in and out by mat coward

Mat Coward knows a good deal about darts
Converted to the game in
the 1970s when darts was booming, Mat played regularly for a pub in Hampstead,
North London. Later he went on to write articles about the sport in Darts
World and other magazines and newspapers. His approach to reporting the
sport has always been original, no more so than when he wrote about the famous
John Lowe nine-darter (Darts Player January/March 1985). His report,
whilst celebratory, concentrated more on why John’s achievement had had such an
impact on the press, especially the ‘heavies’, those newspapers columns inches
for the sport of darts being as rare then as they are today
Mat Coward is also a friend
of darts
But they are not the only
reasons I have for recommending his latest book ‘In and Out’ (Waterville,
Maine, USA: Five Star, 2001) to you. ‘In and Out’ is a damn good read.
It is a detective novel, the second involving the moody, philosophical, oft
times impatient and ‘in your face’ Detective Inspector Don Packham and the
younger more inward thinking, less hasty and better personally organised, Police
Constable Frank Mitchell - unlikely partners in crime busting in the fictional
North London patch of Cowden
After the first case, (Up
and Down), had been successfully solved by Packham and Mitchell, Mat’s
publishers wanted more. The murder victim in Up and Down had been found
on an allotment. Mat had drawn on his enthusiasm for allotment gardening
for the first book. For his second book he decided to draw on his extensive
personal knowledge of the world of darts – pub darts
One February night a team
of darters from the Hollow Head pub, Cowden, are enjoying a well-deserved
lock-in, following their victory over a great rival house. During the
celebrations, long time team scorer Yvonne ‘Chalkie’ Wood - described as ‘a
serial thriller’ - is found dead in the ladies’ toilet, her head caved in by a
concrete doorstop. Twelve members of the darts team had motives and its up to
Packham – a long time darts player and connoisseur of the arrows – and Mitchell
– who admitted to having no appetite for games - to find out who topped Chalkie
What is good about this
book, from a dart players perspective, is the way Mat weaves into this excellent
murder mystery some of his own personal darts philosophy, particularly through
the character of Don Packham. ‘Darts,’ Packham tells young Frank Mitchell, ‘Is
about friendship. It’s about playing the game for its own sake.’ Whereas golf
is a game ‘designed for keeping people in their place, a game designed to ensure
the continuation of hierarchies.’ PC Frank Mitchell is an unwilling student and
seems resistant to the pull of the darts as expounded by his senior officer.
Certainly he sees his older, more senior colleague as ‘babbling’ when, whilst
visiting a pub, Packham takes offence at the dart light being on when there was
nobody playing. Why should the ritual be to ask the landlord to please switch
the light on? At least Frank Mitchell – when finally agreeing to play darts -
takes on board one of Packham’s key principles of play - you don’t actually
throw a dart, you simply let go
‘In and Out’ is a
good read. The threads of the story and the clues intertwine and although I
thought I’d sussed it early on I was in fact utterly and completely wrong. That
to me is the sign of a true murder mystery
Mat’s book does not utilise
the complex forms employed by Ngaio Marsh in her darts-themed crime novel
Death at the Bar (London: Collins, 1939) nor does it involve the
extravagance of Martin Amis’ London Fields (London: Jonathan Cape,
1989). What it does have is the advantage of being a darts themed mystery that
all darts players can relate to, written by a man who knows the joys of playing
pub league darts in his ‘local.’ Therefore, whether or not you enjoy reading
murder mysteries, In and Out is for all darters. (You might even
recognise someone you know in the characters!)
In and Out
is a darts mystery written with the insight of
– if not a master darter – then perhaps a future master of mystery
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© 2002 Patrick Chaplin |