Sam Llewellyn is an
author I discovered in the late 1980s as a teenager. He wrote a series of suspense novels set in
the British fishing village of Pulteney. The novels all have sailing as a backdrop, and by my recollection none
of them feature the same protagonist.
I recently reread Dead Reckoning, the first of the
Pulteney sailing novels, published in 1987. It’s narrated by Charlie Agutter, from an old Pulteney family, making a nice living designing racing yachts. The novel opens with Charlie receiving a summons to the village’s
lifeboat. A sailing yacht, Aesthete, has been
caught in The Teeth—a dangerous stretch of reef just off shore. Charlie designed the stranded yacht,
and it’s one of only two produced with a new light weight rudder. The dead sailor at the helm is Charlie’s brother.
It appears the rudder
failed and a heavy sea dragged Aesthete into the Teeth shattering its hull. The accident hits
Charlie hard. He and his younger brother
were close and his business is threatened with collapse since most think his new rudder failed. Charlie’s certain the rudder was sabotaged, but the saboteur is a step ahead and Charlie can’t
prove anything. The mystery is as much about motive
as whodunit. Charlie isn’t sure why the
rudder was tampered with; murder for its own sake—to kill his
brother or the other man aboard the yacht—or an attempt to destroy him and his
business by undermining the rudder design.
Dead Reckoning
is a wonderful suspense-adventure mystery. It was fairly (and correctly) compared to the work of Dick Francis by
critics when it was released. A slim
line suspense mystery with a sport setting. In this case yacht racing, but it is as much an adventure story as
mystery, and it is seemingly influenced by the Alistair MacLean style adventure
thriller. It is heavy on description,
setting (weather is always an adversary), action and suspense, and light on
dialogue and whodunit ponderings.
Pulteney is a perfect
setting for the story. A boom town
that was once a place where fishermen made their living from the sea, but it
has been bought up by wealthy professionals and industrialists who use it as a
place to moor yachts and brag about to their friends in the city. The rub between the old and new residents
creates its own tension as Charlie works to solve the puzzle and catch the
killer. He walks a tenuous line between
both old and new, and isn’t quite trusted by either.
Everything works in Dead Reckoning, but what sets it apart
from its peers is the seamless weaving of both the culture and sport of yacht
racing. The plot can’t be extricated
from its background, and one without the other would be useless. The setting is exotic and familiar at once. The characters are smoothly realistic in shades of both likability and
familiarity.
Dead Reckoning
was published more than 30 years ago and has held up remarkably well. Sam Llewellyn is back on my list of favorite writers.
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