Featuring History of Mystery/Detective Fiction and Other Literary Ramblings of Elizabeth Foxwell
Monday, February 23, 2026
Score to Christie's Witness for the Prosecution (1982).
As John Bettencourt notes in Film Score Friday, Caldera has released John Cameron's score for Agatha Christie's Witness for the Prosecution (dir. Alan Gibson, 1982). This TV production features Beau Bridges, Michael Gough, Wendy Hiller, Deborah Kerr, Donald Pleasence, Ralph Richardson, and Diana Rigg. For more information or to listen to some clips, go here.
Monday, February 16, 2026
Film music by Dmitri Tompkin.
As Scott Bettencourt notes in Film Score Friday, Intrada has issued From New York to Hollywood: Music for Albertina Rausch and Classic Films, performed by the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and featuring works by composer Dmitri Tompkin for movies such as Lost Horizon and It's a Wonderful Life. Also included is "Fisherman's Jive" from the film noir D.O.A. (1949).
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| Edmond O'Brien in D.O.A. (1949) |
Monday, February 09, 2026
New mystery audiobooks from Librivox.
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| John Dickson Carr's It Walks by Night |
New free audio mystery releases from Librivox.
- It Walks by Night. John Dickson Carr's debut novel. Wrote the 22 Aug 1930 [Christchurch, NZ] Star, "Mr. Carr carries us along breathlessly .... this original crime story is well constructed, eminently readable, and calculated to give satisfaction to those fond of a thrill").
- The Continental Op, The Maltese Falcon, and Red Harvest by Dashiell Hammett. The 25 Feb. 1950 Lewiston [ME] Evening Journal mentioned that the Continental Op was based on a Pinkerton detective who worked with Hammett.
- The Law of the Four Just Men by Edgar Wallace. Wrote the 3 Apr. 1926 Otago [NZ] Daily Times, "It is an illustration of Mr. Wallace's skill that he is able to cast over the story that air of verisimilitude which carries the reader along on a wave of excitement."
Monday, February 02, 2026
James Sallis, 1944–2026.
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| Nathan Ashman's James Sallis: A Companion to the Mystery Fiction |
He wrote to me after James Sallis: A Companion to the Mystery Fiction by Nathan Ashman had won the Edgar Award for best biographical/critical work (I edited the book), expressing his appreciation for Nathan's hard work and mentioning that his email box had been filling up with congratulations after the Edgar win (It was the first Edgar win for a book in the series, although the Ian Rankin companion and the James Ellroy companion had been Edgar nominees). He also related a funny story: when he was reading the companion, he discovered to his horror that he had forgotten about three short stories discussed by Nathan, and he was in the midst of compiling a collection of his "complete" short stories. He sent an SOS to his editor, rooted around in his files, found the stories, and managed to include them in the volume. Said he, "So Nathan, and you, have to take the blame for those three."
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| James Sallis' biography of Chester Himes, called "smart, conscientious, often stylish" by Robert Polito in NYT |





