Don Alaska
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2025
- Messages
- 479
I have become a big fan of crime fiction. I read a lot of true crime stuff over the years, but have now switched to mostly fiction. The Brits have led the way in this genre over most of the past 130 years or so, beginning with Sherlock Holmes. Doyle wasn't the first I guess, but he was certainly the most popular of his time and the first to use science and medicine in detective fiction. Doyle was followed by Chesterton and his Father Brown series. They were also very good and entertaining (to me at least) but completely different from Conan Doyle's work. Agatha Christie set the model for a school of female writers in the 1920s and 1930s. Christie and Chesterton overlapped a little, but most of Father Brown was published before Christie's characters got really going. Christie and her school of writers mostly dealt with upper-class folks and a limited group of suspects in a somewhat confined environment. Christie and Chesterton were followed by a single crime novel by Graham Greene, Brighton Rock, which has been referred to by some as the "first modern crime novel". I am no expert, but Greene's work is definitely different from his predecessors.
American crime fiction I have encountered is mostly private investigator stuff similar to Agatha Christie, but much more crude in content and environment in the 1930s through the 1950s. Sam Spade is no Hercule Poirot and vice versa. Recent crime fiction on both sides of the Atlantic has centered mostly on police detectives and murder cases. Interestingly, Conan Doyle's stories rarely were about murder.
I now read a lot of British stuff available on Amazon. I enjoy most the 1970's and 1980s stories before DNA and "CCTV" became the norm in crime. Brother Cadfael books were published from the 1970s through the 1990s, but took place in the 12th century, so they are in a different category altogether. Historically quite accurate and many of the characters were real people I like the Masters and Green stories that take place in the 1970s and deal mostly with poisonings. In modern U.S. stuff, I enjoy the early novels by John Sandford--the Lucas Davenport and Virgil Flowers books. I have not read any of the Letty Davenport books.
American crime fiction I have encountered is mostly private investigator stuff similar to Agatha Christie, but much more crude in content and environment in the 1930s through the 1950s. Sam Spade is no Hercule Poirot and vice versa. Recent crime fiction on both sides of the Atlantic has centered mostly on police detectives and murder cases. Interestingly, Conan Doyle's stories rarely were about murder.
I now read a lot of British stuff available on Amazon. I enjoy most the 1970's and 1980s stories before DNA and "CCTV" became the norm in crime. Brother Cadfael books were published from the 1970s through the 1990s, but took place in the 12th century, so they are in a different category altogether. Historically quite accurate and many of the characters were real people I like the Masters and Green stories that take place in the 1970s and deal mostly with poisonings. In modern U.S. stuff, I enjoy the early novels by John Sandford--the Lucas Davenport and Virgil Flowers books. I have not read any of the Letty Davenport books.