Armchair detective

Mycroft Holmes instructing his brother from an armchair, in the story of The Greek Interpreter

An armchair detective is a fictional investigator who does not personally visit a crime scene or interview witnesses; instead, the detective either reads the story of the crime in a newspaper or has it recounted by another person. As the armchair detective never sees any of the investigation, the reader can attempt to solve the mystery on the same terms as the detective.[citation needed]

The phrase possibly originates in a Sherlock Holmes story from 1893, The Greek Interpreter, in which Holmes says of his brother Mycroft, "If the art of the detective began and ended in reasoning from an arm-chair, my brother would be the greatest criminal agent that ever lived."[1]

Examples of armchair detectives in fiction

[edit]

The first example of armchair detecting can be found in the work of Edgar Allan Poe. In The Mystery of Marie Rogêt (1842), C. Auguste Dupin, working wholly from newspaper accounts, arrives at the correct explanation for a young woman's mysterious disappearance.[citation needed] Tabaret from Émile Gaboriau's Monsieur Lecoq stories is another early example.[citation needed]

Baroness Orczy's Old Man in the Corner sits in a restaurant and talks to an acquaintance about cases, almost always finishing by revealing that he has solved the crime.[citation needed]

Lancelot Priestley appeared in a long-running series of novels by Cecil Street after making his debut in The Paddington Mystery (1925).[2]

Marian Phipps, a character in stories by Phyllis Bentley, is an armchair detective in her earliest appearances, solving cases that a policeman friend relates to her.[3]

A more literal use of this term can be found in Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe novels and novellas. He only leaves his house in exceptional circumstances, and typically delegates all the legwork for his cases to his assistant, Archie Goodwin. "I would be an idiot to leave this chair, made to fit me," Wolfe says in the 1947 novella "Before I Die".[citation needed]

L Lawliet from Death Note could also be considered an armchair detective as he solves crimes that were never solved and he reads the cases he takes on from the crime files.[citation needed]

Lord El-Melloi II, in the light novel Fate/strange Fake, can be considered and is called an armchair detective as he solves and provides a number of tips and solutions for the Holy Grail War that is taking place in North America, while he is in London.[citation needed]

Books

[edit]

The Armchair Detective Original Cosy Mystery Series by Ian Shimwell - 10 series - 42 mysteries - has had worldwide success as eBooks, Paperbacks, Hardcovers & Audiobooks - and has also been broadcast as 5 full-cast radio drama plays by Shoestring Radio Theatre Productions based in San Francisco, USA.

Magazine

[edit]

The Armchair Detective magazine was "primarily a mystery fanzine featuring articles, commentary, checklists, bibliographical material, etc., started by the legendary crime fan and bibliographer Allen J. Hubin." It was published from 1967 to 1997.[4]

Radio and television

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Text from the public-domain story, accessed December 18, 2009". Sherlock-holmes.classic-literature.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-02-14.
  2. ^ Herbert, Rosemary. Whodunit?: A Who's Who in Crime & Mystery Writing. Oxford University Press, 2003. p.12
  3. ^ Marvin Lachman, "Introduction," in Chain of Witnesses: The Cases of Miss Phipps, by Phyllis Bentley (Norfolk, Virginia: Crippen & Landru, 2015), p. 3.
  4. ^ Phil Stephensen-Payne. "A bibliographic website accessed December 18, 2009". Philsp.com. Retrieved 2012-02-14.