The Oxford Book of American Detective Stories
Edited by Tony Hillerman and Rosemary Herbert.Published 1996.
Hardcover.
ISBN-10: 0195085817
ISBN-13: 978-0195085815
Description:
"Certain to be the standard anthology of
American detective stories for years to come." – Edward D. Hoch, editor of
The Year's Best Mystery and Suspense Stories.
"The Oxford Book of American Detective
Stories is indispensable to anyone interested in the form." – Robert B.
Parker, creator of the Boston private-eye, Spenser.
ISBN-13: 978-0195085815
Edgar Allan Poe's "Murders in the Rue
Morgue" launched the detective story in 1841. The genre began as a
highbrow form of entertainment, a puzzle to be solved by a rational sifting of
clues. In Britain, the stories became decidedly upper crust: the crime often
committed in a world of manor homes and formal gardens, the blood on the
Persian carpet usually blue. But from the beginning, American writers worked
important changes on Poe's basic formula, especially in use of language and
locale. As early as 1917, Susan Glaspell evinced a poignant understanding of
motive in a murder in an isolated farmhouse. And with World War I, the Roaring
'20s, the rise of organized crime and corrupt police with Prohibition, and the
Great Depression, American detective fiction branched out in all directions,
led by writers such as Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, who brought crime
out of the drawing room and into the "mean streets" where it actually
occurred.
In The Oxford Book of American Detective
Stories, Tony Hillerman and Rosemary Herbert bring together thirty-three tales
that illuminate both the evolution of crime fiction in the United States and
America's unique contribution to this highly popular genre. Tracing its
progress from elegant "locked room" mysteries, to the hard-boiled
realism of the '30s and '40s, to the great range of styles seen today, this
superb collection includes the finest crime writers, including Erle Stanley
Gardner, Raymond Chandler, Ross Macdonald, Rex Stout, Ellery Queen, Ed McBain,
Sue Grafton, and Hillerman himself. There are also many delightful surprises:
Bret Harte, for instance, offers a Sherlockian pastiche with a hero named
Hemlock Jones, and William Faulkner blends local color, authentic dialogue, and
dark, twisted pride in "An Error in Chemistry." We meet a wide range
of sleuths, from armchair detective Nero Wolfe, to Richard Sale's journalist
Daffy Dill, to Robert Leslie Bellem's wise-cracking Hollywood detective Dan
Turner, to Linda Barnes's six-foot tall, red-haired, taxi-driving female P.I.,
Carlotta Carlyle. And we sample a wide variety of styles, from tales with a
strongly regional flavor, to hard-edged pulp fiction, to stories with a
feminist perspective. Perhaps most important, the book offers a brilliant
summation of America's signal contribution to crime fiction, highlighting the
myriad ways in which we have reshaped this genre. The editors show how Raymond
Chandler used crime, not as a puzzle to be solved, but as a spotlight with
which he could illuminate the human condition; how Ed McBain, in "A Small
Homicide," reveals a keen knowledge of police work as well as of the human
sorrow which so often motivates crime; and how Ross Macdonald's Lew Archer solved
crime not through blood stains and footprints, but through psychological
insight into the damaged lives of the victim's family. And throughout, the
editors provide highly knowledgeable introductions to each piece, written from
the perspective of fellow writers and reflecting a life-long interest--not to
say love--of this quintessentially American genre.
American crime fiction is as varied and as
democratic as America itself. Hillerman and Herbert bring us a gold mine of
glorious stories that can be read for sheer pleasure, but that also illuminate
how the crime story evolved from the drawing room to the back alley, and how it
came to explore every corner of our nation and every facet of our lives.