Kansas Public Radio's Film Music Friday recently featured the music of composer David Raksin, including his haunting theme for Laura (1944) and music for The Big Combo (1955).
From left: Gene Tierney, Clifton Webb, and Dana Andrews in Laura (1944)
Featuring History of Mystery/Detective Fiction and Other Literary Ramblings of Elizabeth Foxwell
Kansas Public Radio's Film Music Friday recently featured the music of composer David Raksin, including his haunting theme for Laura (1944) and music for The Big Combo (1955).
From left: Gene Tierney, Clifton Webb, and Dana Andrews in Laura (1944)
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Rod Serling testifies before the FCC in Jan. 1960. |
• Fisher, founder of the Nancy Drew Sleuths group, discusses "95 Years of Nancy Drew"
• Fisher on collecting Nancy Drew
• Stacia Deutsch, who has written under the Nancy Drew pseudonym Carolyn Keene
• Erika Head on using Nancy Drew in the classroom
Steve Aldous and Gary Gillies, authors of McFarland's Harry O Viewing Companion, clear up misconceptions about the beloved PI series and discuss the program's original San Diego location in a two-part episode of Ed Robertson's TV Confidential radio show. Part 1 includes a clip of the late David Janssen talking about the series and some clips from Harry O episodes. Part 2 covers the roles of Farrah Fawcett (as Harry's girlfriend Sue Ingham) and Les Lannom (as aspiring criminologist Lester Hodges) as well as the favorite episodes of Aldous, Gillies, and Robertson.
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Martin Sheen in Pursuit (1972) |
Malden, MA, has honored its native son, author-attorney Erle Stanley Gardner, unveiling a mural by Fred Seager on May 19 that pays tribute to the Perry Mason mysteries. It is located on the Bike to the Sea bike path in Malden. Gardner was born in Malden in 1889, moving to California with his family when he was 10 years old.
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Mural by Fred Seager in Malden, MA, honoring the Perry Mason mysteries by Erle Stanley Gardner. Photo: Malden's Ward 3 Councillor Amanda Linehan |
As Scott Bettencourt writes enthusiastically in Film Score Friday, John Cameron's score to The Mirror Crack'd (dir. Guy Hamilton, 1980, based on the Agatha Christie novel, featuring Angela Lansbury as Miss Marple, Elizabeth Taylor, and Rock Hudson) will soon be issued by Caldera. For more information or to listen to some clips, go here.
The hardworking Nathan Ashman (University of East Anglia) nabbed the Edgar in the Best Critical/Biographical category for his book James Sallis: A Companion to the Mystery Fiction (I edit the McFarland Companions to Mystery Fiction). The many works of the multitalented Sallis (an author and poet active in both mystery and sci-fi) include his novel Drive (filmed with Ryan Gosling and Carey Mulligan), his Lew Griffin series, and his biography of African American mystery author Chester Himes.
The Sallis companion is currently on sale at McFarland.
Clues: A Journal of Detection 43.1 (2025) has been published; see below for abstracts. Contact McFarland for a hard copy issue or a subscription.
Update, May 26, 2025: Kindle, Nook, and GooglePlay versions of the issue are now available.
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Introduction: Insight into Messy Truths
Caroline Reitz (John Jay College of Criminal Justice/CUNY Graduate Center)
Ukrainian Crime Fiction: Trends, Themes, Traditions
Svitlana (Lana) Krys (MacEwan University, Canada)
This article traces the development of crime fiction in Ukraine: its origins in the gothic literary movement, main authors, historical memory and colonial traumas, role as an instrument of Ukraine’s cultural diplomacy, limited presence in the Soviet era, and proliferation following Ukraine’s independence.
Sympathy for the Devil: Failed Catharsis and Universal Guilt in Agatha Christie's Curtain
Emilie Laurent (Université Clermont Auvergne, France)
Reading Christie's Curtain as a depiction of an ideological battle between good and evil, this essay analyzes the novel as a manipulation of the reader’s moral judgment that dissolves the genre’s over-optimistic promise of restoration social order and generates anxiety about a possible guilt located within the
reader’s self.
Dangerous Skepticism and the Challenge of Acknowledgment in Peter Høeg’s Smilla’s Sense of Snow
Christine Hamm (University of Bergen, Norway)
This essay argues that crime fiction can encourage readings of literature that differ from those criticized by Rita Felski (2015) as outcomes of a “hermeneutics
of suspicion.” Tracing motivations for and effects of skepticism at the plot level, Nordic noir such as Smilla’s Sense of Snow promotes acknowledgment rather than “critique.”
Pie in the Sky: Political Readings of Dashiell Hammett’s “Faith”
Jacob A. Zumoff (New Jersey City University)
This essay examines “Faith,” a short story by Dashiell Hammett unpublished in his lifetime, exploring its relationship to detective fiction, proletarian fiction, and literary modernism. The story’s setting suggests a left-wing perspective yet resists easy political categorization, contributing to our understanding of Hammett’s evolving literary approach to detective fiction and complex relationship to left-wing politics and modernism.
A Woman Agent in the Male World of the Cold War Spy Novel:
The Case of Len Deighton’s Fiona Samson
Howard Mason
This essay discusses Len Deighton’s Fiona Samson, a female agent with strong character traits who is working for the West during the Cold War. Samson’s womanhood and femininity, as well as her love of husband and family, eventually take precedence over her agency as a professional intelligence officer.
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Cover of 2015 Omnibus ed. (in French) of Allingham's The Crime at Black Dudley |
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Elizabeth Foxwell (left) and Peter Lovesey, Malice Domestic VIII, 1996. |
Peter teamed up with fellow writer Edward Marston (aka Keith Miles) to write the light-hearted "The Corbett Correspondence," which pays tribute to Deeck, skewers Corbett, and was nominated for an Agatha Award. It is written as a series of letters between "Agent No. 5" and "Agent No. 6," and I understand that Peter and Keith faxed pieces back and forth to each other as their working method.
Peter was beloved not only for the quality of his work but also for his generosity and keen sense of humor. Malice Domestic attendees will recall his song with writing advice such as "You must make all the characters ugly and mean / And start Chapter 1 with an autopsy scene." He was always up for contributing a short story or a nonfiction piece (as he did for Mystery Scene, when I was asking authors for reflections on their first sale for the magazine) and participating in an event (I once organized a mystery panel at Georgetown University with Peter and Miriam Grace Monfredo). I corresponded with him for years, was privileged to have called him a friend, and will miss him greatly.
On The Magic Book podcast, Rebecca Josephy (Oakland Univ) talks about the collection she edited, Magic, Magicians and Detective Fiction: Essays on Intersecting Modes of Mystery (McFarland, 2025), on the use of magic and magicians in mysteries, including discussion of impossible crimes and supernatural elements. It analyzes this subgenre's nineteenth-century roots and features reflections on writers such as Canadian-born author Grant Allen (An African Millionaire), Japanese writer Edogawa Ranpo, and American magician-author-editor-illustrator Clayton Rawson. Josephy, a French literature and detective fiction specialist, contributes an essay on gentleman thief Arsène Lupin, created by Maurice Leblanc.
• Review of Magic, Magicians and Detective Fiction in Mythlore, vol. 43, no. 2 (2025).
• Read about Josephy's earlier Clues article, "A Study in Daniel: Tracing the Biblical Origins of Sherlock Holmes" (38.1, 2020)
Kansas Public Radio's Film Music Friday pays tribute to Gene Hackman, who died in February, including the score for The French Connection (1971; director William Friedkin, composer Don Ellis, screenwriter Ernest Tidyman [author of Shaft]).
J. C. Bernthal, author of Agatha Christie: A Companion to the Mystery Fiction, will discuss the life, work, and enduring popularity of Christie as well as his experiences as a Christie fan and challenges in writing the book on the Mar 14 episode of The Best Part of the Book, McFarland and Co.'s podcast. I edit the companion series.
Take 25% off the Christie Companion with coupon code BESTPART on the McFarland website.
The award, given to individuals who have contributed to the serious study of mystery, detective, and crime fiction, honors well-known mystery scholar George N. Dove. The chair of the Dove Award Committee is Rachel Schaffer (Montana State University Billings). Past recipients include Frankie Y. Bailey (University at Albany, SUNY), Martin Edwards, Barry Forshaw, Douglas G. Greene, P.D. James, Christine Jackson, H. R. F. Keating, Margaret Kinsman, Maureen Reddy (Rhode Island College), Janet Rudolph, J. K. Van Dover (Lincoln University), and yours truly.
• David Geherin reads from Organized Crime on Page and Screen.
Various venues will be hosting The Silence of Snow: The Life of Patrick Hamilton, a one-man show with actor Mark Farrelly as the talented but troubled playwright-author of works such as Rope, Angel Street (aka Gaslight), and Hangover Square.
• Petersfield Museum (Petersfield, UK), Apr. 17, 2025
• Hope Mill Theatre (Manchester, UK), Apr. 25–26, 2025
• The Swallow Theatre (Whithorn, Scotland), Oct. 3–4, 2025
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Conductor Leonard Slatkin, ca. 2015. Wikimedia Commons |
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R.C. Sherriff. NYPL |
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On the set of Odd Man Out, w/James Mason, left; cameraman Russell Thompson (looking through viewfinder); director of photography Robert Krasker (seated); and director Carol Reed (at right). |
The latest episode of Kansas Public Radio's Film Music Friday on Warner Brothers films includes selections from The Maltese Falcon (1941).
James Sallis: A Companion to the Mystery Fiction by Nathan Ashman (University of East Anglia) has been nominated for an Edgar Award in the best Critical/Biographical category. This is no. 13 in the McFarland Companions to Mystery Fiction series that I edit. Sallis may be best known for the novel Drive (filmed with Ryan Gosling and Carey Mulligan), although he is the author of numerous mysteries and a well-regarded book on Chester Himes, is a poet, and has been active in the science fiction community.
Other companion volumes that have previously been nominated for an Edgar are James Ellroy (by Jim Mancall) and Ian Rankin (by Erin E. MacDonald, also a Macavity Award nominee).
Some controversy having arisen in a literary journal as to whether I have written as many books as Edgar Wallace, I asked the British Museum people to tell me how many books I have published. I have just had their reply—233.
Awful!
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Nicol Williamson as Sherlock Holmes in The Seven-Per-Cent Solution (1976) |
• The New Investigations of Inspector Maigret
• The World of Bond and Maigret (a 1964 dialogue between Ian Fleming and Simenon; link to booklet)