TALKING ABOUT DETECTIVE FICTION

By P.D. James

New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2009.

First U.S. edition, first printing.

Fine in a fine dust jacket.

"P. D. James examines the genre from top to bottom, beginning with the mysteries at the hearts of such novels as Charles Dickens’s Bleak House and Wilkie Collins’s The Woman in White, and bringing us into the present with such writers as Colin Dexter and Henning Mankell. Along the way she writes about Arthur Conan Doyle, Dorothy L. Sayers, Agatha Christie (“arch-breaker of rules”), Josephine Tey, Dashiell Hammett, and Peter Lovesey, among many others. She traces their lives into and out of their fiction, clarifies their individual styles, and gives us indelible portraits of the characters they’ve created, from Sherlock Holmes to Sara Paretsky’s sexually liberated female investigator, V. I. Warshawski. She compares British and American Golden Age mystery writing. She discusses detective fiction as social history, the stylistic components of the genre, her own process of writing, how critics have reacted over the years, and what she sees as a renewal of detective fiction—and of the detective hero—in recent years."--dust jacket flap.

Small octavo.
198 Pages; Bibliography and Suggested Reading.



PLEASE VIEW

OUR STORE

FOR MORE GREAT FIRST EDITION BOOKS

THANKS!