The life of crime Detecting the history of mysteries and their creators
Book - 2022
In the first major history of crime fiction in fifty years, The Life of Crime: Detecting the History of Mysteries and their Creators traces the evolution of the genre from the eighteenth century to the present, offering brand-new perspective on the world's most popular form of fiction.
- Subjects
- Genres
- Literary criticism
- Published
-
London :
Collins Crime Club
2022.
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Physical Description
- 724 pages ; 25 cm
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 623-643) and indexes.
- ISBN
- 9780008192426
- Introduction
- 1. Revolution: Origins
- 2. Mystery and Imagination: Edgar Allan Poe and the first detective stories
- 3. Guilty Secrets: Sensation novels
- 4. Detective Fever: Wilkie Collins, Charles Dickens, and early detective fiction
- 5. Poacher Turned Gamekeeper: The French Revolution: Vidocq, Gaboriau and their worldwide influence
- 6. The Great Detective: Sherlock Holmes
- 7. Rogues' Gallery: Raffles and other villains
- 8. The Nature of Evil: G. K. Chesterton and faith and sin in detective fiction
- 9. Plot Minds: Marie Belloc Lowndes and Edwardian-era detective fiction
- 10. The Science of Detection: R. Austin Freeman and scientific mysteries
- 11. Had-I-But-Known: Mary Roberts Rinehart and 'women in jeopardy' novels
- 12. War and Peace: The First World War and detective fiction
- 13. Treacherous Impulses: Early spy fiction
- 14. The Mistress of Deception: Agatha Christie
- 15. American Tragedy: Van Dine and the American Golden Age
- 16. Superfluous Women: Queens of crime
- 17. Challenging the Reader: Detection and game-playing
- 18. Locked Rooms: 'Impossible crime' mysteries
- 19. The Long Arm of the Law: Early police stories
- 20. Blood-Simple: Dashiell Hammett
- 21. Murder and its Motives: True crime
- 22. Twists of Fate: Francis Iles and ironic crime fiction
- 23. The Sound of Mystery: Radio mysteries
- 24. In Lonely Rooms: Raymond Chandler
- 25. Brothers in Crime: Patrick and Bruce Hamilton
- 26. Cracks in the Wall: Georges Simenon and European crime fiction
- 27. Sensation in Court: Legal mysteries
- 28. California Dreaming: Crime writers and Hollywood
- 29. Carnival of Crime: Mystery and the macabre
- 30. Waking Nightmares: Noir fiction
- 31. Dagger of the Mind: Casebook novels
- 32. Whose Body?: Whowasdunins: mysteries about the victim's identity
- 33. Private Wounds: Transitioning from the Golden Age
- 34. Out of this World: Traditional detective fiction evolves in the United States
- 35. Perfect Murders: Crime and the end of empire
- 36. Mind Games: Post-war psychological suspense
- 37. Deep Water: Patricia Highsmith
- 38. Forking Paths: Borges and postmodernism
- 39. Bloody Murder: Julian Symons and crime fiction criticism
- 40. People with Ghosts: Post-war private investigators and the legacy of Vietnam
- 41. Killing Jokes: Comedy and crime
- 42. Literary Agents: Post-war spy fiction
- 43. Nerve: Adventure novels and thrillers
- 44. Outsider in Amsterdam: Dutch crime
- 45. Whodunwhat?: Theatrical murder
- 46. Black and Blue: British police fiction
- 47. Home Discomforts: Domestic suspense
- 48. Mystery Games: East Asian detective fiction
- 49. Early Graves: Difference and diversity
- 50. A Suitable Job for a Woman: Women writing about private investigators
- 51. A Feeling for Snow: Scandinavian crime writing
- 52. Fatal Inversions: Ruth Rendell and modern psychological suspense
- 53. Dark Places: American police fiction
- 54. Long Shadows: Historical crime
- 55. A Taste for Death: P. D. James and the truth about human character and experience
- Select Bibliography
- Acknowledgements
- Index of Titles
- Index of Names
- Subject Index
Review by Library Journal Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review