Martin Edwards & the Best Crime Books




Story of Classic Crime[30189]



Today we have a guest blogger – my good friend Martin Edwards, crime writer and crime fiction expert extraordinaire, is doing a blog tour for his new book:

The Story of Classic Crime in 100 Books


in which he lists the crime fiction that he thinks has been the most influential, important and enjoyable. What a brilliant idea for a book! Like all the other Golden Age crime fiction fans, I can’t wait to read it. I’m sure we’ll all be totting up how many of them we’ve read, and comparing notes…

So make sure you get hold of the book, and follow the blog tour – details below. I think it’ll be one of the most discussed items in GA’s recent history. Martin’s previous book on the Golden Age (on the blog here and here) was a complete winner, a truly monumental piece of work, and I think this one will be as good…



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Now, over to Martin:

As readers of this splendid blog know, Moira is a fan of classic crime fiction, and there’s quite a lot of overlap between her interests and mine (not that I’m an expert on clothes or fashion, as anyone who has checked my wardrobe will confirm.) And apart from the stories themselves, classic crime novels frequently offer an added visual bonus. Their dust jackets are very appealing. In good condition, nowadays, they are also very expensive these days, so much so that there’s a booming trade in facsimile covers, bought by collectors who can’t find the original jackets.

The British Library’s Crime Classics comprise a series of paperbacks, rather than jacketed hardbacks, but the cover artwork of the books is an important ingredient in their success. Rob Davies and his team at the Library hit on the idea of using railway poster artwork from the 30s and 40s for their reprints of obscure titles, starting with John Bude’s The Cornish Coast Murder and The Lake District Murder. The series took off from there, and J. Jefferson Farjeon’s Mystery in White, with its enticing cover showing a steam train stuck in a snowdrift, became a Christmas bestseller. Now a new book is added to the series every month, and many readers are collecting the whole set. The Crime Classics really do furnish a room quite beautifully!

My latest book, The Story of Classic Crime in 100 Books, is a companion to the series. It’s a jacketed hardback, but the wrapper is very much in the series style. As for the contents, well, the idea is to trace trends and development in the crime genre, starting with (who else?) Sherlock Holmes in The Hound of the Baskervilles, and coming up to the immediate aftermath of the Second World War, when Shelley Smith and Julian Symons, in Britain, and Patricia Highsmith, in the US, took crime writing in a fresh direction. I’ve divided the story (and I do set out to tell a story, rather than simply download facts) into themed chapters, covering topics from the “Great Detective” and the country house mystery to the role of irony in the crime novel, and books which deal with notions of justice.

The time-frame of the book includes, but isn’t limited to, the “Golden Age of Murder” which I explored in my previous study of the genre. I like variety, as a writer as well as a reader, so I’ve taken a different approach in this book, which complements, but doesn’t duplicate, its predecessor. And one huge visual bonus, in my opinion, is the presence of plenty of illustrations, most of them full-colour, not only of some fascinating classic dust jackets, but also a range of other bits and pieces – such as crime scene maps, and even musical notations! My hope is that anyone with a taste for classic crime will find plenty of interest between the covers, and also quite a bit that makes them stop for a moment and reflect: “Hey, I never knew that!”

Moira, thank you for hosting this guest post. Over the course of ten days, I’m travelling around the blogosphere, talking about different aspects of the book, and of classic crime. Here’s a list of all the stops on my blog tour:

Wed 28 JuneLesa’ Book Critiques - https://lesasbookcritiques.blogspot.com
Thurs 29 JuneThe Rap Sheet - http://therapsheet.blogspot.com
Fri 30 JunePretty Sinister Books - http://prettysinister.blogspot.com
Sat 1 JulConfessions of a Mystery Novelist (interview) - https://margotkinberg.wordpress.com
Sun 2 JulEurocrime - http://eurocrime.blogspot.co.uk
Mon 3 JulTipping My Fedora - https://bloodymurder.wordpress.com
Tue 4 JulDesperate Reader - http://desperatereader.blogspot.co.uk
Wed 5 JulClothes in Books - http://clothesinbooks.blogspot.co.uk
Thu 6 JulEmma’s Bookish Corner - https://emmasbookishcorner.wordpress.com
Fri 7 Jul - Random Jottings - http://randomjottings.typepad.com


The Story of Classic Crime in 100 Books is published in the UK on 7 July by the British Library, and in the US on 1 August by Poisoned Pen Press

























Comments

  1. Delighted to see Martin here! I think one of the real appeals of this book is that it's got something for everyone. For the reader who's newer to crime fiction, it's a great place to s tart exploring that productive and influential era. For the crime fiction fan, there are plenty of 'I never knew that!' moments, too. Well done, and much success with it!

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    1. Oh great, thanks for that Margot - and now we know: everyone should buy a copy...

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  2. Moira, thanks for hosting Martin. I have read very little of Golden Age crime fiction and this book will both inform and entertain me. I also know that Martin writes very well.

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    1. I think we are all going to really enjoy this book!

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  3. This sounds great, and I particularly look forward to the chapter on the country house mystery.

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    1. Yes me too. I have my copy now and have just started it.

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  4. Love your enthusiasm Moira, but probably not a book for me.

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    1. Maybe not - not quite the book for everyone after all!

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  5. I have enjoyed it hugely and will be reviewing it soon.

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    1. Oh good, will look forward to that! I have started it. Just as good as I expected.

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  6. I've read several of the British Library Golden Age mysteries, and while a little uneven, I've enjoyed them very much*. And I do love the Railway poster covers -- they're wonderful. Off to pre-order!

    * It's hard to read books of this era and not realize how much cell phones have changed things.

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    1. Yes, that's exactly how I feel - they are not the best crime books ever, but full of atmosphere and very enjoyable. And oh yes, phones. Doesn't bother me so much in a 30s books - it's the poor authors who wrote crime just before the cellphone era who read oddly.

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  7. Or watching movies just as mobile phones were becoming widespread. People look like they're holding a brick up to their ears. Hilarious.

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    1. Yes indeed, it's hard to believe they shrank so much and so quickly. And presumably our lovely modern smartphones will look equally ridiculous in 10 years time...

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