• Maria Hebert-Leiter on detecting crime after Hurricane Katrina (including analysis of James Lee Burke and several stories from New Orleans Noir, ed. Julie Smith)
• Stephen Knight on the work of Australian author Peter Temple
• Linda S. Maier on similarities between Jorge Luis Borges (who wrote detective fiction under pseudonyms) and Wilkie Collins
• Pamela S. Saur on the novels of Austrian author Gerhard Roth that can be read as murder mysteries
• Rachel Schaffer on sources of moral authority in Julia Spencer-Fleming's series
• Sarah E. Whitney on emotional violence in the neglected novels of Mary Westmacott (aka Agatha Christie)
Holmes and Watson on the trail with the "staunch hound" Pompey. Illustration by Sidney Paget, "The Adventure of the Missing Three- Quarter" |
• Janice Shaw on Frank Moorhouse's use of whodunit techniques in Lateshows
• Elyssa Warkentin on women in two early fictionalizations of the Jack the Ripper murders
• Reviews of Thrillers: 100 Must Reads, Detective Fiction in a Postcolonial and Transnational World, and Investigating Identities: Questions of Identity in Contemporary International Crime Fiction
Particularly fascinating is Emanuela Gutkowski's explanation using linguistic theory of just how Christie fools the reader regarding the murderer's identity in The Murder of Roger Ackroyd (1926). Readers should not be daunted by the word theory; the author clearly explains each point and illustrates it with examples from Christie's book.
2 comments:
Sounds interesting.
?There are terrible howlers in Knight's article on Temple. Has he read the books? It's like a terrible undergrad essay. How awful it must be for Temple to be admired by someone so sloppy.
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