The Sleuth Slayers (short story): Difference between revisions
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* [[Georgie Price Jones]] | * [[Georgie Price Jones]] | ||
* [[Jane (The Sleuth Slayers)|Miss Jane]] | * [[Jane (The Sleuth Slayers)|Miss Jane]] | ||
* [[Professor]] [[Proven]] | * [[Professor]] [[Proven (The Sleuth Slayers)|Proven]] | ||
* Mr [[Sherrinford]] | * Mr [[Sherrinford]] | ||
* [[Hercule Smith]] | * [[Hercule Smith]] |
Revision as of 17:00, 26 October 2024
The Sleuth Slayers was the third story in the anthology Wildthyme on Top. It was written by Jake Elliot.
Summary
Iris Wildthyme joins in on the investigation of the murders of the country's amateur detectives.
Characters
- Iris Wildthyme
- Tom
- Man with bowler hat
- Georgie Price Jones
- Miss Jane
- Professor Proven
- Mr Sherrinford
- Hercule Smith
- Mrs H
- Dmitri
Worldbuilding
- Miss Jane was investigating the murder of Dr Gorley Herring at Betteredge Hall.
- Professor Proven references Professor Fen and Ronald Knox. He has a Cluedo game.
- Iris and her friends celebrate solving the murders with champagne.
Notes
- The man, whose name is never given, is implicitly John Steed from The Avengers. His partner, Georgie Price Jones, worked with Steed in the Avengers episode The Girl from AUNTIE.
- The amateur detectives are all pastiches of famous literary detectives: Miss Jane of Miss Marple, Hercule Smith of Hercule Poirot, and Mr Sherrinford of Sherlock Holmes.
- Among the murdered detectives are: a travelling French detective found dead in mysterious circumstances (possibly Jules Maigret?), a retired policeman called Cuff who was smothered by his roses (Sergeant Cuff), a part-time solicitor-detective who was gassed in his chambers (possibly Martin Hewitt?) and a dabbling aristocrat who was crushed under some rare books (possibly Lord Peter Wimsey?)
- A small man in clerical dress with a blank, unprepossessing face (Father Brown) briefly appears.
- A number of detectives make unnamed cameo appearances at the restaurant: a suave-looking man doodling stick figures with halos (Simon Templar), a middle-aged couple who address each other as "old bean" and "old thing" (Tommy and Tuppence) and a vague-looking man wearing horn-rimmed glasses (Albert Campion).
Continuity
to be added