Clare T. Walker

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Michael Palmer and the Medical Thriller

October 30, 2021 by Clare T. Walker

 

Michael Palmer poses at his home in Swampscott, Mass., in this 2002 photo.

The world of popular fiction lost one of its best craftsman eight years ago: on Wednesday, October 30th, 2013, Michael Palmer passed away. He was one of the innovators of the thriller genre: he wrote medical thrillers — intense, fast-paced mysteries featuring a medical doctor as the Everyman hero who gets caught up in a perilous adventure.

I read many of his novels as I was preparing and writing my own variation on the genre — a veterinary medical thriller, in which the medical Everyman is a small-town animal doctor who finds herself mixed up in a corporate whistle-blowing scheme against a big, bad pharmaceutical company.

Palmer was known for being an extraordinarily generous writer, so naturally helpful and encouraging that he included his own agent’s contact info on his website and invited aspiring authors to send in their work to the agency. His website also features excellent “how-to” tips for beginning and experienced writers alike, not just in the medical thriller genre but in all types of storytelling. Unfortunately, his website has been taken off-line since his death. I, for one, would welcome the posthumous re-publication of his website articles.

He also conquered drug and alcohol dependency and became an advocate for his colleagues in medicine who faced similar struggles. Read this brief but touching tribute from a fellow medical professional, the former CEO of a large urban hospital.

Books of his that I read and enjoyed include:

Fatal

The Patient

Critical Judgment

Extreme Measures

…with thanks to Chicago-area author Joelle Charbonneau for introducing me to Palmer’s novels.

Links:

a tribute to Michael Palmer on The Big Thrill.

The Big Thrill (the website of the International Thriller Writers association.

 

Filed Under: Authors, Genre Studies Tagged With: biotech thriller, biotech thrillers, medical thriller, medical thrillers, Michael Palmer, veterinary medical thriller

book review: Watership Down by Richard Adams – my favorite book

September 23, 2021 by Clare T. Walker

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Watership Down (1972 by Richard Adams) was my favorite FAVorite FAVORITE childhood book!! I read it when I was in 5th grade. The cover and title confused me: I thought it was going to be a Navy-type book, about a ship sinking or something, and didn’t get why there was a rabbit on the cover. (I didn’t know that a “down” is a hill.)

Nevertheless, I gave it a try and was blown away. That paperback copy literally fell apart from use. I have since owned a few different editions, my current one being a very nice hardcover.

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The book is a straight up children’s adventure story — with talking rabbits, yes, but they are real rabbits, not cartoon rabbits. They do rabbity things and think rabbity thoughts. As a child I appreciated it on this level. As an adult, I realized with delight that Adams had also woven fascinating political and social commentary into the story. Not only that, but as a feat of fantasy world-building and culture-creation, this book excels. Absolutely a wonderful book!

All the world will be your enemy, Prince of a Thousand enemies. And when they catch you, they will kill you. But first they must catch you; digger, listener, runner, Prince with the swift warning. Be cunning, and full of tricks, and your people will never be destroyed.

The setting of Watership Down is a real place:

  • Sandleford, near Newbury, is in the county of Berkshire
  • Watership Down is in Hampshire (just south of Berkshire)
  • Laverstoke and Whitchurch are also in Hampshire. The River Test runs through these towns.
  • The four-county area of Berkshire, Hampshire, Oxfordshire, and Wiltshire is home to the North Wessex Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). It includes numerous downs, including our Watership, and many of the famous chalk horses carved into the hills of the English countryside.

This map of the England pinpoints the location of West Berkshire. Just south of it is Hampshire, which is home to the coastal cities of Portsmouth and Southampton. It makes sense that a lost seagull might find his way into the story!

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Here’s a short video showing scenes from the real-life locations that inspired the book, including the beech hanger, Nuthanger Farm, and that famous hill, Watership Down.

Ironically, as of the date of this news clip (Mar. 2012), a site near Sandleford, the opening location of the book, was slated for development.

Richard Adams and illustrator Aldo Galli were featured at the Whitchurch Arts Show in November, 2012. Adams died in 2016, on Christmas Eve, at the age of 96.

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Watership Down, in the distance

To buy the book, click the bunny!

Filed Under: Authors, Reviews Tagged With: book review, Richard Adams, Watership Down

“In a hole in the ground, there lived a hobbit”

October 11, 2019 by Clare T. Walker

A review of Dome Karukoski’s 2019 biopic, Tolkien

“In a hole in the ground, there lived a hobbit.” So begins J.R.R. Tolkien’s masterpiece of heroic fantasy, The Hobbit, first published in 1937 and continuing with the epic story of the Ring of Power in The Lord of the Rings trilogy.

Was Professor Tolkien referring in some way to himself? Perhaps. As a soldier serving in the British army during World War I, he spent a lot of time underground in the trenches, and it is well-known that his experiences in the Battle of the Somme inspired some of the bleakly iconic settings of Middle-Earth: the Dead Marshes and Mordor, especially. And his early childhood in the English countryside no doubt inspired The Shire, the idyllic homeland of the hobbits.

These inspirations of Tolkien’s imagination are amply and beautifully depicted in the 2019 biopic Tolkien, directed by Dome Karukoski and starring Nicholas Hoult and Lily Collins.

The film begins with the Tolkien family in England, shortly before young Ronald (as J.R.R. is called) and his brother lose their mother to diabetes. Under the watchful guardianship of a priest who had been a close family friend, the Tolkien boys grow up in the home of a kindly woman who takes in orphans. There, Ronald meets Edith Bratt, with whom he becomes romantically attached, and in school he meets fellow students with whom he becomes close friends. His romance with Edith, his career as a student at Oxford University, and his “fellowship” with his pals from school all come to a screeching halt with the onset of the Great War, and young Tolkien’s creative, romantic soul is stretched to the breaking point.

In my opinion, the filmmakers made a major creative misstep: it seemed like they couldn’t decide what story they were trying to tell. Is Tolkien a coming-of-age war story? Is it a buddy movie? Is it a romance? The answer is that it tries to be all three and triply misses the mark. Tolkien’s military career was not very exciting: he became so ill with “trench fever” that he had to be sent home and the connections between Tolkien’s boyhood friendships and the fellowship depicted in his Legendarium seemed a bit forced. By contrast, his early life as an orphan and his on-again off-again relationship with Edith are the stuff that Dickensian melodramas and heart-string tugging romances are made of. This is what I think the filmmakers should have concentrated on.

I was also disappointed but not surprised by the dismissive and subtly negative treatment of Tolkien’s devout Catholic faith.

Still, as a huge devotee of all things Tolkien, I really enjoyed the movie. It was fun to catch glimpses of Middle-earth in sketches tacked to his bedroom wall and see his imagination come to life through clever animation, especially in the battlefield scenes.

The film’s niche appeal and sub-optimal creative choices led to its disappointing and brief theatrical run this past summer, but it has recently been released on DVD and would make a great addition to any fan’s video library.

Additional resources:

Tolkien DVD

Clare and her daughter Hannah discuss the movie on their podcast, Splanchnics: (Season 1, Episode 1)

The Hobbit Special commemorative edition, featuring a reproduction of the First Edition cover, which was painted by Tolkien himself.

The Lord of the Rings 3-volume boxed set with iconic illustrations by Alan Lee.

A Hobbit, A Wardrobe, and A Great War by Joseph Laconte. A fascinating literary biography about how World War I shaped the lives, fortunes, and futures of two of the greatest British authors, J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis.

The Fellowship: the Literary Lives of the Inklings by Carol Zaleski and Philip Zaleski. This one is not just about Tolkien and Lewis–tons of interesting stuff about the other members of “the Inklings,” the informal Oxford University literary club of which of Tolkien and Lewis were the principal members.

We provide these resources to help you find and enjoy the things we talked about on this episode! Note that some of these may include “affiliate” links to books and other products. When you click through and purchase, the price of the item is the same for you. In fact, most of the time you’ll get a discount! But the company gives us a little somethin’ somethin’ to say “thanks” for sending you their way! This helps you enjoy the website and the podcast EVEN MORE by eliminating intrusive advertisements. Thanks for clicking!

 

Filed Under: Authors, Reviews Tagged With: biopic, Dome Karukoski, film, hobbits, J.R.R. Tolkien, Lily Collins, Lord of the Rings, Middle-earth, movies, Nicholas Hoult, The Hobbit, Tolkien

C.S. Lewis book discussion series at Wheaton College’s Wade Center

August 11, 2017 by Clare T. Walker

Hey, Chicago area peeps! Did you know that we have, in our little old suburb of Wheaton, Illinois, one of the largest repositories of C.S. Lewis stuff in the world? It’s at the Wade Center on the campus of Wheaton College (corner of Washington St. and Lincoln Av. in Wheaton). This fall they are having a Saturday morning book discussion on The Letters of C.S. Lewis. Starts Sat. Sep 9 and goes through Sat. Nov 18. It’s FREE! Email the Wade Center at wade@wheaton.edu or call 630.752.5908 to RSVP.

And don’t forget to acquire a copy of the book! 

Filed Under: Authors, Events, Literature

book review published: The Inklings

January 26, 2016 by Clare T. Walker

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Just a quick heads up: here’s a book review of mine that appeared in the National Catholic Register:

“Inklings Introduced” http://www.ncregister.com/site/article/inklings-introduced (2/2/16)

Enjoy!

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Authors, Literature, Reviews Tagged With: book reviews, C.S. Lewis, Charles Williams, J.R.R. Tolkien, Owen Barfield, The Inklings

finalizing novel ms & binge reading c.s. lewis

August 27, 2015 by Clare T. Walker

one of my favorite sections of my bookshelf at home

one of my favorite sections of my bookshelf at home

Sorry. Cannot write much at the moment. Am putting finishing touches on final draft of novel hopefully to be released in September and simultaneously binge reading C.S. Lewis in preparation for class I’m teaching beginning mid-October. Please send chocolate. That is all.

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Filed Under: Authors, Events

reading aloud at the No Shush Salon

June 25, 2015 by Clare T. Walker

 

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Tonight (June 25, 2015) I read a chapter from Startling Figures, volume 1 at the No Shush Salon, the monthly open mic night at the Clarendon Hills Public Library.

For the past year and a half, the Clarendon Hills Public Library has been hosting an open mic night called the No Shush Salon on the last Thursday of the month. There it gives the microphone and the attention of the audience to anyone who wants to read from a published work or a work in progress — song, poem, short story, essay, novel — you get the idea. The speaker gets about 10 minutes and the chance to learn how others experience his or her work. (“Clarendon Hills No Shush Salon to showcase author,” June 11, 2015 by Sara Clarkson for the Chicago Tribune.)

The featured author tonight was local Chicago writer Brendan Detzner, author of the short story collection Scarce Resources whose other short fiction has appeared in the story anthologies Exigencies, Book of Dead Things, and One Buck Horror, volume 5, as well as various magazines.

I bartered with Brendan — a copy of Startling Figures for a copy of Book of Dead Things. Hopefully it won’t be too scary for me.

Brendan is also the founder of Bad Grammar Theater, a monthly open mic for authors of “Horror, Fantasy, Pulp Fiction, Science Fiction, and the Unexpected.”

Clarendon Hills librarian Jeanine Vaughn runs the No Shush Salon. She read from her novel-in-progress and was also handing out free notebooks: nice hardcover ones, the kind with a snappy elastic ribbon to keep it closed. No author in his or her right mind would say “no” to that!

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So I got to hang out with some amazing writers, got two “freebies,” and before I left I checked out The Hobbit, part 3: The Battle of Five Armies.

Here’s a challenge: say “No Shush Salon” five times fast. I can barely say it one time slow! 🙂 Thanks, Jeanine, for putting together this chance for local authors to share their work!

Links & Info

No Shush Salon facebook page

No Shush Salon blog

Bad Grammar Theater meets every 3rd Friday at Powell’s Books (University Village location: 1218 S. Halsted, Chicago, on the campus of the University of Illinois Chicago) from 6 pm to 9 pm. Upcoming dates: July 17th, August 21st, September 18th.

Brian Detzner’s website

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Authors, Creativity, Events

massive Lewis and Tolkien geek-out at Wheaton College

January 28, 2015 by Clare T. Walker

On January 7, 2015 the air temperature was a whopping 1 degree Fahrenheit, and that’s without the wind chill factor. Whatever. Here in Chicago we eat that kind of weather for breakfast, especially when compared to the weather almost exactly one year previously:

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So instead of spending my day off wrapped in a warm, fleecy blanket sipping cups of steaming, hot herbal tea, I went with 3 students who are members of SPLANCHNICS,[1] a young adult fiction-writing workshop I lead.

Where did we go? To see the wardrobe, of course. Not just any wardrobe, but The Wardrobe, as in the one built by C.S. Lewis’s grandfather, kept in the home Lewis grew up in, and later moved to his home near Oxford University and kept in the front hall. The one that inspired The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. And we also saw the very desk upon which J.R.R. Tolkien wrote, edited, typed and illustrated The Hobbit. These wonderful objects of literary memorabilia are in the permanent collection of the Marion E. Wade Center, on the campus of Wheaton College in Wheaton, Illinois.

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outside the Wade Center on Jan 7, 2015

The collection began in the 1950s, when Dr. Clyde S. Kilby, a professor of English at Wheaton College, began corresponding with C.S. Lewis. They wrote each other letters right up until Lewis’s death in 1963. By that time, Kilby was also friends with Tolkien, and actually assisted in the compilation and editing of The Silmarillion.

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a letter written by C.S. Lewis to Clyde S. Kilby. TWHF refers to Lewis’s 1956 novel “Till We Have Faces.”

Kilby donated his Lewis letters to Wheaton College, and they were originally housed in the college library. In 1974, the family of the late Marion E. Wade (a Chicago-area businessman and fan of C.S. Lewis) donated the funds to create a dedicated center for the growing collection that by then included letters, manuscripts, books, and artifacts from seven authors the collectors considered of monumental importance to modern British literature and Christian thought: C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, Charles Williams, G.K. Chesterton, Dorothy L. Sayers, Owen Barfield, and George Macdonald. At the Wade Center, they are affectionately called “the Seven,” (as in “the Seven have left Minas Morgul.” Just kidding.)

a letter written by J.R.R. Tolkien

a letter written by J.R.R. Tolkien

a letter written by Dorothy L. Sayers

a letter written by Dorothy L. Sayers

a letter to Dorothy L. Sayers, written by G.K. Chesterton

a letter to Dorothy L. Sayers, written by G.K. Chesterton

The Wade Center, nestled unobtrusively in the cozy campus of Wheaton College, contains one of the most complete collections of C.S. Lewis documents and memorabilia in the world, including hundreds of letters, over 2,000 volumes from his personal library, and many of his personal effects:

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The Wardrobe is definitely a highlight of the visit…

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A young person trying to get to Narnia through the wardrobe!

The Center also has one of the largest collections of “Chestertonia,” (G.K. Chesterton stuff), and all sorts of things owned by Tolkien and Sayers and the other authors.

The desk upon which Tolkien wrote, revised, typed and illustrated The Hobbit

The desk upon which Tolkien wrote, revised, typed and illustrated The Hobbit

The Kilby Reading Room, however, is the real treasure of the Wade Center. They have at least one copy of every book written by the seven authors, vast scholarship by and about them, hundreds of letters, original manuscripts, inscribed and annotated books from the authors’ personal libraries—it’s a vast collection. I was so entranced by the authors’ handwritten letters that I bought myself a fountain pen. When I got home, I started reading The Silmarillion, and rewatched the special features documentaries about Tolkien in my Lord of the Rings DVDs.

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The Seven are:

Owen Barfield, 1898-1997

Owen Barfield

Owen Barfield

Not well-known by the general public, but his writing and scholarship had an enormous influence on both Lewis and Tolkien. He was one of The Inklings, the informal literary society of which Lewis, Tolkien, and Charles Williams were also members. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe is dedicated to Barfield’s daughter, Lucy.

G.K. Chesterton, 1874-1936

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G.K. Chesterton

Prolific author of fiction, essays, political and social commentary, poetry, Christian apologetics, you name it. For many years, he gave very popular talks on BBC Radio. He’s famous for wittily turning common sayings on their heads. (“If a thing is worth doing, it’s worth doing badly.”) His most well-known works include the Father Brown mysteries, The Man Who Was Thursday, and Orthodoxy. His book The Everlasting Man influenced C.S. Lewis profoundly.

C.S. Lewis, 1898-1963

C.S. Lewis

C.S. Lewis

The author whose works inspired Professor Kilby to start the collection at Wheaton College. He was a professor of English literature at Oxford University, and, like Chesterton, wrote Christian apologetics (Mere Christianity, The Screwtape Letterx, others) and gave well-received talks and radio addresses. His fiction includes The Chronicles of Narnia, a trilogy of science fiction novels known as the Space Trilogy, and an excellent fantasy novel called Till We Have Faces.

George MacDonald, 1824-1905

George Macdonald

George MacDonald

MacDonald is the only one of the seven who was not a 20th century author. He wrote in the 19th century. He’s not a household name like a few of the others, but he had an enormous influence on Lewis and Chesterton especially. He’s sometimes called “the father of the Inklings.” His children’s books are At the Back of the North Wind, The Princess and the Goblin, and The Princess and Curdie, and his fantasy novels are Phantastes and Lilith. C.S. Lewis wrote, “Picking up a copy of Phantastes one day at a train-station bookstall, I began to read. A few hours later, I knew that I had crossed a great frontier.” G.K. Chesterton said that MacDonald’s The Princess and the Goblin “made a difference to my whole existence.”

Dorothy L. Sayers, 1893-1957

Dorothy L. Sayers

Dorothy L. Sayers

Dorothy L. Sayers is familiar to many mystery readers as the creator of amateur sleuth Lord Peter Wimsey. Her translation of Dante’s Divine Comedy is considered one of the best. As a woman in those days, she was not admitted to the exclusively male ranks of The Inklings, although she was friends with C.S. Lewis and Charles Williams. She, like Lewis, and Chesterton, was a “lay theologian” and wrote Christian non-fiction, The Mind of the Maker being the most notable example. Her essay “The Lost Tools of Learning” serves as a manifesto for the classical education and home-schooling movements.

J.R.R. Tolkien, 1892-1973

J.R.R. Tolkien

J.R.R. Tolkien

With the publication of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien might be single-handedly responsible for the entire genre of modern fantasy literature–or at least its 20th-century revival. He was a linguist, a philologist, and a professor at Oxford University. He worked on his magnum opus on and off for decades. The Silmarillion was published after his death (and we owe his youngest son Christopher a great debt for all the work he did compiling his father’s piles and piles of notes, fragments, and stories, some finished and some unfinished, into publishable form.) What I find interesting about Tolkien is that he did not set out to be a fiction author, but he created Elf languages just for fun and then constructed a fictional world to explain the development of the languages. As an exercise in world-building, Middle-Earth is an incredible achievement.

Charles Williams, 1886-1945

Charles Williams

Charles Williams

Williams made his living as an editor at Oxford University Press, but his real profession–his true vocation, perhaps–was scholar and author. He was a “lay academic:” he wrote, published and lectured on scholarly topics even though he lacked a university degree. He was also an accomplished poet and author of “supernatural thrillers” (The Place of the Lion, War in Heaven, Descent Into Hell, others). And, like Lewis, Chesterton, and Sayers, he was a “lay theologian:” Descent of the Dove: A History of the Holy Spirit in the Church and He Came Down From Heaven.

one of my favorite sections of my bookshelf at home

one of my favorite sections of my bookshelf at home

LINKS

The Marion E. Wade Center An excellent and absorbing website. For each author, they have a “Where to Begin Reading” section, which is nice because some of the authors a bit obscure, and some are so prolific one hardly knows what to read first. The links I’ve provided below are not exhaustive, but they’ll get you started.

Official Website of the Owen Barfield Literary Estate

The American Chesterton Society

Into the Wardrobe: A C.S. Lewis Website C.S. Lewis’s stepson Douglas Gresham has written an introduction to this site.

The Golden Key (George MacDonald site)

The Dorothy L. Sayers Society

The Tolkien Society

The Charles Williams Society

“A Literary Pilgrimage” An article I wrote for the National Catholic Register.

“Things Altogether Unexpected” a video produced by the Wade Center in 2012 to commemorate the 75th anniversary of The Hobbit.

[1] SPLANCHNICS stands for Society for the Preservation of Literature, the Arts, Numinosity, Culture, Humor, Nerdiness, Innovation and Creativity in Storytelling. Sometimes I forget what all the letters stand for and substitute “Inspiration” for “Innovation.”

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The use of the word “splanchnic” as an anagram name for a club is not original with me. It was the name chosen in the 1980s by a literary society under the sponsorship of Dr. U. Milo Kaufman, professor of English at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. They came across the word “splanchnic” during a game of Dictionary and it just snowballed from there. (“Splanchnic” is a real word — it refers to a major artery and vein in the body that bring blood to and from the intestines.) Yes, I was a member, but I joined the group after they had already chosen the name. I took two classes from Dr. Kaufman: Science Fiction and The Literature of Fantasy. They were two of my favorite college courses ever. I still have my notes.

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Filed Under: Authors, Literature

acclaimed mystery writer P.D. James dies

November 30, 2014 by Clare T. Walker

P.D. James

P.D. James (1920-2014)

P.D. James, one of my favorite authors, died Thursday, November 27, 2014, at 94 years of age. The world has truly lost one of the greats—she was a master of the “classical detective story,”[1] an accomplished author of a fine novel of dystopian speculative fiction,[2] and, most recently, a beautifully written light mystery set in the world of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice,[3] which, coincidentally, I finished reading the day before she died.

I also just finished teaching a class on Popular Fiction (as opposed to the other kind, that is, Literary Fiction). P.D. James was one of the few authors whom we discussed more than once, because of her ability to write in more than one genre.

I highly recommend her books, and when you read the detective novels pay particular attention to how she worked within the stringent confines of the genre. Her creative genius lay in her ability to be innovative and original even when adhering to the formulas and conventions of the classical detective novel.

These formulas and conventions include:

  • The Hero — the detective — employs reason, logic, and ingenuity to solve the crime. He (or she) works by brain-power alone (unlike his counterpart in the Hard-boiled detective novel, who makes frequent use of brute force). Exceptions exist, of course, but the classical detective typically is neither physically attractive, nor sexually active. He may be weak or even disabled, and is often eccentric, fastidious or in some other way aloof from other people. Many classical detectives work independently of the official authorities of the law, solving cases for their own personal reasons. (examples of “classical” detectives: Sherlock Holmes, Adam Dalgliesh, Miss Jane Marple, Hercule Poirot).
  • Even though the hero of the story is usually the detective—with whom the reader matches wits!—the story is frequently told from the point-of-view of the detective’s “sidekick,” — a close friend, relative, colleague or acquaintance of the detective. This character is never as smart as the detective. Indeed, his job is to ask the dumb questions and to say things like, “I don’t understand” and “I still don’t understand.” (examples: Dr. John Watson, Sherlock Holmes’s friend and roommate; Captain Arthur Hastings, Hercule Poirot’s colleague who has “a talent for pointing out the obvious;” Detective Inspector Neele, a professional cop who serves as the foil for Miss Jane Marple)
  • The action of the story takes place on a small stage with distinct edges, such as a charming English village, a large manor house in the country, a remote island resort, a cruise ship, or a transcontinental passenger train. The setting represents a world and a social structure with clear, comprehensible boundaries, into which the murder intrudes like a distasteful aberration.
  • The story ends with the detective cleverly unmasking the criminal and explaining how he solved the puzzle. Once the distasteful business is concluded, the remaining characters all return to their upper middle-class lives, confident in the knowledge that God is an Englishman and that all is right with the world. To the reader, the book (if well-written) has been a satisfying and diverting intellectual exercise.

Of course, there are more conventions and formula elements, but I’ll save all that for later. For now, I just want to acknowledge the passing of a great craftsman in one of the most entertaining genres of popular fiction:

The Rt. Hon. Phyllis Dorothy, Baroness James of Holland Park (Aug 3 1920—Nov 27 2014). May she rest in peace.

Links:

http://www.cnn.com/2014/11/27/showbiz/obit-pd-james/index.html

This article touches on several conventions of the classical detective story.

 

http://www.randomhouse.com/features/pdjames/index.html

The official P.D. James website. Contains excerpts and a trailer from Death Comes to Pemberley, a biography of James, a complete list of all her books, and a page of “Mystery Writing Lessons.” (The mystery-writing page contains a link to James’s 2004 essay “Why Detection?”)

 

http://www.patheos.com/blogs/watchinggod/2014/11/an-earnest-appreciation-of-p-d-james/

Includes an interesting quote from James about how crime fiction confirms a certain worldview about the universe. Those of you who took my class may recall that one of the functions of the classical detective story is to confirm this worldview.

 

Books by P.D. James:

Classical detective mysteries featuring Adam Dalgliesh

Cover Her Face, 1962

A Mind to Murder, 1963

Unnatural Causes, 1967

Shroud for a Nightingale, 1971

The Black Tower, 1975

Death of an Expert Witness, 1977

A Taste for Death, 1986

Devices and Desires, 1989

Original Sin, 1994

A Certain Justice, 1997

Death in Holy Orders, 2001

The Murder Room, 2003

The Lighthouse, 2005

The Private Patient, 2008

 

Classical detective mysteries featuring Cordelia Gray

An Unsuitable Job for a Woman, 1972

The Skull Beneath the Skin, 1982

 

Standalone novels

Innocent Blood, 1980

Children of Men, 1992

Death Comes to Pemberley, 2011

 

Non-fiction

The Maul and the Pear Tree: The Ratcliffe Highway Murders, 1811, 1971 (true crime, co-authored with T.A. Critchley

Time to Be in Earnest, 2000 (autobiography)

Talking About Detective Fiction, 2009

 

[1] Highlights of James’s career in this genre include Cover Her Face (1962), Unnatural Causes (1967), An Unsuitable Job for a Woman (1972), A Taste for Death, 1986), Devices and Desires (1989).

[2] Children of Men (1992)

[3] Death Comes to Pemberley (2011)

Filed Under: Authors Tagged With: classical detective, mystery, P.D. James

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The Keys of Death – a veterinary medical thriller

Startling Figures: 3 stories of the paranormal

Tooth and Nail: a novelette

Look At Me: a novelette

The Fellowship: The Literary Lives of the Inklings

Dungeons & Dragons Player’s Handbook, 5th edition

Homeland: The Legend of Drizzt – Book 1 by R.A. Salvatore

Exile: The Legend of Drizzt – Book 2 by R.A. Salvatore

Watership Down by Richard Adams

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