Category Archives: Lockridge, Frances

The Clock Strikes Murder – New Years Eve Mysteries

I love the ubiquitous Christmas mystery and am always on the lookout for new ones. It seems like every golden/silver age mystery writer wrote at least one of them. Less common, but still fun, is the NYE murder, which I also keep my eye out for – and I found a couple of new ones this year.

The Dishonest MurdererThe Dishonest Murderer
by Frances Lockridge, Richard Lockridge
Rating: ★★★★
Series: Mr. & Mrs. North #13
Publication Date: January 1, 1949
Genre: mystery: golden age (1920-1949)
Pages: 297
ReRead?: No

Mr. and Mrs. North attempt to solve the case of a New Year’s Eve murder Freddie Haven has just crossed the Brooklyn Bridge when she sees a man she believes to be her fiancé, Sen. Bruce Kirkhill, on the sidewalk, walking alone through one of Manhattan’s vilest slums. It seems impossible that the shabby figure is actually Bruce, and Freddie tries to put the sight out of her mind. She prepares herself for her father’s New Year’s Eve party, and waits for her husband-to-be to arrive. But the senator never shows. Bruce is found dead in a doorway not far from the Bowery. What was he doing in the wrong part of town, and why was he dressed in a bum’s shabby suit? Freddie begs for help from Mr. and Mrs. North, amateur sleuths who catch killers between sipping martinis. But is she ready to discover that the senator had a secret the shadows of the Bowery weren’t dark enough to hide?

The Dishonest Murderer is the 13th book in the Mr. and Mrs. North Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.


Of the two that I read, this was my favorite, and not only because I actually read it on NYE and New Years Day. It starts at a NYE party – and Mr. and Mrs. North get invited to really good parties. This one was thrown by Vice-Admiral Satterbee, who is also writing a book for Jerry North, and his daughter, Freddie Haven. Freddie’s fiance, Senator Bruce Kirkhill, never shows up.

Because he is dead.

There is intrigue and drama and very little sleep, and Pam North, as is her wont figures everything out first, and manages to put her life in peril in a confrontation with the murderer, although Detective Weigand is on the scene with no delay. There is a potentially intriguing new romance that may or may not go anywhere in future books.

The Case of the Headless JesuitThe Case of the Headless Jesuit
by George Bellairs
Rating: ★★★½
Series: Chief Inspector Littlejohn #16
Publication Date: January 1, 1950
Genre: mystery: silver age (1950-1979)
Pages: 492
ReRead?: No
Project: a century of crime

On New Year’s Eve a string of grisly deaths strike a remote English hamlet

For centuries Cobbold-in-the-Marsh has been haunted by the ghost of a Jesuit priest who lost his head rather than deny his faith. Since then, there hasn’t been much bloodshed in this peculiar little village, but all that changes during the icy week just after Christmas. First a policeman is found drowned in the canal, a tragic death that shows signs of foul play. Then, as the whole town gathers for midnight mass on New Year’s Eve, the prodigal son of the manor house staggers down the aisle. The congregation thinks he’s drunk—until they notice the blood seeping down his side.

Detective-Inspector Thomas Littlejohn and Detective-Sergeant Robert Cromwell are called in from Scotland Yard to oversee the investigation. As they dig into the quirks and secrets of this eerie little enclave, they find that Cobbold is haunted by more than a decapitated priest.


I checked this one out from the KU library and read it right before Christmas. I really enjoy the Chief Inspector Littlejohn mysteries by Bellairs, but this didn’t turn out to be a favorite. The plot summary looked great, and I do love holiday mysteries, but I thought that it was on the weaker side of the books in the series.

Having said that, Chief Inspector Littlejohn ends up adopting the now homeless dog of one of the victims as part of the story, which I found heartwarming and delightful.

Other NYE mysteries, for anyone who is interested, include The Clock Strikes Twelve by Patricia Wentworth, the 7th Miss Silver mystery, which I read in 2020, and one of my favorite Peter Wimsey mysteries, The Nine Tailors, by Dorothy Sayers.

Like I said, I’ve always got a BOLO out for NYE mysteries, so if you know of any that I haven’t identified, mention it in the comments!

ACOC 1946: Murder within Murder by Frances & Richard Lockridge

Murder Within MurderMurder Within Murder
by Frances Lockridge, Richard Lockridge
Rating: ★★★★
Series: Mr. & Mrs. North #10
Publication Date: January 1, 1946
Genre: mystery: golden age (1920-1949)
Pages: 301
ReRead?: No
Project: a century of crime

Mr. and Mrs. North seek the killer of a terribly unpleasant society woman

Miss Amelia Gipson doesn’t tolerate foolishness. She doubts she’s ever made a mistake, and it’s unlikely she would change anything about her life—even if she knew she was in danger. While researching a famous murder case at the public library, she becomes ill at her desk. Within minutes, she’s dead. Miss Gipson would be pleased with the coroner. He doesn’t muck around when delivering the cause of death. There’s simply no question: She was poisoned.

Fortunately, Miss Gipson was one of Jerry North’s authors, which means that the accomplished amateur sleuth has another case on his hands. With the help of his utterly brilliant—if slightly strange—wife, Pamela, Mr. North soon finds that the question isn’t who wanted Miss Gipson dead, but who didn’t.

Murder within Murder is the 10th book in the Mr. and Mrs. North Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.


Murder Within Murder is the 10th book in the long running Mr. & Mrs. North series, which spanned two decades. The first book, The Norths Meet Murder, was published in 1940; the final book, Murder by the Book, was released in 1963. I previously posted about the first three Mr. & Mrs. North books in 2020, in a post titled Mr. and Mrs. North and Their Glam and Fab Murder Life.

Since 2020, I have been making my way through the 14 books that are available from my local library. I’ve read 1 through 8, and for some reason my library skipped #9, Death of a Tall Man, picking up with the series at book 10. Sadly, I’m nearly to the end of what’s available to me for free. Once I finish with the library inventory, Open Road Media/Mysterious Press has reprinted the entire series for the kindle, and I will have to decide if I am going to buy book 9, and 16 through 26.

I probably will, because I love this series. It’s light and funny, without being twee or cozy. Pam and Jerry North are exceptionally entertaining amateur sleuths, constantly getting themselves mixed up in murderous happenings. If Tommy & Tuppence Beresford hosted cocktail parties in a glamorous 1940’s NYC walkup, they might have been Pam and Jerry North.

The side characters are also so good – their Detective friend, Lt. Weigand, is solidly pleasant without being bumbling, and his wife, Dorian, is a nice additional to the crew.

This specific mystery is a good one as well – some of the series entries are stronger than others, and I would rate this one fairly highly. It has one of the victims that you love to hate, as a reader, everyone has a motive, and there are suspects galore.

Given how popular mystery series adaptations are, I’m a little bit surprised that no one has rediscovered the Norths because, with the right casting, it would make a great Netflix/Hulu/Prime series.

Mr. and Mrs. North and their glam and fab murder life

A few years ago, I read The Thin Man by Dashiell Hammett. I had never seen the movie with Myrna Loy and William Powell as Nick and Nora Charles, but I had a mental picture that led me to believe that I would love this book. It would be fabulously glamorous, with sparkle – both in the champagne and the banter – to spare, and a side serving of crime detection.

Unfortunately, that’s not really what I experienced when I actually read the book – although that may well be the aesthetic of the movie.

And then I met Jerry and Pamela North.

The Norths Meet MurderThe Norths Meet Murder
by Frances Lockridge, Richard Lockridge
Series: Mr. & Mrs. North #1
Publication Date: March 8, 1940
Genre: mystery
Pages: 252

Jerry and Pamela North’s upstairs apartment has been empty as long as they can remember. It’s an ordinary Greenwich Village abode, and the Norths are ordinary Villagers—which means they can’t bear to go more than a few days between cocktail parties. So when Pamela decides to stage a soiree in the empty apartment, Jerry goes along begrudgingly. But what seems inconvenient becomes felonious the moment they find a dead man in the tub. He has been bludgeoned, stripped naked, and left to rot. The party is most certainly off.

Which neighbor was rude enough to leave a body in the upstairs tub? Though they should know better, Mr. and Mrs. North can’t resist getting involved. Before they know it, they’re right in the thick of a manhunt, and Greenwich Village will never be the same.


First published in 1940, this is the book that I thought I would be reading when I read The Thin Man. Jerry and Pamela are a young couple who live in a Greenwich Village apartment. Jerry ostensibly works, and Pamela ostensibly does not. They don’t yet have children, although there is a cat who figures in the book. Being young, fabulous, moderately financially secure, and otherwise ordinary young people living in 1940’s New York, they like a good cocktail party. Pamela decides that the empty upstairs apartment provides a perfect location for a soiree, and when they jaunt upstairs to check it out, they find a dead body in the tub.

Jerry is fine, but Pamela is a delight – a total firecracker. The Norths meet Detective William Weigand, who inexplicably goes by Loot, and they make friends and commence investigating. I really enjoyed this book.

According to Wikipedia, Charles Silet, in his article Married Sleuths, states as follows:

“The Mr. and Mrs. North novels contain carefully crafted puzzles and the Lockridges usually play fair with their readers. The series also features Pam and Jerry’s warmly humorous domestic environment and the couple’s witty exchanges with the duller members of the police force. Although the Norths remain the focus of the series, the books contain a good deal of political and social commentary, a richly detailed look at the changing life in New York City, as well as glimpses of the outlying suburban counties. Also, the North’s stable marriage relationship presents a marked contrast—and a welcome one—to the traditions of the lone detective characteristic of much other American mystery fiction. Even though the Mr. and Mrs. North novels now may appear overly deliberate in their pacing, they still prove wonderful reading as mysteries, and the glimpses they provide of our past social history give them a nostalgic and authentic period flavor. Aficionados of classic crime fiction have always appreciated this long-running series, and new readers should be encouraged to discover this witty and charming couple.”

I couldn’t agree more.

Murder out of TurnMurder out of Turn
by Frances Lockridge, Richard Lockridge
Series: Mr. & Mrs. North #2
Publication Date: March 8, 1941
Genre: mystery
Pages: 224

In a remote cabin far from New York City, Jerry and Pamela North are getting killed. On the brink of annihilation, they grit their teeth and battle back. In a moment, the fight is finished—and the Norths are named mixed doubles champions. It’s a happy moment during a splendid vacation, but off the tennis court, all is not well. After an afternoon of fun and games, the evening’s entertainment will be murder.

Mr. and Mrs. North have invited their closest friends—an ex-aviator, a mysterious doctor, and New York Police Department’s own Lt. William Weigand—to join them on this glittering retreat, but the joviality ends when Weigand finds Helen Wilson lying across the path, a knife buried in her neck. A member of the group surely killed her, and unless the Norths act quickly, the murderer will strike again.


Following up on The Norths Meet Murder, I checked out the second book in the series, Murder Out Of Turn, which takes place at a summer hideaway in upstate New York, where Jerry and Pamela vacation at a rustic cabin with their friends. We are reintroduced to many of the characters from the first book. The Norths have become quite good friends with Detective Weigand, so they invite him to join them for part of their summer holiday. Naturally, murder ensues, when a friends ends up with knife in the back.

There is a lot of tennis playing, canoeing and other recreation going on in this book, as well as quite a bit of back and forth between the city. Detective Weigand meets Dorian Hunt, who catches his attention and, possibly, also his heart. It was still delightful, although not so delightful as the first book.

A Pinch of PoisonA Pinch of Poison
by Frances Lockridge, Richard Lockridge
Series: Mr. & Mrs. North #3
Publication Date: December 1, 1941
Genre: mystery
Pages: 200

There’s a stunning view from the top of the Ritz-Plaza Hotel, but it pales in comparison to Lois Winston’s beauty. She arrives on the arm of David McIntosh—an agreeable young man who would marry her if she gave him the chance—to take in the scenery, eat a light supper, and forget the busy world below. Lois’s first cocktail lifts her spirits, helping her dispel the strange sadness that tugs at her soul, but her second drink isn’t so kind. Lois isn’t halfway done with her Cuba libre when her cheeks grow hot, her breath becomes short, and she falls dead to the floor.

Solving the case of this terribly fashionable murder falls to New York Police Department’s Lt. William Weigand, who tackles the investigation with the help of his friends, Jerry and Pamela North. The effervescent couple will catch the killer between cocktails—unless the poisoner targets their glasses next.


The third book in the series steps outside of the North’s close circle of friends – which is good, because otherwise they probably wouldn’t have any friends left. Detective Weigand is trying to figure out if Dorian Hunt, whom he met in the last book, is as interested in him as he is in her, and, simultaneously, gets pulled into the poisoning murder of a socialite that happened on the ever so glamorous rooftop bar of the Ritz Carlton. Pamela, once again, proves that she is as quick-witted (more quick-witted) than any of the men in the story by working out the motive and the murderer before anyone else has it completely solved.

I’ve heard that the fourth book, Death on the Aisle is a terrific mystery. I have it checked out, so I’ll be finding out as soon as I finish up a book or two, so I can continue my acquaintance with the Norths and their very murderous life.