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Saturday, 31 October 2020
A Damon Gaunt mystery - Eyes that saw not
Saturday, 24 October 2020
Isabel Ostrander - Author
Isabel Ostrander was a prolific writer in the early twentieth century, contributing more than thirty serials using three pseudonyms, and perhaps more under other names, to the Munsey and Street and Smith pulps in little over a decade before her untimely death. Many of these serials were later reprinted as novels, some with changed titles.
Her inclusion in this series of articles is due to her
creation of Damon Gaunt, the second blind detective to feature in American
fiction. The first was Thornley Colton, created by Clinton H. Stagg. Damon
Gaunt is however, closer to the British school of detective fiction epitomized
by Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot. How? We’ll see later.
Isabel Ostrander c. 1907 |
Saturday, 17 October 2020
Bibliography of the Thornley Colton stories
Saturday, 10 October 2020
Clinton H. Stagg - Author, Script Writer, News Reporter
Clinton H. Stagg - Creator of the first blind fictional detective |
Saturday, 3 October 2020
The first blind detective in modern English fiction
October is Blindness Awareness Month when the National
Federation for the Blind (NFB), holds outreach activities to create
opportunities for people to meet blind people living in their communities and
to realize that blind people are vital contributing members of society.
My small contribution to this is to get you to meet the
earliest blind detectives and their authors. Three of them in fact:
Thornley Colton appeared in eight stories in People’s
Ideal Fiction Magazine from February to October 1913, beating Ernest
Bramah’s Max Carrados (first appearance in The Coin of Dionysus,
published in News of the World, August 17, 1913) by six months, and
Isabel Ostrander’s Damon Gaunt by over a year (first appearance in Eyes that
see not, published in The Cavalier, Feb 14, 1914). It’s
possible that there could be an even earlier story, yet undiscovered, but until
then Stagg and Colton have first place in the pantheon of blind detectives.
Why did so many blind detectives appear at around the same
time? I think it had to do with Helen Keller. Born in 1880, she overcame many
obstacles to become the first deaf-blind graduate of Radcliffe College for
women. She graduated summa-cum-laude, and published her autobiography in 1902. The
Story of My Life was a best-seller, and by 1913, Keller was on a lecture
tour around the United States, going from city to city and giving talks on her
experience as a blind person.
By 1913 the world had seen blind people match their sighted
brethren in skills and accomplishments. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle had been writing
Sherlock Holmes’ stories for over a quarter century, and detective stories were
a staple of popular fiction in the all-fiction rough paper magazines and their
more sophisticated counterparts. Then, as now, an author of detective fiction needed
something different –the setting, the crime, the detective or the criminal - to
differentiate his story from the crowd. While Stagg wasn’t unique in picking blindness
as his detective’s distinguishing characteristic, he was the first to be
published.
Next week: Clinton Stagg and Thornley Colton