Baker Street Irregulars discussion
Off Topic
>
What are you currently reading?
message 251:
by
Barbara
(new)
Mar 04, 2020 10:28AM

reply
|
flag

Green was an American writer of detective fiction, writing from the late 19th century into the 1920s. Though she didn't write the first female sleuth (often credited with it, but wasn't the first) her amateur sleuth Amelia Butterworth is cited as the precursor to Miss Marple, and other senior lady sleuths, and her socialite sleuth, Violet Strange, is cited as a precursor to the "girl detective", specifically Nancy Drew.
"The Affair Next Door" was strong on the main character and had some good plot twists - too long, as were many novels of the era - but Green should not be overlooked in discussions of 19th/ early 20th century detective fiction.

This one's a stand-alone. The setup is that a man wakes up in a hospital with amnesia, one woman claims to be his wife, another claims to be a cousin and he may or may not have something to do with the theft of some rare emeralds. Published in 1933 originally, but her books are being rediscovered and many are easy to get on Kindle or in inexpensive reprints.


Well-researched, detailed, sometimes grim in its depiction of London's underclass, but great cast, well-plotted, one of the more original historical series to come around.


he did a great job on the lord of the rings but the hobbitt was not necessary to be 3 parts and too many changes!

I picked this up because it sounded like it was in the same vein as my recent find, the Lizzie Thomas, John Webber books of Anthony Oliver. They're present day, a series that is only 4 books long, and they are without question the best English countryside mysteries - maybe among the best mysteries - I've picked up in a long time. Oliver is an obscure figure, and most believe the author to be a Welsh actor who worked n the 30s and 40s, and then turned to his real love, which was antique pottery - Lizzie Thomas is Welsh and antiques play a big part in the books. She is a middle-aged part time housekeeper and cook for a retired detective. Intricate, well-plotted with a very well-defined supporting cast.
Absolutely first-class writing and storytelling. Unfortunately, the books are long out of print, and the first in the series - The Pew Group - is unaffordable. However, you might be able to get your hands on mmpbs of the other three: The Property of a Lady, The Elberg Collection, Cover-Up, for a fair price.

Mrs. Jeffries is a housekeeper and policeman's widow. One thing I did wonder was whether Mrs. Hudson - there was something Mrs H-ish about Mrs. Jeffries - was a policemans widow.

MX Publishing has been doing anthologies of new Holmes fiction, mostly short stories, but some of the volumes will include essays, poems, short plays. Full disclosure: I've got stories in four of the most recent editions (Part XII through Part XXIII).
Most of them are based on other cases, or new cases set in Conan Doyle's time frame. A few have themes, like the Christmas mysteries, or cases that appear to have a supernatural element.

Going through the Dorcas Dene stories now. Dene is another "female Sherlock", an actress-turned-sleuth who becomes a "lady detective" to make ends meet after her husband loses his sight and she has to support him and her mother. The character is more interesting than the stories overall, but worth checking out.







I have read a lot of female detectives of the late 19th/early 20th century - Miss Butterworth, Loveday Brooke, Lois Cayley, Mrs. G, Miss Silver - but I think Dene is the best of the lot, often more interesting than the puzzles themselves.




I think "Lamb to the Slaughter" was made into a short movie about 15 years ago - it was also used for an episode of one of those suspense shows from back in the day, Alfred Hitchcock or Twilight Zone.



One thing about Conan Doyle - he even managed to make the longer expository passages suspenseful. These tales were, IMHO, overly long and the payoff just wasn't worth the time spent reading them. I actually didn't finish the book

Got a bit bogged down midway, but decent enough for me to look for other Wells books. Apparently Wells was inspired to write mysteries after reading Anna Katherine Green - I mentioned Green's "The Affair Next Door" earlier in this thread.

Overly long for its material, but enjoyable for people who like to go back to the mysteries of that era. (This was written in the early 1900s.)

Steve writes Dan Brown-esque historical conspiracy theory stuff. I'm sure there is a name for this genre but I have n..."
i have read all his books! they are great!

First, Thunderhead, another good book by the dynamic duo Douglas Preston and [author:Lincoln..."
i agree!

Liked it a lot less than the previous two I'd read, though generally I've enjoyed going through mysteries of that era overall. Wells gravitated toward the locked-room mystery, and the Holmes/Wiggins inspiration for her Fleming Stone and his sidekick Fibsy are pretty obvious.

A real find. These were excellent short mysteries/puzzles, most with a devilish twist at the end. Highly recommended.


5 Star - Sherlock Holmes and the Eye of Heka
Knight Errant, the Singular Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
4 Star - Most of the MX Anthologies (a few got 5 stars)
The Strange Case of Eliza Doolittle
The Spider's Web
3 Star. Sherlock Holmes and the Beast of the Stapleton's
The Revenge of the Hound
Sherlock Holmes and the Christmas Demon
The House of Silk
Sherlock Holmes and the Autumn of Terror
Holmes Entangled
2 Star. The Fifth Heart
The Sherlock Holmes Stories of Edward D. Hoch


5 Star - Sherlock Holmes and the Eye of Heka
Knight Errant, the Singular Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
Thanks for the nod. "Knight Errant" was 3 novellas, been out of print awhile. It was actually accepted so quickly that I felt I would have liked to do one more pass - but I always feel like that!
I also liked "The Eye of Heka."


Right now, I'm reading "Necropolis," a Victorian era thriller by Basil Copper. Published in 1980, but it reads like a Victorian-style novel.
"The Witness on the Roof", by Annie Haynes, who had a very short career (started late and passed away too soon); she has been compared to Margery Allingham, Carolyn Wells, Dorothy Sayers.



Lately I love the idea of psychological suspense, women-centered mystery more than I'm liking the actual books.

Not as good as the recent MX anthologies I have been able to pick up lately.
I reviewed it and gave it 2 stars - just really disappointed.

The portrayal isn't very authentic, and there is no Watson but there is a young assistant named Harry Waxman. The plot involves the near 40 murders of the infamous Jack the Ripper and a wager between Holmes and a police detective named Murphy to see who will capture the killer.
The translation is quite awkward and occasionally hilarious but it was an entertaining digression into early Sherlockiana.



This book is one of the titles that I can't find as it's out of print !

I have read several accounts that one of the London detectives had taken Joseph Bell and Arthur Conan Doyle to the crime scenes and given them access to the files, they then put their own conclusions in separate envelopes and then handed them to the detective who claimed they both suspected the same individual.
I recently finished reading 'Portrait of a Killer - Jack the Ripper, Case Closed' by Patricia Cornwell which is a criminal investigators look at the evidence. It's an interesting read and worth it even if only for the forensic detail and photographs. Without any wish for spoilers (as it's on the cover) she has compelling evidence that Jack the Ripper was a student of Whistler called Walter Sickert. Not only was he responsible for the Whitechapel murders but the earlier similar murders know as the Camden Town murders.
Wouldn't these be a good starting point for a Sherlock Holmes novel, perhaps a challenge for an author to accept ?
Books mentioned in this topic
Thunderhead (other topics)The Columbus Affair (other topics)
Blood on the Tracks: Railway Mysteries (other topics)
Collected Stories of O. Henry: Revised and Expanded (other topics)
Lincoln in the Bardo (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Douglas Preston (other topics)Steve Berry (other topics)
Shashi Tharoor (other topics)
O. Henry (other topics)
Anne Frank (other topics)
More...