Our columnist on a handful of recently reissued crime novels, all of which are worth your time. Credit...Pablo Amargo Supported by By Sarah Weinman Most of my recent conversations about books have ...
You can probably count on the fingers of one hand the number of truly innovative works of crime fiction since Edgar Allan Poe: and one of them is The New York Trilogy by Paul Auster, whose death was ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Sughnen Yongo is a Midwest writer covering Black women, pop culture. Detective fiction is a creative sub-genre of crime and ...
Before espionage fiction took over, there was a rather different dapper, sleuthing figure who captured the imagination of literary fiends across the globe. Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes has ...
Sarah Weinman, who writes a monthly crime and mystery column for the Book Review, discussed her niche. By Katherine J. Igoe A murder in a Northern California coastal town. The unsolved case of a girl ...
This course will investigate forms of detective fiction- and discourses of mystery and crime more broadly-in literature, cinema and other media. We will rethink their development form the ...
WSET Level 3–qualified executive wine salesman and fifth generation Texan Eric D. Sanchez releases his debut crime novel in advance of Texas Wine Month in October. In Killer Vintage: A West Texas Wine ...