Thursday, August 28, 2025

The Murder Of My Aunt by Richard Hull

 "My father was unfortunate in his financial affairs … My aunt was made my sole guardian and trustee. Everything was to be hers for life, but out of it she was to make me an allowance, the size of which she was to determine, as long as I lived with her or in any place of which she approved. Should I leave her, she was under no moral obligation to assist me, and at no time was she under any legal obligation. … So then at Llwll I must live while my aunt lives and insists on my staying there. If only, if only my aunt— No, I’m not going to think about that possibility. It makes my pen tremble, it makes the most frightful thoughts rise to my mind." - Richard Hull, The Murder of My Aunt


The Murder of My Aunt (1934) by Richard Hull is a classic from the golden age of mystery novels. It's a different sort of mystery where the murderer or would be murderer is known to the reader right from the beginning. The mystery is not who did it but will they be caught.  

And so when the Murder of My Aunt begins we are introduced to Edward Powell. It is the early 1930's and Edward is living with his aunt in the fictional town of Llwll located in a rural part of Wales. Edward narrates the book through his diary and he is not happy to be living in Llwll which he regards as a place lacking in culture and refinement.  

Edward would love to leave Llwll for London or Paris but his Aunt Mildred controls the purse strings and due to a clause in her will she gets to decide where Edward will live. Granted, Edward could decide to defy his aunt and move out anyway but he would need to get a job. And every job according to Edward including office work is beneath him: "The idea of my solemnly expressing a preference as to which compartment of hell I preferred, was too comic". 

Most people are beneath Edward as he sees it. He regards his neighbors as fools and people of no class and they don't take kindly to him either. But Edward though he detests his aunt does have a real respect for her intelligence. It's very much a battle of wills between these two and the drama is in who will end up being victorious

I enjoyed The Murder of My Aunt.  Edward is not a likeable character but he is fascinating and also funny in a dark humor sort of way. And I finished the book wondering how much Edward is to blame for the way his life turned out?   His parents died when he was a baby under mysterious circumstances and Aunt Mildred was not the best parenting figure.  

She puts Edward down referring to him in one climatic scene as “a sponger on my bounty who hasn’t even the decency to admit that he is sponging”.  And  more insults proceed from there. That would have been a hard woman to grow up with. And so Edward's sense of superiority and not trusting anyone is probably a defense mechanism. But the empathy ends when we learn about the violent ways Edward is planning to murder Mildred.

I recommend The Murder of My Aunt. You don't always have to be in the dark with regard to who the culprit is for a mystery novel to keep your attention.

16 comments:

  1. I thought this one was very funny! And that was quite the twist at the end. I really liked this classic mystery. :D

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The twist at the end was interesting. I somehow knew things weren't going to turn out well for Edward!

      Delete
  2. I liked this story a lot when I read it. I then bought another mystery by Hull, Murder Isn't Easy, but I haven't read it yet.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I don't know if I will read another mystery by Hull. There are too many books on my TBR list. But I am definitely trying more golden age and fair play mysteries. And so far I am having a good experience.

      Delete
  3. Kathy, I did leave a comment here but it seems to have disappeared. In your spambox maybe?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Cath, I didn't see it in spam. My computer not the greatest but thanks for letting me know I always like hearing from you.

      Delete
    2. My computer's the same, Kathy, so the problem could easily be my end. I just commented that I had enjoyed this book too, particularly its quirkiness. I don't think it was like any other crime novel I've read.

      Delete
    3. Hi Cath, it was a different sort of crime novel. I did some checking and found that The Murder of My Aunt is part of a sub genre of mystery novel known as "the inverted mystery". In these mysteries you know from the start who the killer is. But even though I knew I was still intrigued about how it would end.

      Delete
  4. Nicely reviewed. I have not read this one, so I'm glad to hear of it and how Edward seems to snap under his aunt's rules. I think I would like the twist at the end and how Edward's not in the clear after all, is he?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Susan. Edward is not in the clear for sure. If Edward has a literary double I was thinking it might be Ignatius J Reilly in Confederacy of Dunces. Ignatius wasn't planning a murder as I recall but the same sense of superiority as a defense mechanism fits both characters.

      Delete
    2. Oh I liked Confederacy of Dunces .... but it's been so long pre-blog - I could use a reread of that. I recall it being a bit funny.

      Delete
  5. What an interesting approach to a mystery--not whodunit but will they get away with it! Never heard of Richard Hull, but I love the cover of this one.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I like the cover too and it's part of a series of British Golden Age Mystery novels which are so good and I plan to read more.

      Delete
  6. I'll start searching for this one.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I hope you like it Ryan. Edward can be very funny in a dark humor sort of way.

      Delete