<![CDATA[Library Mix - Adult Mix]]>Sun, 20 May 2012 02:37:48 -0800Weebly<![CDATA[Not-so-mysterious statistic: Women love reading mysteries]]>Sat, 25 Feb 2012 23:35:05 -0800http://librarymix.com/2/post/2012/02/not-so-mysterious-statistic-women-love-reading-mysteries1.htmlPicture
Anna Katharine Green, Library of Congress
by Alicia Rudnicki, Library Mix

Edgar Alan Poe is credited with creating the modern detective mystery in 1841 when his short story “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” was published in Graham’s Magazine. It wasn’t long before American women began penning mysteries as well.

According to a 2011 survey published by the mystery writer organization Sisters in Crime, women purchase 68 percent of mystery novels. Plus, women write many of these novels and have been doing so since Victorian times.

Women Detective Collection
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro is home to the Robbie Emily Dunn Collection of American Detective Fiction, which encompasses 200 writers, 85 percent of whom were women. It contains a copy of the 1867 novel The Dead Letter by Seeley Regester, a pseudonym for Metta Victoria Fuller Victor. Perhaps the most amazing aspect of this publication was that Victor raised nine children yet still found time to write. Unfortunately, UNCG describes The Dead Letter as deadly boring.

But a woman became the most famous American mystery writer of her age 11 years later. In 1878, Anna Katharine Green wrote a detective story so popular, that it became “the first bona fide American bestseller,” according to Mystery Scene magazine, which refers to Green as the “mother” of American mystery.

Green was the daughter of an attorney and drew on what she learned from her father in writing The Leavenworth Case: A Lawyer’s Story. UNC notes that the novel contained the first literary use of ballistics testimony. Similar to the fictional mystery writer, J.B. Fletcher, of the "Murder, She Wrote" television series, UNCG says, Green “was often asked to help solve real crimes.”

For many years, Mystery Scene notes, Yale University law classes used The Leavenworth Case to demonstrate “the perils of trusting circumstantial evidence.” Nowadays, Green is mostly unknown; but The Leavenworth Case can be found online at the Gutenberg Project for readers who want to delve into the mysteries of the detective genre’s development.

Revealing a short list of favorites
This article is what you call a “hub” story, the spokes of which are the mini reviews of mysteries by some of my favorite women writers. They are posted in alphabetical order by author on the Adult Mix page, but many may be of interest to teen readers.

All of these authors are well worth acquaintance if you enjoy strong plotting, in-depth characterization and settings so real that you feel you are there. These are writers who will take you away from wherever, whatever and whoever is bothering you. Some are relatively new to my nightstand while others are long-time, recurrent visitors. I crossed paths with all, by serendipity, at the public library.

Margaret Coel — The Spider's Web
Irene Fleming — The Edge of Ruin
Shamini Flint — A Most Peculiar Maylaysian Mystery
Tana French — Faithful Place
Sue Grafton — V Is for Vengeance
Elly Griffiths — The Crossing Places
Lene Kaaberbol and Agnette Friis — The Boy in the Suitcase
Rett MacPherson — The Blood Ballad
Sara Paretsky — Breakdown

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<![CDATA[Mini Review: Margaret Coel — The Spider's Web]]>Sat, 25 Feb 2012 23:22:54 -0800http://librarymix.com/2/post/2012/02/mini-review-margaret-coel-the-spiders-web.htmlPicture
Courtesy of Penguin Group
by Alicia Rudnicki, Library Mix

The Spider's Web, by Margaret Coel
Penguin Group (USA), 2010,
ISBN 978-0-425-23660-4

Coel is the author of two series, my favorite being her Wind River mysteries, which involve a Jesuit priest, Father John O’Malley, and Vicky Holden, a lawyer who specializes in representing cases involving her Arapaho tribe. Most of the stories take place in the Arapaho and Shoshone Wind River Reservation of Wyoming.

In Coel’s novels, you can taste the dust or frost in the air and feel the dry grass and hard-packed earth underfoot. Her skills at setting, characterization, plotting and interpreting culture are powerful. The Spider’s Web focuses on the puzzling death of a young man as he prepares for the rigors of a sacred celebration.

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<![CDATA[Mini Review: Irene Fleming — The Edge of Ruin]]>Sat, 25 Feb 2012 23:22:42 -0800http://librarymix.com/2/post/2012/02/mini-review-irene-fleming-the-edge-of-ruin.htmlPicture
Courtesy of Minotaur
by Alicia Rudnicki, Library Mix

The Edge of Ruin, by Irene Fleming
Minotaur, 2010
ISBN 978-0-312-57520-5

As the title and the cover art of this novel indicates, it involves a Hollywood cliffhanger of an ending. Fleming also has written a variety of novels under the name Kate Gallison. The Edge of Ruin gives readers a fascinating picture of the cut-throat, silent-movie days of Thomas Edison and other early film producers.

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<![CDATA[Mini Review: Shamini Flint — A Most Peculiar Malaysian Murder]]>Sat, 25 Feb 2012 23:22:30 -0800http://librarymix.com/2/post/2012/02/mini-review-shamini-flint-a-most-peculiar-malaysian-murder.htmlPicture
Courtesy of Piatkus Books
by Alicia Rudnicki, Library Mix

A Most Peculiar Malaysian Murder, by Shamini Flint
Piatkus Books, 2009
ISBN 978-0-749-92975-6

Flint is a children’s author as well as a writer of adult mysteries. A Most Peculiar Malaysian Murder is the first novel in her Her Inspector Singh series. Singh is an overweight, rumply, taciturn police detective who is, nevertheless, charming due to his essential goodness. Inspector Singh may be in a bad mood about having to leave his home in Singapore to solve a celebrity murder in Malaysia, but he is a dogged investigator who strives to set the world right.

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<![CDATA[Mini Review: Tana French — Faithful Place]]>Sat, 25 Feb 2012 23:22:19 -0800http://librarymix.com/2/post/2012/02/mini-review-tana-french-faithful-place.htmlPicture
Courtesy of Viking
by Alicia Rudnicki, Library Mix

Faithful Place, by Tana French
Viking, 2010
ISBN 978-0-143-11949-4

French’s gritty, working-class Dublin doesn’t seem all that far away from the mean streets of blue-collar Boston in Dennis LeHane’s mysteries. It is no surprise that French chose  LeHane's Mystic River as one of her top 10 favorite mysteries in an article for the Guardian. Similar to so many of LeHane’s stories, French’s tales are driven by dark, long-buried secrets of friends and family.

So far, French has published three novels, all interconnected through related characters, but not really a series. Each is haunting in its own way. In Faithful Place, a detective learns that although you can go home, it may be more like a visit to Hell than to a safe harbor.

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<![CDATA[Mini Review: Sue Grafton — V Is for Vengeance]]>Sat, 25 Feb 2012 23:21:51 -0800http://librarymix.com/2/post/2012/02/mini-review-sue-grafton-v-is-for-vengeance.htmlPicture
Courtesy of G.P. Putnam's Sons
by Alicia Rudnicki, Library Mix

V Is for Vengeance, by Sue Grafton
G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 2011
ISBN 978-0-399-15786-8

Grafton’s novels occur in alphabetical order from “A” to “V.” A master of plotting, characterization, and deep detail, Grafton never disappoints. Her central character, private investigator Kinsey Milhone, is a loner who specializes in insurance fraud but often finds herself reluctantly pursuing cases far afield. Milhone doesn’t know how to say “No” to questionable clients or friends.

In V Is for Vengeance, it is Milhone’s chance observation of a shoplifting incident that sends her in harm’s way with organized crime. But before she has a clue to the trouble ahead, it appears that the shoplifter has resolved her sins by jumping off a bridge. Stunned by his dead girlfriend's secret life of crime and her apparent suicide, the shoplifter's lover hires Milhone to untangle the truth. Meanwhile, Milhone helps a former jailbird friend hide from the danger that is tailing him, but which he refuses to explain. These bad omens are just the beginning of the black eyes, broken nose and bloody mess that  Milhone faces in novel "V."

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<![CDATA[Mini Review: Elly Griffiths — The Crossing Places]]>Sat, 25 Feb 2012 23:21:37 -0800http://librarymix.com/2/post/2012/02/mini-review-elly-griffiths-the-crossing-places.htmlPicture
Courtesy of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
by Alicia Rudnicki, Library Mix

The Crossing Places, by Elly Griffiths
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010
ISBN 978-0-547-22989-8

Dr. Ruth Galloway is an archeology professor and a forensic specialist the police call on when bones show up in unexpected places. Griffiths recreates the haunting gloom of eastern England’s Norfolk coast and marshlands. In The Crossing Places, she intertwines the horrors of ancient history with the terror of a contemporary crime involving a long-missing child. It is the first novel in the Investigator Ruth Galloway series. Reading the books in order is helpful.

I placed the third book in Griffiths’ series, The House at Seas End, on hold at my local library. It may be a long wait, because multiple copies at two other nearby library districts are also checked out.

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<![CDATA[Mini Review: Kaaberbol and Friis —The Boy in the Suitcase]]>Sat, 25 Feb 2012 23:21:18 -0800http://librarymix.com/2/post/2012/02/mini-review-kaaberbol-and-friis-the-boy-in-the-suitcase.htmlPicture
Courtesy of Soho Press
by Alicia Rudnicki, Library Mix

The Boy in the Suitcase, by Lene Kaaberbol and Agnette Friis
Soho Press, English translation 2011
ISBN 978-1-569-47981-0

Nina Borg is a nurse and an ardent advocate for the underdog, who works with refugee children in Denmark. It is her do-good nature and persistence that causes a long-estranged friend to ask Nina to pick up a suitcase from a public locker in the Copenhagen train station.

The suitcase is unusually heavy. When Nina opens it, she discovers a toddler, alive but powerfully drugged. Soon Nina is living on the run, temporarily abandoning family and work to protect the boy from the evil that chases him.

The Boy in the Suitcase is compelling and will cause readers to search for more translations of works by this deft writing team. Unfortunately, there is little information about Kaaberbol and Friis online. This is their first novel in the Borg series and was translated to English by Kaaberbol. Similar to Sara Paretsky’s work it focuses heavily on fighting for social injustice.

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<![CDATA[Mini Review: Rett MacPherson — The Blood Ballad]]>Sat, 25 Feb 2012 23:21:02 -0800http://librarymix.com/2/post/2012/02/mini-review-rett-macpherson-the-blood-ballad.htmlPicture
Courtesy of Minotaur Books
by Alicia Rudnicki, Library Mix

The Blood Ballad, by Rett MacPherson
Minotaur Books, 2008
ISBN 978-0-312-36222-5

This is the eleventh book in this Missouri author's series of Torie O'Shea cozies. Victory “Torie” O’Shea is a genealogist, town historian and booster, tour guide, amateur detective, and devoted, wisecracking mother. She excels at prying into the past to explain the present. In this one, Torie digs up a dangerous secret — literally, long buried — about local country music royalty connected to her family.

Trouble always begins in MacPherson’s stories during ordinary activities, as in The Blood Ballad when Torie and a companion flee from bullets at dusk during a community bird-watching competition. Stopping to take a breath, they get sprayed by a skunk. But then the story really takes off when an antique trunk hurtles downhill toward them, depositing a dead, bloody body. MacPherson's mayhem and Americana along the Mississippi would be fun to watch on “Masterpiece Mystery.”

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<![CDATA[Mini Review: Sara Paretsky — Breakdown]]>Sat, 25 Feb 2012 23:20:48 -0800http://librarymix.com/2/post/2012/02/mini-review-sara-paretsky-breakdown.htmlPicture
Courtesy of Putnam
by Alicia Rudnicki, Library Mix

Breakdown, by Sara Paretsky
Putnam, 2012
ISBN 978-0-399-15783-7

V.I. Warshawski is the daughter of a Polish-American policeman and an Italian immigrant opera singer. She grew up tough on Chicago’s South Side, an area that the private investigator and lawyer hasn’t strayed far from as an adult and which always figures in the Warshawski stories. Breakdown is a fast-paced assault on tabloid journalism empires,  right-wing politics amid mucky electioneering.

As with a number of the books in this Library Mix series of mystery mini reviews, Paretsky’s novels are often driven by terrible, deeply hidden secrets. Always timely, Paretsky tracks American popular culture as well as politics. Breakdown touches on the current teenage passion for paranormal fiction. As the novel opens, a group of girls who are barely teenagers giggle as they film each other with cell phones in the dark of night. They are dancing around a tomb in an abandoned graveyard during a creepy hazing ritual. But they soon discover that the “vampire” they may have seen is more likely a murderer.

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