Thanks! Hope you enjoy them!Starting the IKS Gorkon series with A Good Day to Die. Enjoyed this crew a lot in Diplomatic Implausibility
Hmm.Grits hits the fan by Maddie Day
You'd have to go into the Agatha Christie stuff for more murder.Hmm.
1. Hmm Grits hitting a fan. Sounds messy and wasteful.
2. Why does detective fiction have to be murder whodunits? Out of the Holmes canon, surprisingly little, by opus-count, involves murder, and even by page-count, I'm pretty sure murder whodunits are in the minority (and there's even one short story that looks like a torture-murder, that turns out to have been a fatal encounter with a wild animal).
Now 158 pages into re-reading Inside Music, by Karl Haas. In spite of passages that look like they should have had some attention from a musically literate copy-editor, it is still, for my money, a far better music appreciation textbook tha the "industry standard," The Enjoyment of Music. Which could be used for drying out martinis.
Check out the TV series Johnathan Creek. It's a: how did they do it?You seem to be missing my point. By several kiloparsecs, I'd wager. My point is that murder is hardly the only crime suitable for detective fiction, and the whodunit format is hardly the only format available.
One of my favorite television detective series (one for which I have the entire series run on DVD) is Banacek. The title character is a very intelligent, and very wealthy (and proudly, FIERCELY Polish) insurance investigator who specializes in seemingly impossible disappearances. A rocket engine from the main arena of a trade show. A small fortune in cash from a locked display case in a Las Vegas casino full of people. A room-filling mainframe computer from a hospital outbuilding. An automobile on a flatcar, from a moving train.
And while Columbo (of which I've probably seen every episode) always involved murder, it was always a "howcatchem" format.
I cited the Homes Canon earlier because I have the complete Holmes Canon, which I've read several times. And I grew up on The Bobbsey Twins, in editions from long after the Stratemeyer Syndicate discovered (from their Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew series) that detective stories sell better than the sorts of stories used in the early editions of the earliest Bobbsey Twins novels. I have the complete series, including both the original and replacement versions of the two that were rewritten top-to-bottom. And being children's novels, it kind of goes without saying that none of them involved murder, very few involved any violence at all, and some (like a handful of Sherlock Holmes short stories) didn't even involve crime at all.
My point is that murder is hardly the only crime suitable for detective fiction, and the whodunit format is hardly the only format available.
One of my favorite television detective series (one for which I have the entire series run on DVD) is Banacek. The title character is a very intelligent, and very wealthy (and proudly, FIERCELY Polish) insurance investigator who specializes in seemingly impossible disappearances. A rocket engine from the main arena of a trade show. A small fortune in cash from a locked display case in a Las Vegas casino full of people. A room-filling mainframe computer from a hospital outbuilding. An automobile on a flatcar, from a moving train.
And while Columbo (of which I've probably seen every episode) always involved murder, it was always a "howcatchem" format.
I've found that my library has a very limited selection of Star Trek books, so I grab the sales, which gives me a good TBR.I wanted to go to my library to read some star trek books and I asked the librarian why they weren't any of Star trek newer books weren't listed in their online catalog and she told me they got rid of all their star trek books because no one was reading them or checking them out anymore. I find that really really disappointing. Lots of endless Star wars books and no Star trek book it sucks for Star trek fans who like me who want to read physical books.![]()
Have you ever watched Without A Trace? It focused on an FBI missing persons unit, and was just focused on figuring out what happened to the persons, and they had a pretty nice mixture of conditions they found them in. It's a little older, it ran from 2002-2009.You seem to be missing my point. By several kiloparsecs, I'd wager. My point is that murder is hardly the only crime suitable for detective fiction, and the whodunit format is hardly the only format available.
One of my favorite television detective series (one for which I have the entire series run on DVD) is Banacek. The title character is a very intelligent, and very wealthy (and proudly, FIERCELY Polish) insurance investigator who specializes in seemingly impossible disappearances. A rocket engine from the main arena of a trade show. A small fortune in cash from a locked display case in a Las Vegas casino full of people. A room-filling mainframe computer from a hospital outbuilding. An automobile on a flatcar, from a moving train.
And while Columbo (of which I've probably seen every episode) always involved murder, it was always a "howcatchem" format.
I cited the Homes Canon earlier because I have the complete Holmes Canon, which I've read several times. And I grew up on The Bobbsey Twins, in editions from long after the Stratemeyer Syndicate discovered (from their Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew series) that detective stories sell better than the sorts of stories used in the early editions of the earliest Bobbsey Twins novels. I have the complete series, including both the original and replacement versions of the two that were rewritten top-to-bottom. And being children's novels, it kind of goes without saying that none of them involved murder, very few involved any violence at all, and some (like a handful of Sherlock Holmes short stories) didn't even involve crime at all.
"Yes, dear, we're going to have a lovely murderpoo." -- Jessica Marbles (Elsa Lanchester) to her ancient nurse (Estelle Winwood), Neil Simon's Murder by Death
That sounds positively Joycean. Ulysses is an insanely accurate record of Dublin on June 16, 1904. The late writer Frank Delaney said something along the lines that one could rebuild Dublin just from the detail given in Ulysses.I can pull out a Bobbsey Twins novel (they hold up surprisingly well for adult readers, and one of them, The Red, White and Blue Mystery, is also a shockingly accurate travelogue of Colonial Williamsburg, so good that you can navigate the Historic Area just based on recollections of reading the book).
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.