11-20-2010, 07:31 PM | #151 |
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Certainly the category of "cozy mystery" is almost exclusively by women and, frankly, for women: often there is a romantic secondary story.
But police procedurals still have a significant number of male authors and target a broader audience: Ian Rankin comes to mind. I think perhaps thrillers / suspense titles are a pretty mixed audience: James Patterson comes to mind. And then, alas, there are too many supernatural tinged / overwhelmed stories with vampires in every shadow. |
11-21-2010, 09:11 AM | #152 | |
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11-21-2010, 09:34 AM | #153 |
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As a retired criminalist, I prefer to stay away from most literary attempts to re-create forensic evidence analysis used 'with poetic license' in many of the newer crime thrillers. Cornwell is not too off-base, usually, but many, such as the current run of CSI programs on U.S. television, are too far out. Give me a good old mystery anytime and forget trying to write of things about which too little is known with truth and accuracy....just my preference.
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12-22-2010, 02:17 PM | #154 |
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Love crime fiction
Gosh where to begin. Love the obvious Patterson, Connelly, John Hart, Lee Child, Greg Iles, Especially like Tess Gerritsen. Check this blog for other good authors.
www.murderati.com/ Last edited by flhden; 12-22-2010 at 02:26 PM. Reason: Addittion of text |
01-12-2011, 01:04 AM | #155 |
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Brighton's Detective Superintendent Roy Grace makes a third appearance in Peter James Not Dead Enough, published in 2007 (there are now six titles in the series). It's a fairly long read, with multiple story lines, and three murders. I did find it bogging down by the mid-point but, around 3/4s in, and with the solution to the murders clear, the pace actually picked up as all the loose ends came together.
Brian Bishop is a succesful entrpreneur, with a flat in London and gorgeous house (and wife) in Brighton. When Katie Bishop is found by the housekeeper one morning quite dead, wearing a gas mask on her naked body, Brian's world begins to collapse. With DS Roy Grace on the case, more evidence suggests Bishop's complicity and he has an alibi: he was 60 miles away, sound asleep, when the murder of his wife occured. Or was he? As more clues emerge, the details of the Bishop's family life don't add up. And then a second murder occurs, and Bishop appears tied to that one as well. I enjoyed much of the narrative, and the dialogue range true for most of the characters. Sometimes I found the short chapters annoying -- over 100 -- which James uses like a film-maker, cross-cutting between storylines. Grace is in almost every scene, but it grew tiresome for patches. The plotting is clever although for my taste a little over-plotted and a tad too many co-incidences. But it was a worthwhile read and, for a police procedural, relatively light on highly detailed descriptions of gorey moments. Available here for Amazon Kindle for under $8; not available for Kobo in Canada. The mass paperback is around $10 in Canada. |
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01-12-2011, 02:35 AM | #156 | |
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01-12-2011, 10:12 PM | #157 |
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In Apr 1931, the pulp magazine publisher Street and Smith issued the first title in The Shadow series, The Living Shadow, which turned into 282 of 325 official stories penned by Walter B Gibson under the pseudonym Maxwell Grant. Though the idea actually for The shdoaw started as a narrator's introduction to a radio series Detective Story Hour in July 1930, it wasn't long before the hit pulp magazine generated its own radio series, a few years later starring a young and "undiscovered" Orson Welles as "the voice".
The opening scene is memorable: a young man is about the commit suicide leaping off a bridge in New York City but is rescued even after his feet have left the bridge by a cloaked figure. In a ride back to town, the young man must commit to "serve" his resucuer -- no questions asked! -- in exchange for his life and a handsome future lifestyle. His benefactor turns out to be The Shadow, a mysterious crime-fighting vigilante. In this story, concerned with a crime syndicate based in New York's Chinatown, current day readers may cringe at stereotypes ... but part of the charm of the stories is that they transport you back to an urban landscape just starting to feel the effects of the depression, and an age with WWI still fresh in its memory and the prohibition already in force. Condé Nast is the current owner of the Street and Smith publications. At this time, not a single one of the over 300 The Shadow novels is in e-print, although a number of the novels are in licensed specialty small press reprint paper editions and second hand stores carry mass paperback copies issued in the 1970s and beyond. You may also be successful finding a Darknet Digital Edition. |
01-13-2011, 05:24 PM | #158 |
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Not sure if he's been mentioned yet, but I highly recommend Chester Himes. He's one of the few black writers in the noir-crime genre, and a contemporary of Hammett and Chandler (considered their equal by many). Most notable are his books in the Harlem Detective series, such as A Rage in Harlem and The Real Cool Killers. It's the adventures of a couple detectives named "Coffin Ed Johnson" and "Gravedigger Jones." It's really hardboiled stuff, crazy violent, and of considerable literary quality to boot.
I think he wrote at least one book from prison where he was serving time for armed robbery. |
01-13-2011, 05:54 PM | #159 | |
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I had not done much reading in the last 10 years, 1 or 2 books a year maybe, until I bought my first e-reader A Sony prs 300, now a kindle 3. The last 2 years I am back to over 30 books a year and loving it again. It's great when you find an author that you enjoy and there is a whole series to catch up on. There is so many books in my Amazon wish list that I can't wait to get to. Found this site the other day so I can try a few more authors that I had never heard of. http://www.lansing.lib.il.us/readali...rs.html#Reichs |
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01-13-2011, 07:40 PM | #160 |
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01-13-2011, 11:14 PM | #161 | |
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01-15-2011, 09:32 PM | #162 |
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Some I haven't seen mentioned much... who I think are excellent...
Daniel Woodrell (WINTERS BONE) Don Winslow (SAVAGES, CALIFORNIA FIRE AND LIFE) Val McDermid, who is definitely not cozy Karin Slaughter, ditto |
01-16-2011, 06:59 AM | #163 |
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Michael Connelly (just finished The Overlook today as it happens)
Mo Hayder (she'll scare the hell out of you, especially The Treatment, but start with her first book Birdman) John Sandford Elmore Leonard Minette Walters Jeffery Deaver Robert Crais Carl Hiaason R D Wingfield Martin Cruz Smith Last edited by JKU; 01-16-2011 at 08:17 PM. |
01-17-2011, 04:44 AM | #164 |
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What's Michael Connelly like? What style of crime?
Peter Temple is brilliant. Michael Robotham I like too. They write so beautifully. I am also currently enjoying Arnaldur Indridason. |
01-17-2011, 05:03 PM | #165 |
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I don't think Ken Bruen has been mentioned here. I'm nearing the end of his Once Were Cops (my first from him) and it's sharp, true neo noir crime fiction that doesn't hold back. No flash, just raw crimes warping minds and a lean storyline. Whoa. It's a nice though grim diversion from my usual diet of historical (1930s/40s mostly) espionage-related crime/mystery novels. I'll have to do more.
Steve |
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