The Rasp

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The Rasp
Author Philip MacDonald
Country England
Language English
Series Anthony Gethryn mysteries
Genre(s) Mystery novel / Whodunnit
Publisher Collins (1st edition, UK, 1924); Dial (1st edition, USA, 1925)
Publication date 1924 (1st edition)
Media type Print; first edition hardcover, later editions in paperback
ISBN 0-394-72435-6 (1984 Vintage paperback edition)
Followed by The White Crow (1928, the next Gethryn novel)

The Rasp is a whodunit mystery novel that was published in 1924 by Philip MacDonald that introduces his series character, detective Colonel Anthony Gethryn. It is set in a country house in rural England.


Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Anthony Gethryn, ex-secret service agent, is an occasional "special correspondent" for a literary paper and is assigned to cover the story when a cabinet minister, John Hoode, is found murdered in the library at his country house, battered to death with a wood-rasp. Gethryn recalls his acquaintance with a member of the household and is thus invited to investigate the crime as a kind of "friend of the family". It soon seems as though everyone concerned has a cast-iron alibi for the time of the crime, but Gethryn comes up with an imaginative way for the murderer to have accomplished the deed and established an alibi, and reveals the murderer.

[edit] Literary significance & criticism

Anthony Gethryn is an early example of the amateur detective, the idea of which was soon to become popular in detective fiction. The focus on the breaking of an elaborate alibi is similar to the work of Freeman Wills Crofts, MacDonald's contemporary. "The story is the conventional body-in-the-study, with a fair amount of obvious detection. ... The killer's fakery is plain from the start. Despite all this, it has several times been declared "a classic" and "epochmaking" by students of the genre."[1]

[edit] Film

The story was made into a film with a screenplay by Philip MacDonald which was directed by Michael Powell in 1932. It starred Claude Horton as Gethryn but is now missing, believed lost.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Barzun, Jacques and Taylor, Wendell Hertig. A Catalogue of Crime. New York: Harper and Row, 1971, revised edition 1989. ISBN 0-06-015796-8