29 Herriott Street: by John Hutton

 



"...he had been a shade too set on making a fine figure. It was part and parcel of that immense, secret vanity of his, the vanity which had led him to avoid promotion and wilfully seek obscurity."


With a such a philosophy one can imagine the horror of Wilfred Rimmer as he is charged, condemned and hanged for the murder of his wife. The case becomes a sensation. Years later a true crime writer attempts to shed new light on the facts, but is unable to penetrate Rimmer's character, which remains active beyond the grave in the memories of those few remaining people who knew him. Worse, Rimmer's philosophy is class-based, which brings him into conflict with the pre-conceived bias of the writer. By all accounts a shabby, bespectacled and determined loser, those who knew Rimmer speak of him as a gentleman. But if he was innocent, why won't they speak to absolve him? Well, it was Rimmer's tragedy to marry above his station and everything flows from there...

A complex and infuriating first novel by John Hutton, whose observations of class hypocrisy in England set him apart from the usual run of crime and so-called literary novelists. His two books are unique in the history of post-war British literature. And make no mistake, they are literature. If only the arts knew their business. But that is covered in the novel too. Recommended.

Accidental Crimes: by John Hutton

 




Conrad Nield finds himself in a spot of bother; having given a lift to a hitchhiking girl, he leaves her stranded on a country road. When the body of a murdered girl is found nearby, Conrad lies to the police, denying he was even in the area. He becomes a person of interest and as his story unravels, so does his life, police attention impacting his marriage and his job.


More a character study than a crime novel, Accidental Crimes is a closely written account of an unpleasant character getting something of a comeuppance. Nield is a typical English Tory type - a patronising narcissist, his own worst enemy, but kept from the consequences of his actions because the suffering tends to fall on his victims; his wife, colleagues and students. In this instance, however, he oversteps the mark, with some gratifying results for the reader.

It appears that author John Hutton only penned two novels, this being his second and last, published in 1983. Which is a pity as his work seems excellent and rather timeless in its characterisations. Hutton engages the reader's antipathy towards his main character in the way other authors go for the easier option of sympathy. The book is over a generation old but still powerful both in style and intrigue. Highly recommended.