The Case of Miss Elliott | |
Author: | Baroness Orczy |
Country: | UK |
Language: | English |
Published: | 1905 T. Fisher Unwin |
Preceded By: | The Old Man in the Corner |
The Case of Miss Elliott was Baroness Orczy's first collection of detective stories. It appeared in 1905 and featured the first of her detective characters, The Old Man in the Corner, who solves mysteries without leaving his chair.
This is one of three books of short stories featuring Orczy's armchair detective, and although the first published it is second chronologically. The stories follow those in The Old Man in the Corner and precede those in Unravelled Knots.
The Old Man in the Corner stories first appeared in 1901 in The Royal Magazine, with the author receiving the large sum of £60. The stories were immediately popular, and the public clamoured for more. The stories in this collection were published in The Royal Magazine in 1904 and 1905. They include
Despite his vanity about his own talents, the Old Man in the Corner is a nondescript armchair detective. A balding, watery-eyed, mild-mannered little man in violently checked tweed, he haunts a corner of the ABC Teashop on the corner of Norfolk Street and the Strand.
His listener and protégé is an attractive young journalist (named some editions of the previous volume as Polly Burton), who brings him details of obscure crimes baffling the police, which he helps her to solve. She is fascinated by the unlikely unravellings she hears, but despite her sarcasm and pride in her own investigative talents she remains the learner, impressed in spite of herself.
Although The Old Man does not hide his upper class attitudes, he sometimes feels sympathy for the criminals.
The Old Man's cases include a wide range of sensational and complex detective puzzles: