If you subscribe to the New Yorker – as indeed you should, in these scoundrelly times, because it provides clarity and purpose, and restores some small threshold of grace to our debased coinage – you happen on unexpected rewards. This year just past was their 100th anniversary, and their archive yields some hauntingly authentic stuff, not least their portraits of a vanished history, a history which was everyday back then, but which can seem to us almost an archeology. They ran one a couple of weeks ago, S.N. Behrman’s profile of the prewar art dealer Joseph Duveen, a genteel hustler with an appetite for grand gestures.

Duveen was himself a fascinating character, and he cultivated a celebrated circle of clients and contacts, John D. Rockefeller, the Armenian oil baron Calouste Gulbenkian, the émigré Russian prince Felix Youssoupoff – one of the conspirators who murdered Rasputin. My initial interest, though, was less about the specifics, and more about the atmosphere, the climate of the rich and entitled.
I’ve
written a number of period mystery stories set in
In other words, I didn’t know. I had no idea how to use this, it was just floating around in the zeitgeist. In the meantime, though, reading about Duveen, his lifestyle, his tastes, his indulgences, you get a terrific sense of this lost world, up where the steaks are thick and the air is thin. These are not people who drink jug wine. At the same time, for all their self-confidence, they harbor doubts, the Dürer, the Gainsborough, not so much that they might be cheated, but that they might be buying in when the fashion has already passed them by.
This is a very interesting kind of one-upsmanship, or fear of missing out, or cultural insecurity. You know you could do something with it. Henry James, eat your heart out.
As so
often, it isn’t the thing itself. It
isn’t the missing drug money, or the Fabergé egg, or the fact that Rasputin just won’t stay dead, no matter the poison, or the bullet
wounds, or sewing him into a bag full of rocks and dumping him in the frozen
I can’t tell you how this story comes out. I can’t even tell you how it begins. It’s no more than a whisper. I’ll let you know when it comes in earshot.
From The Maltese Falcon:
ReplyDeleteKasper Gutman: Well, sir, what do you suggest? We stand here and shed tears and call each other names... or shall we go to Istanbul?
Joel Cairo: Are you going?
Kasper Gutman: Seventeen years I've wanted that little item and I've been trying to get it. If we must spend another year on the quest... well, sir, it will be an additional expenditure in time of only... five and fifteen seventeenths percent.
They want what they want when they want it...
BTW, with Rockefeller, an "in" to his personality is that while he was a cutthroat business man, he was also a philanthropist. From Wikipedia, "Later in his life, Rockefeller recalled: "It was at this moment, that the financial plan of my life was formed". Money making was considered by him a "God-given gift".
I think you've just identified one of the proverbial seven plots (of which there are many more than seven, just like the three rules of writing). I'm halfway through a book by Denise Mina in which the McGuffin is a silver box that may have belonged to Pontius Pilate and may or may not contain proof that the Crucifixion and Resurrection did or did not happen. A sort of sub-McGuffin is a painting from the Gardner Museum heist, more than thirty years ago and still fascinating to many. In that case, I think the stolen objects have intrinsic interest. New to me: the suggestion that they seem to have been stolen to order, reflecting a collector's personal taste.
ReplyDeleteThere was always this lingering suspicion that Whitey Bulger had something to do with the Gardner robbery, but now that Whitey got shanked, we'll never know. It makes sense that the art was stolen a la carte - it's too well known to be sold on the open market.
DeleteAlways love to see Lovejoy mentioned in one of our Sleuthsayer posts! Yes, I'm with Hitchcock - it's the motivation that's interesting, not the object or McGuffin itself.
ReplyDeleteI've often thought ours is a strange genre, murder for entertainment. Likewise, The Louvre and the Gardner robberies are intriguing in the abstract, but horrifying in reality. At least we have an opportunity to see justice done.
ReplyDeleteLeigh, Dorothy Sayers wrote mysteries, and justified them thusly: "Detective stories contain a dream of justice. They project a vision of a world in which wrongs are righted, and villains are betrayed by clues that they did not know they were leaving. A world in which murderers are caught and hanged, and innocent victims are avenged, and future murder is deterred."
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