in bits and pieces over the course of the series, both by the readers and by Gwen.

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    2. Coralee, I have no doubt that Murder at the White Palace can be read as a standalone, but I would strongly recommend reading the series from the beginning if you can.

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  12. I'm with Flora in that I tend to suspend disbelief if I find the series captivating. I have somehow missed your works Allison/Alan and am reserving the first book in the series at my library. I'm looking forward to reading it. Congratulations on this latest book and may many more be percolating in your mind. -- Victoria

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    1. Thanks. I'm percolating away, currently working on Book 8!

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    2. Hard to believe there are already seven books, Alan! Seems like yesterday I read the first one.

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    3. It has flown by for me.

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  13. Greetings Allison and congrats on the book. Yes, it does - which is probably why I gravitate toward professionals in my writing.

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  14. I don't worry about the Jessica Fletcher syndrome when reading something by a writer as terrific as Alan Gordon. I met him at Author Speed Dating at Bouchercon last year and was absolutely gobsmacked to learn that he is Allison Montclair as well. I love this series and have devoured it all! Please keep writing the series, Alan!

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  15. Yay!!!! More Iris and Gwen! So exciting! Can’t wait to dive in.

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  16. Welcome back to Jungle Reds, Alison/Alan.

    When I think of the Jessica Fletcher syndrome, I thought it meant that you, as the author, have been asked by a police detective in Real Life to help solve a mystery.

    Did that happen in real life?

    Look forward to reading the White Palace. Does it have anything to do with the Princes in the Tower from the War of the Roses?

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    1. Diana, in my real life I have had a long career as a public defender from which I recently retired, so not exactly on call for solving mysteries that have baffled the local police. (I discussed the lack of mystery-solving in a story I performed at the Moth, which can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxRrjQB1JOI). And the White Palace in this book is a closed-down nightclub being renovated from bomb damage during the Blitz, which is how the body came to be discovered. No royalty involved in this one.

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    2. Love the video!! Alan's Encyclopedia Brown moment!!!

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  17. Alan, I want to say also how much I enjoy the puzzles represented by the matchmaking efforts of Gwen and Iris in the course of each story--bonus little 'mysteries'!

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    1. Thank you. That's part of the fun of writing them. And even if they don't play a direct role in the mystery, they allow me to poke into the oddities of London lives and habits.

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    2. I love the oddities of London lives and habits!

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  18. Until you mentioned it here , I never knew there a Jessica Fletcher syndrome so I must not be bothered by it. If it's a good book, I read it. Like others, your series is new to me, I'm off to check it out.

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  19. I look forward to reading your books. 1946 is the year my parents got married. My dad had been home from the Navy long enough to meet my mother and decide to not stay in the Navy! I’m interested in books set in and around the time of the Second World War.

    What bothers me are the series books and TV programs in which the protagonist and/or close family members are constantly being arrested for murders they didn’t commit!

    DebRo !

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  20. As a writer, I'm always worrying about the Jessica Fletcher syndrome. It helps when you have a large metropolitan area - I'm sure there were plenty of murders in London in 1946 (especially since I'm pretty sure the UK's restrictive gun laws weren't in force back then.) It's the small towns that get you. How many residents and visitors can get murdered before people start shunning your protagonist-sleuth? :-D

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    1. Agreed. And I can't kill too many clients or the agency founders.

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    2. I could say that have two cop protagonists would solve that problem, except that I'm always looking for ways to give them a personal connection to the case. I think that's the most important thing to readers.

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  21. What an intriguing premise. Looking forward to traveling back in time.

    As a writer, I do worry about Jessica Fletcher syndrome with my Florida Keys books. I don't want the Chamber of Commerce to ban from from the eighteen-mile stretch. As a reader, to be honest, part of the fun is figuring out whose next and why. As long as the story has something to ground me in semi-reality, I'm good.

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  22. Jessica is a sweet woman but I wouldn't invite her to stay with me. Murder would follow. Alan, I love how Gwen and Iris have been embracing each other's strengths and developing their own. Each is becoming more like the other in every book. Gwen is bolder, more authoritative. Iris is softer, more contemplative. I've read an ARC of Murder in the White Palace and you'd better be writing the next one, double time!

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    1. Thanks, Pat. And that was part of what I was trying to do with the longer stories, so I'm glad to hear it's coming across. And the next one is written! AN EXCELLENT THING IN A WOMAN will be out next year. I'm currently working on Book 8.

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  23. Sparks and Bainbridge is at the top of my list of series to start reading. I can't believe I haven't yet started, but I do have the first two books bought and waiting. I don't think much about the Jessica Fletcher syndrome because the books I've read where it's a possibility always seem to handle it well. I guess we could call it the Miss Marple syndrome, too, and that never bothered me one bit. Congratulations on your new book, Alan, and on a most successful series.

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  24. We are heading towards five, and it is my turn to cook. Thank you all for the nice comments, and keep on reading! Yours, Alan/Allison

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  25. MURDER AT THE WHITE PALACE sounds fantastic! Thanks for sharing the story behind Sparks and Bainbridge. As far as the "jessica fletcher syndrom" - I think it's a problem for cozy writers to make it believable. Rather than the amateur sleuth continually happening to trip over dead bodies. The authors who do it best make it work.

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  26. Amateur detectives give me the false sense that maybe I can figure out "who did it" before the big reveal. Although I loved Angela Lansbury and saw her on the stage at the Colonial in Boston in Sweeney Todd as well as on Broadway in A Little Night Music with Catherine Zita Jones, Jessica Fletcher was too much of a reminder of my mother-in-law for me to have the patience to watch that TV show.

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