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Wednesday, January 13, 2010

The Mystery Corner/Mystery Firsts

One of the things I do at the Library is to contribute a column for our newsletter. I thought I would put the latest one up. If anyone would enjoy older columns let me know and I will post them. Remember, I am not an expert so I apologize ahead of time for any errors.

At the start of a new year it might be fun to look at some of the "firsts" in mystery writing. These are old and you may have to ask for them through inter-library loan.

1. First "inverted" mystery - An inverted mystery is one in which you know who the criminal is from the beginning; the question is how do they get caught. The very first one was published in 1858, in France, but the first English one was The Singing Bone by R. Austin Freeman (1912). It's part of the Dr. Thorndyke series and is still enjoyable.

2. First mystery story - In 1704 the first English translation of Arabian Nights was published. One of the stories, The Three Apples, is really the first murder mystery, but most people would say the first was Edgar Allen Poe's Murder in the Rue Morgue (1841).

3. First "locked room" mystery - John Dickson Carr is considered the master of the "locked room" genre, but the first to appear was The Big Bow Mystery by Israel Zangwill (1891). It is an excellent tale of about 100 pages.

4. First American woman mystery writer - Anne Katherine Green, educated at Poultney College, in Vermont, began a prolific writing career, in 1878, with her series detective Ebenezer Gryce of the New York Police Department in The Leavenworth Case.

5. First Native American detective - Move over Tony Hillerman! The laurels here go to Rex Stout's detective, Tecumseh Fox, in Double for Death (1936).

6. First African-American detective - Although the first to reach real popularity were Chester Himes characters "Coffin" Jones and "Gravedigger" Johnson, the first was Perry Dart in Rudolph Fisher's The Conjure-Man Dies in 1932.

7. First police detective in English fiction - Inspector Bucket in Charles Dickens' Bleak House (1853).

8. First female detective - There was an 18th century "Miss Marple" named Mlle de Sudery, but our first English language female detective is Miss "G", in The Female Detective by Andrew Forrester, Jr. (1864).

9. First time the investigator is the guilty party - Gaston Leroux, well known for The Phantom of the Opera, wrote Mystery of the Yellow Room in 1907. It's also a "locked room" mystery and a very good read.

10. First English mystery with multiple narratives - The Beast Must Die by Nicholas Blake (1938). It had two first-person narrators. Bleak House (1853) had multiple narratives but not all were first person.

Next month it's Oscar time so we'll look at Mysteries That Have Gone To The Movies.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Series Books & 23 Things

How many of you are still writing 2009~ It is hard to believe that it is almost the middle of Jan. already. It is true that the older you get the faster time goes by.

Technically, I have decided not to do Flicker (or is it Fliker?) for personal matters. It is easy enough to send a photo when I want to. We have photo's on the library facebook page. I have also decided not to do RSS. I tried it and wound up with way to much incoming info and have chosen to stay with bookmarks. I can open what I feel like, no problem.

I did try to comment on a blog, but when I thought I clicked Publish, or whatever it was, I must have clicked something else, because my comment disappeared into the either, never to be seen or heard of again. I was commenting on an item bemoaning the popularity of "series". The writer was thinking of books for young readers with predictable plots, inferior writing, etc, etc. but I still have to ask - what's wrong with "series"?

I wouldn't want to do without them! How well I remember my father getting quite angry with me when I failed to respond to his call to come and set the table for dinner even though I was only three feel away! I was deep into Nancy Drew and honestly did not hear him. I have remained a mystery fan, and love series mysteries. You watch a character develop over time and see their lives change - as you do with your "alive" friends. It's true, there can be poorly written series, but there are poorly written non-series books (as we all know).

There are books we read for enlightenment and there are books that we read for "comfort". One is not "good" and the other "bad". Comfort books provide a great relaxation in a stressful world. They may not all be "great literature" - indeed, perhaps none might be called such. But, you know what? Some "great literature" while good for us, can also be terribly boring. I, for one, say - Up with Series!

And that is my soapbox for today.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

We Enter the Blogging World

Ten years into the 21st century I've decided to join the blogger community. Nothing like keeping up to date! Our Vt Dept of Libraries created a program to help Library Trustees learn all these social networking aids and so here I am.