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Margery Allingham

Margery Louise Allingham (20 May 1904 – 30 June 1966) was an English novelist from the "Golden Age of Detective Fiction", and considered one of its four "Queens of Crime", alongside Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers and Ngaio Marsh.

Margery Allingham
BornMargery Louise Allingham
(1904-05-20)20 May 1904
Ealing, London, UK
Died30 June 1966(1966-06-30) (aged 62)
Colchester, Essex, England
Pen nameMargery Allingham
Maxwell March
OccupationNovelist
Period1923–1966
GenreMystery, crime fiction
SpousePhilip Youngman Carter
ParentsHerbert Allingham and Emmie Allingham

Allingham is best remembered for her hero, the gentleman sleuth Albert Campion. Initially believed to be a parody of Dorothy L. Sayers's detective Lord Peter Wimsey, Campion matured into a strongly individual character, part-detective, part-adventurer, who formed the basis for 18 novels and many short stories.

Early life edit

Margery Louise Allingham was born on 20 May 1904 in Ealing, London, the eldest daughter of Herbert John (1868–1936) and Emily Jane (née Hughes; 1879–1960). She had a younger brother Philip William, and a younger sister Emily Joyce Allingham, former WRNS member and amateur filmmaker.[1][2]

Her family was immersed in literature; her parents were both writers. Her father was editor of the Christian Globe and The New London Journal, to which Margery later contributed articles and Sexton Blake stories, and he had become a successful pulp fiction writer, and her mother, as Emmie Allingham, was a contributor of stories to women's magazines, including The Exploits of Phinella Martin, stories of a lady detective which ran in Woman's Weekly from 1915 to 1920.[3]

Soon after Margery's birth the family left London for Essex, where they lived in an old house in Layer Breton, a village near Colchester.

She attended a local school and then the Perse School for Girls in Cambridge, all the while writing stories and plays. She earned her first fee at the age of eight, for a story printed in her aunt's magazine.[4]

Upon returning to London in 1920 she studied drama and speech training at Regent Street Polytechnic, which helped her manage a stammer which she had since childhood. At this time she first met her future husband, Philip Youngman Carter, whom she married in 1927. He collaborated with her and designed the jackets for many of her books. They lived on the edge of the Essex Marshes in Tolleshunt D'Arcy, near Maldon.[4]

Career edit

Early writings edit

While she was enrolled at the Regent Street Polytechnic she wrote a verse play, Dido and Aeneas, which was performed at St. George's Hall, London, and the Cripplegate Theatre, London. Allingham played the role of Dido and the scenery was designed by Philip Youngman Carter.[5][full citation needed]

 
South Street, Tolleshunt D'Arcy: Allingham and Carter lived in the far house

Her first novel, Blackkerchief Dick, was published in 1923, when she was 19. It was allegedly based on a story she had heard during a séance, though later in life this was debunked by her husband. Nevertheless, Allingham continued to include occult themes in many of her novels. Blackkerchief Dick was well received, but was not a financial success. She wrote several plays in this period and attempted to write a serious novel, but finding that her themes clashed with her natural light-heartedness, she decided instead to try the mystery genre.

Campion and success edit

Her breakthrough occurred in 1929 with the publication of The Crime at Black Dudley. This introduced Albert Campion, initially as a minor character, thought to be a parody of Dorothy Sayers’s Lord Peter Wimsey.[6] Campion returned in Mystery Mile, thanks in part to pressure from her American publishers, who had been taken with the character.

With a strong central character and a format to work in, she began to produce a series of Campion novels. At first she also continued writing short stories and articles for magazines such as The Strand Magazine, but as her Campion saga went on her sales grew steadily. Campion proved so successful that Allingham made him the centrepiece of another 17 novels and more than 20 short stories, continuing into the 1960s. [citation needed]

Campion is a mysterious upper-class character (early novels hint that his family is in the line of succession to the throne), working under an assumed name. He floats between the upper echelons of the nobility and government on the one hand, and the shady world of the criminal class on the other, often accompanied by his scurrilous ex-burglar servant Magersfontein Lugg. During the course of his career Campion is sometimes a detective, sometimes an adventurer.

The first three Campion novels, The Crime at Black Dudley, Mystery Mile and Look to the Lady, were all written by what Allingham referred to as the "plum pudding" method, focused less on methods of murder or the formal strictures of the whodunit and more on mixing possibilities together.[7] As the series progresses, however, Campion comes to work more closely with the police and MI6 counter-intelligence.[8] He also falls in love, gets married and has a child, and as time goes by he grows in wisdom and matures emotionally.

The style and format of the books moved on: while the early novels are light-hearted whodunnits or "fantastical" adventures,[8] The Tiger in the Smoke (1952) is more a character study than a crime novel, focusing on the serial killer Jack Havoc. In many of the later books Campion plays a subsidiary role, no more prominent than the roles of his wife Amanda and his police associates, and in the last novel he is a minor character.

In 1941 Allingham published a non-fiction work, The Oaken Heart, which describes her experiences in Essex when an invasion from Germany was expected and actively being planned for, potentially placing the civilian population of Essex in the front line.[9]

Death edit

Allingham suffered from breast cancer and died at Severalls Hospital, Colchester, England, on 30 June 1966, aged 62. Her final Campion novel, Cargo of Eagles, was completed by her husband at her request, and was published in 1968. She was cared for through her illness by her sister, who avoided the topic in her films depicting their home life as well as ensuring her husband was not inconvenienced by it.[10]

Compilations of her work, both with and without Albert Campion, continued to be released through the 1970s. The Margery Allingham Omnibus, comprising Sweet Danger, The Case of the Late Pig and The Tiger in the Smoke, with a critical introduction by Jane Stevenson, was published in 2006.[11]

Allingham was buried in the newer cemetery in Tolleshunt D'Arcy, which is across the road from the graveyard of St Nicholas's Church and about half a mile to the south.

Legacy edit

A film version of The Tiger in the Smoke was made in 1956, and a highly popular series of Campion adaptations, now available on DVD, was shown by the BBC in 1989–90. It is titled simply Campion and stars Peter Davison as Campion and Brian Glover as Lugg.[12]

Several books have been written about Allingham and her work, including:

  • Margery Allingham: 100 Years of a Great Mystery Writer edited by Marianne van Hoeven (2003)
  • Margery Allingham: A Biography by Julia Thorogood (1991); revised as The Adventures of Margery Allingham as by Julia Jones (2009).
  • Ink in Her Blood: The Life and Crime Fiction of Margery Allingham by Richard Martin (1988)
  • Campion's Career: A Study of the Novels of Margery Allingham by B.A. Pike (1987)

Further Campion adventures have been written by Mike Ripley. The first of these, Mr Campion's Farewell, was based on notes left at his death by Allingham's husband Philip Youngman Carter; all the rest have been originals.

Bibliography edit

Albert Campion novels and short stories edit

Title Author Year
The Crime at Black Dudley
US title: The Black Dudley Murder
Margery Allingham 1929
Mystery Mile Margery Allingham 1930
Look to the Lady
US title: The Gyrth Chalice Mystery
Margery Allingham 1931
Police at the Funeral Margery Allingham 1931
Sweet Danger
US titles: Kingdom of Death / The Fear Sign
Margery Allingham 1933
Death of a Ghost Margery Allingham 1934
Flowers for the Judge
US title: Legacy in Blood
Margery Allingham 1936
Dancers in Mourning
US title: Who Killed Chloe?
Margery Allingham 1937
Mr. Campion: Criminologist
(compilation of short stories)
  • The Case of the Late Pig (novelet)
  • The Border-Line Case
  • The Case of the Man with the Sack
  • The Case of the Old Man in the Window
  • The Case of the Pro and the Con
  • The Case of the White Elephant
  • The Case of the Widow
Margery Allingham 1937
The Case of the Late Pig
(originally appeared in Mr Campion: Criminologist)
Margery Allingham 1937
The Fashion in Shrouds Margery Allingham 1938
Mr. Campion and Others
(compilation of short stories)
  • "The Widow"
  • "The Name on the Wrapper"
  • "The Hat Trick"
  • "The Question Mark"
  • "The Old Man in the Window"
  • "The White Elephant"
  • "The Frenchman's Gloves"
  • "The Longer View"
  • "Safe As Houses"
  • "The Definite Article"
  • "The Meaning of the Act"
  • "A Matter of Form"
  • "The Danger Point"
Margery Allingham 1939
Traitor's Purse
US title: The Sabotage Murder Mystery
Margery Allingham 1941
Coroner's Pidgin
US title: Pearls Before Swine
Margery Allingham 1945
The Casebook of Mr Campion
(compilation of short stories)
  • The Case of the Question Mark
  • The Crimson Letter
  • The Definite Article
  • The Magic Hat
  • A Matter of Form
  • The Meaning of the Act
  • Safe As Houses
Margery Allingham 1947
More Work for the Undertaker Margery Allingham 1948
The Tiger in the Smoke
Serialized in US newspapers as Tiger Loose.[13]
Serialized in the UK in John Bull (1952)
Margery Allingham 1952
The Beckoning Lady
US title: The Estate of the Beckoning Lady
Margery Allingham 1955
Hide My Eyes
US titles: Tether's End / Ten Were Missing
Margery Allingham 1958
The China Governess Margery Allingham 1963
The Mind Readers Margery Allingham 1965
Cargo of Eagles
(completed by Philip Youngman Carter after Allingham's death)
Margery Allingham
Philip Youngman Carter
1968
Mr. Campion's Farthing Philip Youngman Carter 1969
Mr. Campion's Falcon
US title: Mr. Campion's Quarry
Philip Youngman Carter 1970
The Allingham Minibus
(also known as Mr. Campion's Lucky Day)
(compilation of short stories)
  • "The Barbarian"
  • "Bird Thou Never Wert"
  • "The Correspondents"
  • "He Preferred Them Sad"
  • "He Was Asking After You"
  • "The Man with the Sack"
  • "Mr. Campion's Lucky Day"
  • "The Perfect Butler"
  • "Publicity"
  • "A Quarter of a Million"
  • "The Same to Us"
  • "The Secret"
  • "The Sexton's Wife"
  • "She Heard It on the Radio"
  • "'Tis Not Hereafter"
  • "The Unseen Door"
  • "The Wink"
Margery Allingham 1973
The Return of Mr. Campion
(compilation of short stories)
  • The Beauty King"
  • "The Black Tent"
  • "The Case Is Altered"
  • "The Curious Affair in Nut Row"
  • "The Dog Day"
  • "Happy Christmas"
  • "The Kernel of Truth"
  • "Once in a Lifetime"
  • "Sweet and Low"
  • "What to Do with an Ageing Detective"
  • "The Wind Glass"
  • "The Wisdom of Esdras
Margery Allingham 1989
Mr Campion's Farewell
(completed by Mike Ripley after Youngman Carter's death)
Philip Youngman Carter
Mike Ripley
2014
Mr Campion's Fox Mike Ripley 2015
Mr Campion's Fault Mike Ripley 2016
Mr Campion's Abdication Mike Ripley 2017
Mr Campion's War Mike Ripley 2018
Mr Campion's Visit Mike Ripley 2019
Mr Campion's Seance Mike Ripley 2020
Mr Campion's Coven Mike Ripley 2021
Mr Campion's Mosaic Mike Ripley 2022

Short stories and novellas edit

  • Formula for Murder.
    This Week, 5 May 1935
  • The Great London Jewel Robbery.
    This Week, 27 February 1955
  • A Matter of Form
  • A Proper Mystery
  • Bird Thou Never Wert
  • Borderline Case
  • Evidence in Camera
  • Frenchmen Wear Gloves
  • Bluebeard's Bathtub.
    This Week, 23 September 1956
  • It Didn't Work Out
  • It Needed Someone Innocent.
    Published as Wanted, Someone Innocent
  • Miss Amber
  • Publicity
  • Jubilee for Two
  • Safe as Houses
  • The Case is Altered
  • The Case of the White Elephant.
    Also published as The White Elephant
  • The Correspondents
  • The Danger Point
  • The Definite Article
  • The Dog Day
  • The Friend
  • The Hat Trick
  • The Lieabout
  • The Longer View
  • The Man with the Sack
  • The Meaning of the Act
  • The Mistress of the House
  • The Name on the Wrapper
  • The Old Man in the Window
  • The Perfect Butler
  • The Pioneers
  • The Pro and the Con
  • The Question Mark
  • The Wind Glass
  • They Never Get Caught
  • Tis Not Hereafter
  • You've Got to Have Brains

Non-fiction edit

  • Is Golf a Menace to Marriage?
  • The Public Spirit of Francis Smith

Radio plays edit

Stage plays edit

  • Water in a Sieve

Other works by Margery Allingham edit

  • Blackkerchief Dick (1923)
  • The White Cottage Mystery (1928)
  • The Darings of the Red Rose (1930) Published anonymously in the Weekly Welcome magazine
  • Black Plumes (1940)
  • The Oaken Heart (1941: autobiographical)
  • Dance of the Years (1943: also known as The Galantrys)
  • Wanted: Someone Innocent (1946: novella and short stories)
    • Wanted: Someone Innocent
    • He Was Asking After You
    • The Sexton's Wife
    • 'Tis Not Hereafter
  • Deadly Duo (1949: UK title Take Two at Bedtime (1950)) – two novellas:
    • Wanted: Someone Innocent
    • Last Act
  • Take Two at Bedtime (1950) (novellas)
    • Last Act
    • Wanted: Someone Innocent
  • No Love Lost (1954) (novellas)
    • The Patient at Peacocks Hall
    • Safer Than Love
  • The Allingham Case-Book (1969: short stories)
    • "Black Plumes" (some re-prints)
    • "The Border-Line Case" (Mr. Campion)
    • "Evidence in Camera"
    • "Face Value"
    • "Is There a Doctor in the House?"
    • "Joke Over" (Mr. Campion)
    • "The Lieabout"
    • "Little Miss Know-All" (Mr. Campion)
    • "The Lying-in-State"
    • "The Mind's Eye Mystery"
    • "Mum Knows Best" (Mr. Campion)
    • "One Morning They'll Hang Him" (Mr. Campion)
    • "The Pioneers"
    • "The Pro and the Con" (Mr. Campion)
    • "The Psychologist"
    • "The Snapdragon and the C.I.D." (Mr. Campion)
    • "Tall Story" (Mr. Campion)
    • "They Never Get Caught"
    • "Three Is a Lucky Number"
    • "The Villa Marie Celeste" (Mr. Campion)
  • The Darings of the Red Rose (Crippen & Landru, 1995)
  • Three is a Lucky Number

As Maxwell March (a pseudonym) edit

  • Other Man's Danger (1933: US title The Man of Dangerous Secrets)
  • Rogues' Holiday (1935)
  • The Shadow in the House (1936: US title The Devil and Her Son)

References edit

  1. ^ "Joyce Allingham - Groups and Centres". www.uea.ac.uk. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
  2. ^ "Joyce Allingham | Filmmakers | AMDB". www.amateurcinema.org. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
  3. ^ Reed, Eleanor (1 May 2023). Woman's Weekly and Lower Middle-Class Domestic Culture in Britain, 1918-1958. Liverpool University Press. p. 49. doi:10.3828/liverpool/9781802078428.001.0001. ISBN 978-1-80207-842-8.
  4. ^ a b "Margery Allingham". Classic Crime Fiction. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  5. ^ Thorogood (1991) p. 87
  6. ^ 'The Great Detectives: Albert Campion' by Mike Ripley, Strand Magazine
  7. ^ Herbert, Rosemary (1999). The Oxford Companion to Crime and Mystery Writing. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 14. ISBN 0195072391.
  8. ^ a b Stevenson, Jane (19 August 2006). "Rereading: Margery Allingham, Queen of Crime". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 July 2014.
  9. ^ City of Westminster green plaques 16 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine, westminster.gov.uk; accessed 26 October 2014.
  10. ^ "Joyce Allingham - Groups and Centres". www.uea.ac.uk. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
  11. ^ Allingham, Margery (2006). The Margery Allingham Omnibus. London et al: Vintage (Random House). ISBN 9780099503729.
  12. ^ Riddington, Ken (producer) (2009). Campion (DVD). London: BBC Worldwide. OCLC 448112963.
  13. ^ New York Daily News, 17 May 1958 and after
  14. ^ Thorogood (1991) pp.278, 398

Further reading edit

  • CLUES: A Journal of Detection[permanent dead link] 23.1 (Fall 2004). Ed. Margaret Kinsman. Theme issue on Margery Allingham.
  • Joshi, S. T. "Margery Allingham: Murder, Gangs and Spies." In Varieties of Crime Fiction (Wildside Press, 2019) ISBN 978-1-4794-4546-2.
  • Pike, B. A. "The Short Stories of Margery Allingham."[permanent dead link] CLUES: A Journal of Detection 25.4 (Summer 2007): 27–36.
  • Tuck, Donald H. (1974). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy. Chicago: Advent.

External links edit

  • A brief biography and analysis from ClassicCrimeFiction.com
  • Works by Margery Allingham at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by Margery Allingham at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

margery, allingham, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Margery Allingham news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message Margery Louise Allingham 20 May 1904 30 June 1966 was an English novelist from the Golden Age of Detective Fiction and considered one of its four Queens of Crime alongside Agatha Christie Dorothy L Sayers and Ngaio Marsh Margery AllinghamBornMargery Louise Allingham 1904 05 20 20 May 1904Ealing London UKDied30 June 1966 1966 06 30 aged 62 Colchester Essex EnglandPen nameMargery AllinghamMaxwell MarchOccupationNovelistPeriod1923 1966GenreMystery crime fictionSpousePhilip Youngman CarterParentsHerbert Allingham and Emmie Allingham Allingham is best remembered for her hero the gentleman sleuth Albert Campion Initially believed to be a parody of Dorothy L Sayers s detective Lord Peter Wimsey Campion matured into a strongly individual character part detective part adventurer who formed the basis for 18 novels and many short stories Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Early writings 2 2 Campion and success 3 Death 4 Legacy 5 Bibliography 5 1 Albert Campion novels and short stories 5 2 Short stories and novellas 5 3 Non fiction 5 4 Radio plays 5 5 Stage plays 5 6 Other works by Margery Allingham 5 7 As Maxwell March a pseudonym 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life editMargery Louise Allingham was born on 20 May 1904 in Ealing London the eldest daughter of Herbert John 1868 1936 and Emily Jane nee Hughes 1879 1960 She had a younger brother Philip William and a younger sister Emily Joyce Allingham former WRNS member and amateur filmmaker 1 2 Her family was immersed in literature her parents were both writers Her father was editor of the Christian Globe and The New London Journal to which Margery later contributed articles and Sexton Blake stories and he had become a successful pulp fiction writer and her mother as Emmie Allingham was a contributor of stories to women s magazines including The Exploits of Phinella Martin stories of a lady detective which ran in Woman s Weekly from 1915 to 1920 3 Soon after Margery s birth the family left London for Essex where they lived in an old house in Layer Breton a village near Colchester She attended a local school and then the Perse School for Girls in Cambridge all the while writing stories and plays She earned her first fee at the age of eight for a story printed in her aunt s magazine 4 Upon returning to London in 1920 she studied drama and speech training at Regent Street Polytechnic which helped her manage a stammer which she had since childhood At this time she first met her future husband Philip Youngman Carter whom she married in 1927 He collaborated with her and designed the jackets for many of her books They lived on the edge of the Essex Marshes in Tolleshunt D Arcy near Maldon 4 Career editEarly writings edit While she was enrolled at the Regent Street Polytechnic she wrote a verse play Dido and Aeneas which was performed at St George s Hall London and the Cripplegate Theatre London Allingham played the role of Dido and the scenery was designed by Philip Youngman Carter 5 full citation needed nbsp South Street Tolleshunt D Arcy Allingham and Carter lived in the far house Her first novel Blackkerchief Dick was published in 1923 when she was 19 It was allegedly based on a story she had heard during a seance though later in life this was debunked by her husband Nevertheless Allingham continued to include occult themes in many of her novels Blackkerchief Dick was well received but was not a financial success She wrote several plays in this period and attempted to write a serious novel but finding that her themes clashed with her natural light heartedness she decided instead to try the mystery genre Campion and success edit Her breakthrough occurred in 1929 with the publication of The Crime at Black Dudley This introduced Albert Campion initially as a minor character thought to be a parody of Dorothy Sayers s Lord Peter Wimsey 6 Campion returned in Mystery Mile thanks in part to pressure from her American publishers who had been taken with the character With a strong central character and a format to work in she began to produce a series of Campion novels At first she also continued writing short stories and articles for magazines such as The Strand Magazine but as her Campion saga went on her sales grew steadily Campion proved so successful that Allingham made him the centrepiece of another 17 novels and more than 20 short stories continuing into the 1960s citation needed Campion is a mysterious upper class character early novels hint that his family is in the line of succession to the throne working under an assumed name He floats between the upper echelons of the nobility and government on the one hand and the shady world of the criminal class on the other often accompanied by his scurrilous ex burglar servant Magersfontein Lugg During the course of his career Campion is sometimes a detective sometimes an adventurer The first three Campion novels The Crime at Black Dudley Mystery Mile and Look to the Lady were all written by what Allingham referred to as the plum pudding method focused less on methods of murder or the formal strictures of the whodunit and more on mixing possibilities together 7 As the series progresses however Campion comes to work more closely with the police and MI6 counter intelligence 8 He also falls in love gets married and has a child and as time goes by he grows in wisdom and matures emotionally The style and format of the books moved on while the early novels are light hearted whodunnits or fantastical adventures 8 The Tiger in the Smoke 1952 is more a character study than a crime novel focusing on the serial killer Jack Havoc In many of the later books Campion plays a subsidiary role no more prominent than the roles of his wife Amanda and his police associates and in the last novel he is a minor character In 1941 Allingham published a non fiction work The Oaken Heart which describes her experiences in Essex when an invasion from Germany was expected and actively being planned for potentially placing the civilian population of Essex in the front line 9 Death editAllingham suffered from breast cancer and died at Severalls Hospital Colchester England on 30 June 1966 aged 62 Her final Campion novel Cargo of Eagles was completed by her husband at her request and was published in 1968 She was cared for through her illness by her sister who avoided the topic in her films depicting their home life as well as ensuring her husband was not inconvenienced by it 10 Compilations of her work both with and without Albert Campion continued to be released through the 1970s The Margery Allingham Omnibus comprising Sweet Danger The Case of the Late Pig and The Tiger in the Smoke with a critical introduction by Jane Stevenson was published in 2006 11 Allingham was buried in the newer cemetery in Tolleshunt D Arcy which is across the road from the graveyard of St Nicholas s Church and about half a mile to the south Legacy editA film version of The Tiger in the Smoke was made in 1956 and a highly popular series of Campion adaptations now available on DVD was shown by the BBC in 1989 90 It is titled simply Campion and stars Peter Davison as Campion and Brian Glover as Lugg 12 Several books have been written about Allingham and her work including Margery Allingham 100 Years of a Great Mystery Writer edited by Marianne van Hoeven 2003 Margery Allingham A Biography by Julia Thorogood 1991 revised as The Adventures of Margery Allingham as by Julia Jones 2009 Ink in Her Blood The Life and Crime Fiction of Margery Allingham by Richard Martin 1988 Campion s Career A Study of the Novels of Margery Allingham by B A Pike 1987 Further Campion adventures have been written by Mike Ripley The first of these Mr Campion s Farewell was based on notes left at his death by Allingham s husband Philip Youngman Carter all the rest have been originals Bibliography editAlbert Campion novels and short stories edit Title Author Year The Crime at Black DudleyUS title The Black Dudley Murder Margery Allingham 1929 Mystery Mile Margery Allingham 1930 Look to the LadyUS title The Gyrth Chalice Mystery Margery Allingham 1931 Police at the Funeral Margery Allingham 1931 Sweet DangerUS titles Kingdom of Death The Fear Sign Margery Allingham 1933 Death of a Ghost Margery Allingham 1934 Flowers for the JudgeUS title Legacy in Blood Margery Allingham 1936 Dancers in MourningUS title Who Killed Chloe Margery Allingham 1937 Mr Campion Criminologist compilation of short stories The Case of the Late Pig novelet The Border Line Case The Case of the Man with the Sack The Case of the Old Man in the Window The Case of the Pro and the Con The Case of the White Elephant The Case of the Widow Margery Allingham 1937 The Case of the Late Pig originally appeared in Mr Campion Criminologist Margery Allingham 1937 The Fashion in Shrouds Margery Allingham 1938 Mr Campion and Others compilation of short stories The Widow The Name on the Wrapper The Hat Trick The Question Mark The Old Man in the Window The White Elephant The Frenchman s Gloves The Longer View Safe As Houses The Definite Article The Meaning of the Act A Matter of Form The Danger Point Margery Allingham 1939 Traitor s PurseUS title The Sabotage Murder Mystery Margery Allingham 1941 Coroner s PidginUS title Pearls Before Swine Margery Allingham 1945 The Casebook of Mr Campion compilation of short stories The Case of the Question Mark The Crimson Letter The Definite Article The Magic Hat A Matter of Form The Meaning of the Act Safe As Houses Margery Allingham 1947 More Work for the Undertaker Margery Allingham 1948 The Tiger in the SmokeSerialized in US newspapers as Tiger Loose 13 Serialized in the UK in John Bull 1952 Margery Allingham 1952 The Beckoning LadyUS title The Estate of the Beckoning Lady Margery Allingham 1955 Hide My EyesUS titles Tether s End Ten Were Missing Margery Allingham 1958 The China Governess Margery Allingham 1963 The Mind Readers Margery Allingham 1965 Cargo of Eagles completed by Philip Youngman Carter after Allingham s death Margery AllinghamPhilip Youngman Carter 1968 Mr Campion s Farthing Philip Youngman Carter 1969 Mr Campion s FalconUS title Mr Campion s Quarry Philip Youngman Carter 1970 The Allingham Minibus also known as Mr Campion s Lucky Day compilation of short stories The Barbarian Bird Thou Never Wert The Correspondents He Preferred Them Sad He Was Asking After You The Man with the Sack Mr Campion s Lucky Day The Perfect Butler Publicity A Quarter of a Million The Same to Us The Secret The Sexton s Wife She Heard It on the Radio Tis Not Hereafter The Unseen Door The Wink Margery Allingham 1973 The Return of Mr Campion compilation of short stories The Beauty King The Black Tent The Case Is Altered The Curious Affair in Nut Row The Dog Day Happy Christmas The Kernel of Truth Once in a Lifetime Sweet and Low What to Do with an Ageing Detective The Wind Glass The Wisdom of Esdras Margery Allingham 1989 Mr Campion s Farewell completed by Mike Ripley after Youngman Carter s death Philip Youngman CarterMike Ripley 2014 Mr Campion s Fox Mike Ripley 2015 Mr Campion s Fault Mike Ripley 2016 Mr Campion s Abdication Mike Ripley 2017 Mr Campion s War Mike Ripley 2018 Mr Campion s Visit Mike Ripley 2019 Mr Campion s Seance Mike Ripley 2020 Mr Campion s Coven Mike Ripley 2021 Mr Campion s Mosaic Mike Ripley 2022 Short stories and novellas edit Formula for Murder This Week 5 May 1935 The Great London Jewel Robbery This Week 27 February 1955 A Matter of Form A Proper Mystery Bird Thou Never Wert Borderline Case Evidence in Camera Frenchmen Wear Gloves Bluebeard s Bathtub This Week 23 September 1956 It Didn t Work Out It Needed Someone Innocent Published as Wanted Someone Innocent Miss Amber Publicity Jubilee for Two Safe as Houses The Case is Altered The Case of the White Elephant Also published as The White Elephant The Correspondents The Danger Point The Definite Article The Dog Day The Friend The Hat Trick The Lieabout The Longer View The Man with the Sack The Meaning of the Act The Mistress of the House The Name on the Wrapper The Old Man in the Window The Perfect Butler The Pioneers The Pro and the Con The Question Mark The Wind Glass They Never Get Caught Tis Not Hereafter You ve Got to Have Brains Non fiction edit Is Golf a Menace to Marriage The Public Spirit of Francis Smith Radio plays edit A Corner in Crime Room to Let 1947 14 full citation needed filmed in 1950 Stage plays edit Water in a Sieve Other works by Margery Allingham edit Blackkerchief Dick 1923 The White Cottage Mystery 1928 The Darings of the Red Rose 1930 Published anonymously in the Weekly Welcome magazine Black Plumes 1940 The Oaken Heart 1941 autobiographical Dance of the Years 1943 also known as The Galantrys Wanted Someone Innocent 1946 novella and short stories Wanted Someone Innocent He Was Asking After You The Sexton s Wife Tis Not Hereafter Deadly Duo 1949 UK title Take Two at Bedtime 1950 two novellas Wanted Someone Innocent Last Act Take Two at Bedtime 1950 novellas Last Act Wanted Someone Innocent No Love Lost 1954 novellas The Patient at Peacocks Hall Safer Than Love The Allingham Case Book 1969 short stories Black Plumes some re prints The Border Line Case Mr Campion Evidence in Camera Face Value Is There a Doctor in the House Joke Over Mr Campion The Lieabout Little Miss Know All Mr Campion The Lying in State The Mind s Eye Mystery Mum Knows Best Mr Campion One Morning They ll Hang Him Mr Campion The Pioneers The Pro and the Con Mr Campion The Psychologist The Snapdragon and the C I D Mr Campion Tall Story Mr Campion They Never Get Caught Three Is a Lucky Number The Villa Marie Celeste Mr Campion The Darings of the Red Rose Crippen amp Landru 1995 Three is a Lucky Number As Maxwell March a pseudonym edit Other Man s Danger 1933 US title The Man of Dangerous Secrets Rogues Holiday 1935 The Shadow in the House 1936 US title The Devil and Her Son References edit Joyce Allingham Groups and Centres www uea ac uk Retrieved 24 May 2023 Joyce Allingham Filmmakers AMDB www amateurcinema org Retrieved 24 May 2023 Reed Eleanor 1 May 2023 Woman s Weekly and Lower Middle Class Domestic Culture in Britain 1918 1958 Liverpool University Press p 49 doi 10 3828 liverpool 9781802078428 001 0001 ISBN 978 1 80207 842 8 a b Margery Allingham Classic Crime Fiction Retrieved 26 October 2014 Thorogood 1991 p 87 The Great Detectives Albert Campion by Mike Ripley Strand Magazine Herbert Rosemary 1999 The Oxford Companion to Crime and Mystery Writing New York Oxford University Press pp 14 ISBN 0195072391 a b Stevenson Jane 19 August 2006 Rereading Margery Allingham Queen of Crime The Guardian Retrieved 10 July 2014 City of Westminster green plaques Archived 16 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine westminster gov uk accessed 26 October 2014 Joyce Allingham Groups and Centres www uea ac uk Retrieved 24 May 2023 Allingham Margery 2006 The Margery Allingham Omnibus London et al Vintage Random House ISBN 9780099503729 Riddington Ken producer 2009 Campion DVD London BBC Worldwide OCLC 448112963 New York Daily News 17 May 1958 and after Thorogood 1991 pp 278 398Further reading editCLUES A Journal of Detection permanent dead link 23 1 Fall 2004 Ed Margaret Kinsman Theme issue on Margery Allingham Joshi S T Margery Allingham Murder Gangs and Spies In Varieties of Crime Fiction Wildside Press 2019 ISBN 978 1 4794 4546 2 Pike B A The Short Stories of Margery Allingham permanent dead link CLUES A Journal of Detection 25 4 Summer 2007 27 36 Tuck Donald H 1974 The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy Chicago Advent External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Margery Allingham The Margery Allingham Society A brief biography and analysis from ClassicCrimeFiction com Works by Margery Allingham at Faded Page Canada Works by Margery Allingham at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Margery Allingham amp oldid 1223726927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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