Eric Sandberg is an assistant professor at City University of Hong Kong and has published and presented extensively on twentieth and twenty-first century literature Sandburg is the coeditor of Adaptation, Awards Culture, and the Value of Prestige (2017) and the author of Virginia Woolf: Experiments in Character (2014).
This anthology of 100 critical profiles of fictional detectives
rounds up the usual suspects and introduces some less familiar
figures who will surely provoke discussion among crime
connoisseurs. Warning that it would be impossible to include every
reader’s favorite gumshoe, editor Sandberg includes essays on an
eclectic selection of crime-solvers from the past two centuries.
Along with Poe’s C. Auguste Dupin and Conan Doyle’s Sherlock
Holmes, there is coverage of Brother William of Baskerville, the
14th-century monk sleuth in Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose. In
addition to Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe and Dashiell
Hammett’s Sam Spade, both iconic hardboiled detectives, there are
Philip K. Dick’s Bob Arctor (from A Scanner Darkly) and China
Miéville’s Inspector Tyador Borlú (from The City and the City),
both crossovers from speculative fiction. Among essays on Walter
Mosley’s Easy Rawlins, Sue Grafton’s Kinsey Millhone, and Patricia
Cornwell’s Kay Scarpetta, there is also one on Daniel Quinn, the
failed detective of Paul Auster’s metafictional New York Trilogy.
The book’s contributors, mostly academics, cite chapter and verse
from novels and stories to provide cogent and involving studies,
driving home Sandberg’s central point that crime fiction favors
character as much as plot.
*Publishers Weekly*
This enormously important gift to scholars, edited by Eric
Sandberg, sets a benchmark for scholars and scholarship in
detective literary fiction. The excellent 7-page Introduction
focuses much needed attention on, and gives poignant recognition
to, this literary stepchild. This reference volume may in fact be a
catalyst that moves detective literature from literary stepchild
status to provide it a genuine and legitimate place in literary
scholarship. . . This excellent monograph should be added to
academic library collections from high school through community
college and university. Large public libraries and special
libraries that serve fiction readers should also acquire this
resource.
*American Reference Books Annual*
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