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Average rating4.3
Way back during the crusades Richard I presented the Huntingforest family with the tiny Balkan principality of Averna but since then the kingdom has been forgotten, until circumstances in Europe suddenly render it extremely strategically important to the British Government. They hire unconventional detective Albert Campion to recover the long-missing proofs of ownership - the deeds, a crown, and a receipt - which are apparently hidden in the village of Pontisbright. On arriving in Pontisbright, Campion and his friends meet the eccentric, young, flame-haired Amanda Fitton and her family who claim to be the rightful heirs to Averna and join in the hunt. Mr. Campion and his two young friends, Eager-Wright and Farquharson, posted as the Hereditary Paladin of Averna and his entourage! Unfortunately, criminal financier Brett Savanake is also interested in finding the evidence of the oil-rich state's ownership for his own ends. Things get rather rough in the village as Savanake's heavies up the pressure on Campion to solve the mystery before they do. In the course of the hunt, Campion dresses in drag, takes refuge in a tree, is nearly drowned in a mill race, and his friends find themselves bound and gagged in sacks, shot at, and witnesses to a satanic ceremony led by the local doctor. The rural calm of Pontisbright is well and truly shattered.
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This novel is not really a fantasy: there's nothing impossible in it. However, the whole story is so implausible that it may be best thought of as a fantasy, first published in 1933, but akin to one of Jasper Fforde's more modern stories.
Along with being fantastic, it's also an exciting, charming, and romantic adventure story, set mostly in darkest Suffolk, although it begins with an unlikely encounter on the Mediterranean coast of France: starting as it means to go on.
Although the story is obviously dated, the writing style is remarkably fresh; Allingham was still in her twenties at the time of writing, and this is a young person's book.
The plot revolves around the lost title to the tiny kingdom of Averna, located somewhere on the Adriatic coast; although the story never takes us there. Both goodies and baddies are engaged in a treasure hunt for the means to claim the title, and they are a motley assortment of characters. We also encounter a country doctor with a secret obsession and a cellarful of priceless vintage port, although he's almost incidental to the plot.
Of course everything works out well in the end, after a spectacular finale the goodies triumph and the baddies are completely defeated, cheers all round.
This was the fifth outing for Allingham's regular adventurer-detective, Albert Campion, but it was the first that I read, long ago. Campion makes an odd hero, like a sort of adult Tintin with a sense of humour. He hides his inner seriousness with a taste for humorous dialogue; he's highly intelligent but likes to appear stupid.
Probably the most memorable character from this book is the vivid 17-year-old Amanda, who makes an impression on Campion and is destined to marry him in a later book, although I feel she could have done better. There's something oddly sexless about Campion, who's attracted to various women in different books, but hardly seems to know what to do with them. An odd hero for a female writer to create, but I suppose she knew men like that, and wrote about what she knew.
Campion is an interesting, amusing, and knowledgeable fellow, who'd make a good friend for man or woman, but I have trouble seeing him as a husband, especially for a live wire like Amanda; though admittedly I don't have a woman's point of view. As far as I can tell, he's about 15 years older than she is.
A woman he might have married from a previous book went and married someone else, which was rather sensible of her.
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10 primary books11 released booksAlbert Campion is a 11-book series with 10 primary works first released in 1931 with contributions by Margery Allingham and Youngman Carter.