Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Barbara Nadel: A Collection of Links

At last night's discussion of Belshazzar's Daughter, I said that I would post some interesting links to interviews with the author, Barbara Nadel, as well as articles she has written. Finally, there are two links concerning the final identification of the "missing" Romanov children. One link is to the research paper documenting the DNA analysis.

Interviews

Barbara Nadel   (February 20, 2006)

Quest for the intangible: Barbara Nadels's detectives and demons   (June 16, 2007)

Barbara Nadel: Chatting about her newest book and the facts of writing  
(July 5, 2009)

"Istanbul is Always There": Barbara Nadel's Inspector Ikmen Series   (May 19, 2010)

The Outsider: An Interview with Barbara Nadel   (October 12, 2010)

Articles Written by Barbara Nadel 

Where the Bodies are Hid   (2005?)

The Last Hookah: with a smoking ban looming, Barbara Nadel seeks out Istanbul's water pipe salons and laments the end of a 400 year old tradition
(May 23, 2009)

Istanbul: My Kind of Town   (June 2, 2009)

Insider's Istanbul   (March 22, 2010)


The Romanovs
Mystery of murdered Czar's missing children solved by DNA Study
(March 11, 2009)


 Mystery Solved: The Identification of the Two Missing Romanov Children Using DNA Analysis
(March 11, 2009)

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Istanbul - A Great City Inspires Authors

Byzantium, Constantinople, and finally, Istanbul. Whatever the name, this ancient city that bridges Europe and Asia has long inspired writers with its busy harbor, labyrinthine underground, and magnificent buildings. The capital of Turkey, it is the fourth largest city proper in the world with a population of 12.6 million.


Several mystery authors have used this ancient city as the setting for three very different mystery series. Different in their periods and characters, but similar in their intriguing descriptions of the place and its diverse population.





British author Barbara Nadel has set her series in contemporary Istanbul. Her detective, Inspector Cetin Ikmen, is a chain smoking, police detective with a very large family and an interesting team of colleagues. Only the first four books in the series have been published in the United States, but hopefully the others will be forthcoming. The crimes and characters are both well written and full of atmosphere. Start with Belshazzar’s Daughter, which begins with a bizarre murder in the Russian emigre community.

Jason Goodwin’s The Janissary Tree won the Edgar Award for Best First Novel and was a finalist for the Macavity in 2007. His detective, Yashim Togalu, serves the Ottoman sultan in 1830′s Istanbul. Yashim is supported by interesting characters including a defunct Ambassador of Poland and the Valide, the sultan’s mother. The plots are typically based on political situations of the time and the setting is ripe with the smells and sights of the ancient city and port.





Go back another 13 centuries when the city was known to the world as Byzantium, capital to the 6th century Roman Empire for Mary Reed’s John the Eunuch series. John serves as the Lord Chamberlain in Justinian’s very newly Christian court. The politics and machinations are every bit as outrageous as the Roman Roman Empire with everyone jockeying for power and protection against a backdrop of old religions and bickering courtiers.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Random Food for Thought on The Yiddish Policemen's Union

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Michael Chabon said in interviews that to prepare for Yiddish Policemen's Union, he re-read his favorite mystery writers -- Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett, and Ross Macdonald. Can you see the hard-boiled influence in Yiddish Policemen's Union? Would you consider it a hard-boiled mystery like The Big Sleep?


Chabon has been described as a writer who can take genre novels into the realm of literary fiction. "His books show a remarkable ability to be comfortable in exploiting the delights of genre writing and yet incorporate enough imaginative variation on the genres to be taken seriously by the literary establishment." (J. Madison Davis, World Literature Today, 2008). Do you think more mysteries should be taken seriously by the 'literary establishment'? Does anyone care what they think?

Monday, September 27, 2010

Books mentioned last time

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Sorry for the delay. Here are books that you all recommended during our last meeting. Links should take you to the library catalog.


Author Donna Leon


Mistress of the Art of Death. And there's a follow-up, A Murderous Procession.


Author Maj Sjowall


Author Alexander McCall Smith


Ghostwritten, by David Mitchell


Thanks!

Friday, September 10, 2010

Maps!

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The Big Sleep's Marlowe runs all over Los Angeles. Here is a link for a map that shows his various locations. (If you click on the different sections, they get big enough to read.)


Raymond Chandler himself lived in 24 different houses around Los Angeles. Here's a  link to a map of those spots, for any L.A. buffs out there.

Philip Marlowe, Cowboy

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I got excited after finishing The Big Sleep, and decided to look up hard-boiled detective fiction in the library's "Academic Search Complete" database. There, I learned that some critics have compared characters like Marlowe to the cowboys or frontiersmen of western fiction. The detectives are described as "carving civilization out of the wilderness," even if they contend with an urban landscape instead of a natural one -- "a world in which [the detective] is constantly under siege." Like a cowboy, the hard-boiled detective is a loner who solves problems with action and adventuring.


Does this comparison work for The Big Sleep? Is Marlowe like a frontiersman or the hero of a Western? How might Chandler be creating a wilderness landscape for his detective?


Also: Did you think there was an awful lot of talk about thumbs and fingers and teeth in The Big Sleep? You're not alone... 


(The links above will ask you to log in with your library card number and pin).

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Portrait with Cat

How awesome is this picture?



Our book for September 14, Raymond Chandler's The Big Sleep, was the author's first novel and a breakout hit. In The Big Sleep, he combined two earlier stories he had written for pulp fiction magazines. The Big Sleep is also the first appearance of Chandler's famous character, detective Philip Marlowe. Chandler, who had been struggling financially, found work in Hollywood soon after the publication of his first novels. He went from earning a penny a word for his first pulp stories to making thousands as a screenwriter for Paramount Studios.

[Biographical information taken from the EBSCO database "Biography Collection Complete," available through the Library Web site.)

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Our Next Books

Hello mystery readers!


Here are our next six book selections. All meetings start at 7 pm. We hope to see you there!


Tuesday, September 14
The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler


Tuesday, October 12
The Yiddish Policemen's Union, by Michael Chabon


Tuesday, November 9
Belshazzar's Daughter, by Barbara Nadel


Tuesday, December 14
Maisie Dobbs, by Jacqueline Winspear


Tuesday, January 11
Wednesday's Child, by Peter Robinson


Tuesday, February 8
The Brass Verdict, by Michael Connelly


We have more copies on the way for many of these titles. And if a book is unavailable from Sunnyvale Library, try the Link+ catalog. Link+ is a free service that lets you order books from other libraries, to be delivered to Sunnyvale.

Friday, July 30, 2010

Up Close and Personal with Tony Hillerman

"[A lot of people] began the autographing chat with a disclaimer. They'd assure me they were not mystery readers. They read my books because of the tribal cultural material intermixed with the plot line. They wanted to learn a bit about American Indians. It occurred to me that I had tapped into a mass of American readers who suffer from the same workaholic problem that besets me. Reading for idle amusement left them feeling guilty. My books, like a sausage sandwich spiced with antiacid tablets, give absolution along with the sin." -- Seldom Disappointed, p. 300.


Tony Hillerman's long and distinguished life included Army combat during World War II that earned him a Purple Heart, a stint as a newspaper reporter and editor, and a childhood among the Pottawatomie and Seminole Indians. If you'd like to learn more about the author of our August book, Skinwalkers, check out these resources from the library:


Seldom Disappointed: A Memoir, by Tony Hillerman
The Tony Hillerman Companion: A Comprehensive Guide to His Life and Work, edited by Martin Greenberg


These two books are full of fun facts. For instance:


In a 1993 interview published in the Companion, Hillerman says that when he started writing Skinwalkers, he hadn't planned to bring together his two main heroes, Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee. But he needed "a superior for [Chee] to deal with. And there was gold old Joe Leaphorn on the shelf, whom I knew very well, so I just started using him."  (p.61).


What would you like to know about Tony Hillerman? Does reading Skinwalkers make you wonder about his life or his writing process?

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

More books on the way!

Hello mystery lovers! Some of you may have noticed that it's getting hard to find a library copy of July's selection, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie. But we've ordered six more copies, and they should be here soon. You can place a hold by clicking "request" on this page.


Let us know if you're having trouble getting your hands on the book. See you July 13th at 7 pm! We'll be meeting upstairs, in one of the library conference rooms.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Last Night's Discussion

Thanks to all who came to our inaugural meeting last night!

Below is the list of books that everyone suggested, to the best of our memory and notes. Please tell us in the comments if we left something out or if there are additional great titles that need a mention.

Thanks again, and we hope to see you July 13, for a discussion of The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie.


Mysteries
Mistress of the Art of Death by Ariana Franklin
Rolling Thunder by Chris Grabenstein
Monkeewrench by P. J. Tracy
Tao Yun Shan series by Eliot Pattison
C.I. Armand Gamache series by Louise Penny
Inspector Salvo Montalbano series by Andrea Camilleri
Commissioner Guido Brunetti series by Donna Leon
The Grave Tattoo by Val McDermid
Bloodhounds by Peter Lovesey
Cooper and Fry series by Stephen Booth

Science Fiction
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card

Novels and Short Stories
Housekeeping and Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark
The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara
The Help by Kathryn Stockett

Friday, June 4, 2010

Mystery v. Thriller

Is The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo a mystery, or a thriller? And what's the difference?


The Readers' Advisory Guide to Genre Fiction points out that every mystery is a puzzle, in which the author must hide certain key elements. "[T]he author provides clues to the solution but attempts to obscure some information so that the puzzle cannot be solved too easily."


But for a thriller to function, the reader must be more aware of what is going on behind the scenes. "The role of the readers of thrillers is to watch, to follow the action step-by-step," Joyce G. Saricks writes in the Guide.


The Web site mysterynet.com has an interesting essay on the subject from novelist Janet L. Smith. She notes that according to master of suspense Alfred Hitchcock, suspense is created when the audience is "holding its collective breath," waiting for an event that it expects will happen -- like a bomb under the table that the audience knows is set to explode at a certain time. If the bomb goes off without prior warning, then it is simply a surprise, but not suspenseful, Smith writes.


Readers of thrillers may know about the bomb under the table, but mystery authors often must keep the reader in the dark. "The dilemma created for the writer of traditional mysteries," Smith writes, "is the fact that the villain and the details of the crime must remain unidentified, breaking Hitchcock's rule of keeping the audience informed."


When does The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo act like a thriller and when is it a mystery? Does it go off track and become more about vengeance than solving the crime?  Bring your thoughts to the discussion.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Life Imitating Art

Time magazine has an interesting article this week about the fight over Stieg Larsson's estate. It turns out his longtime partner, Eva Gabrielsson, has inherited nothing from him because they were never married. (Due to Larsson's work reporting on fascism in Sweden, and a Swedish requirement that married couples publish their address, marriage could have been unsafe for the pair.)


Now Gabrielsson is fighting Larsson's father and younger brother for Larsson's estate. With 40 million books sold worldwide, it's a hefty figure. "The irony here, or one of the ironies, is that embattled, disenfranchised women are Larsson's fictional specialty," write Lev Grossman and Carla Power in Time.


Here's a link to the article (works for now). The text is also available from the library's MasterFile Premiere database, which you can access here with your library card.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Save the Date

Well, it's official! The first meeting of the Sunnyvale Library's new mystery book club will be Tuesday, June 8, at 7 pm, in the Library program room. We'll generally be meeting on the second Tuesday night of each month, either in the library Program Room or upstairs in the library's Fireplace Room.


Our title for June 8th will be the Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, by Stieg Larsson. The book is available in hardback, on CD, and in paperback from the library. Check back on this blog before our first meeting for some food for thought about the book.


Come one, come all. We can't wait to meet you!

Monday, March 29, 2010

Survey Says...

Thanks to all of you (76 people!) who took our recent survey about a reading group for mystery lovers. The results are in!


67% of you want to meet once a month.


75% of you want to read and discuss the same book, although 46% of you are also interested in discussing multiple books by the same author, and 39% were interested in reading what they like and sharing it with the group.


We also asked you what types of mysteries you would like to discuss. And here are the results, in order of popularity.


1. Classics: 45 votes
2. Amateur Sleuths: 40 votes
3. Cozy Mysteries: 39 votes
4. Suspense/Thrillers: 38 votes
4. Historical: 38 votes
6. Hardboiled/Noir: 30 votes
7. Police Procedurals: 29 votes
8. Legal/medical: 26 votes.


Thanks again for helping us out and taking our survey.