Murder by Matchlight explained

Murder by Matchlight
Author:E.C.R. Lorac
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Series:Chief Inspector MacDonald
Genre:Detective
Publisher:Collins Crime Club (UK)
Arcadia House (US)
Release Date:1945
Media Type:Print
Preceded By:Checkmate to Murder

Murder by Matchlight is a 1945 detective novel by E.C.R. Lorac, the pen name of the British writer Edith Caroline Rivett.[1] It was the twenty sixth novel of her long-running series featuring Chief Inspector MacDonald of Scotland Yard.[2] Originally published by Collins Crime Club, it was reissued in 2018 by the British Library Publishing as part of a group of crime novels from the Golden Age of Detective Fiction.

Synopsis

On a November night in Regent's Park a man witnesses another being coshed over the head, illuminated only by the match he was lighting for his cigarette. The body is identified by his identity card as John Ward, but further investigations reveal he is really an Irishman named Timothy O'Farrel who had stolen the identity of another man killed in an air raid in Camberwell some months earlier. Enquiries at the theatrical boarding house in Notting Hill where he had been living reveal the dead man was a charming, but good-for-nothing scrounger given to blackmail and black market activities. To further complicate matters, the house is struck and partly destroyed by an incendiary device during a German raid.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Nichols & Thompson p.476
  2. Reilly p.260