Review: Domino Island by Desmond Bagley
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Domino
Island – published in 2019 by HarperCollins – is Desmond Bagley’s
“lost” novel. The manuscript (ms) was discovered by the researcher Philip
Eastwood at Boston University’s Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center where
Bagley’s papers are housed. Along with the ms – titled Because Salton Died
by Bagley – were letters between Bagley and his editor at Collins, Bob Knittel,
and handwritten notes on the ms, identifying planned changes for
publication, but Bagley pulled Because Salton Died back from Collins and
the changes were never made. There are a couple hypotheses about why Bagley
stopped work on the book. The first and most obvious is perhaps Bagley decided it was a
hopeless project and there is some evidence supporting this. In the letter to his
editor accompanying the ms, Bagley wrote, “I had a bad case of ‘writer’s
block’[.]” He had started and abandoned four “standard Bagleys” – adventure
thrillers – and he decided to try something entirely new to get his creative
energy going. So, in the early days of 1972 he began working on an Agatha
Christie-style traditional mystery, or whodunnit, but Bagley wanted to
rework the novel into his usual fare because:
“My method of writing is singularly
ill-adapted for the writing of a whodunnit. I begin with a situation and let it
develop, and the plot follows where the development leads; whereas a whodunnit
should be meticulously worked out in a synopsis before a key on the typewriter
is touched.”
The second hypothesis – and my favorite of the two – involves the film, The Mackintosh Man, which was based on Bagley’s 1972 novel, The Freedom Trap. Doubleday, Bagley’s American publisher, wanted a novel similar to The Freedom Trap that could be marketed in tandem with the film’s release in 1973. Bagley’s next novel, The Tightrope Men (1973), seemed to oblige this request since it is similar in theme to The Freedom Trap. But both thoughts are purely conjecture since, as far as I know, no one has uncovered any direct evidence to support either theory about Bagley’s motive for ditching Because Salton Died in favor of writing The Tightrope Men.
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Bill Kemp, a former Royal
Army officer, is a highly competent and well-paid insurance consultant working
for Western and Continental Insurance Co. Kemp is sent to the Caribbean Island
nation, and former British colony, Campanilla to investigate the death of the
well-heeled David Salton. Salton’s decomposing corpse was discovered in a small
boat off Campanilla’s coast, and the local coroner ruled the cause of death as a
heart attack. Kemp’s investigation is supposed to be nothing more than a simple
“check-the-box” operation, but things start unwinding when he arrives on the
island. According to a police captain, Kemp’s body was too far gone for a cause
of death to be determined. And Salton had enemies everywhere. He was involved
in island politics, and he’d been railing against the island casinos – rumored
to be operated by an organized crime syndicate – the banking industry, which
specialized in moving money discreetly for wealthy clients without paying much
local tax, and the current and very corrupt government.
Domino
Island’s origins as a whodunnit are visible in the finished book. The
mysterious death of David Salton. The wide spectrum of suspects. Kemp’s observations
of the police’s inadequate original investigation and his developing and then
discarding of suspects and murder theories. But the climactic resolution of the
mystery is far from traditional – although a portion is set in something like a
drawing room – with a bunch of action and a conclusion that would be difficult
for any reader to guess because there simply aren’t adequate clues in the
narrative. Which is okay, because Domino Island works well as an
adventure thriller through its exotic location, bullet-flying action, and
Kemp’s tough guy persona. Domino Island isn’t Bagley’s best, but it’s a
welcome addition for any of Bagley’s regular readers.
a little more about Domino Island… ·
After
Because Salton Died was found, Bagley’s literary estate allowed the
screenwriter Michael Davies to make the changes identified in the manuscript notes
and from the correspondence between Bagley and Knittel and Domino Island was
born. ·
According
to Philip Eastwood’s Afterword, Bagley’s “typescript, of approximately
89,000 words, bore on its title page: NEW
NOVEL BECAUSE
SALTON DIED (if
you think of a better, please do) And more than 47 years after it was written, the publisher did find a
different title: Domino Island. Check
out Amazon’s page for Domino Island For
more information about Desmond Bagley and his work, check out The Complete
Desmond Bagley at Amazon |
Thank you! This is incredible, welcome news to an old die-hard Bagley fan! I was one of those high school students, a reader, who tracked down every novel by favorite writers (found most of Harry Patterson's pseudonyms including Jack Higgins long before the Internet!) and read them, in order when possible. Alistair MacLean, Ian Fleming, Jack Higgins (etc), Duncan Kyle, James Leasor, and... Desmond Bagley. Loved his work so much that I'm slowly rereading those double editions from a few years ago, even though I still have the original paperbacks I saved up for in the early 70s. In any case, I'm thrilled to know there's a Bagley novel I had not known existed (and why), and I plan to read it. Well, when I'm done scanning some of the early Len Deightons and the Quiller series by Adam (Elleston Trevor) Hall, which I also loved. These brawny Brits helped lay my writer's foundation, which only stumbling on another Brit, James Herbert, and then some Richard Matheson, and an upstart by the name of King, Stephen King, would rattle. I like to think I've learned to embody both the thriller writers and those early modern horror masters in my own minor contributions to the vast genres of published adventure/crime/thrillers. Thank you for a great, revealing review that reminded me of some of my writer's roots! A fabulous find!
ReplyDeleteDomino Island's genesis is interesting, and while it's not Bagley's best, I had so much fun reading it. I found Higgins's when I was 14 and I dug in and found most of his pseudonyms, too. I loved finding the Gold Medal titles and I can still remember reading The Keys of Hell with that cool cover art by Gordon Johnson (I think) with Paul Chavasse clutching a chest wound and the heroine sighting down the barrel of a pistol. I haven't read nearly enough of Adam Hall's Quiller books, but I pick them up in paperback any time I see one.
DeleteBy the way, I liked your "Wolf" books published by Leisure Books back in the day. I miss Leisure and I thought (and still do) Leisure's horror line in the late-1990s to the mid-2000s was the best in the business.
Thanks for reading the post and commenting.