Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Following The Detectives

In 1995 I went to Russia for the first time. It was a bit chaotic and slightly dangerous but I really enjoyed myself. Before I'd gone I'd made a map of St Petersburg and I spent a couple of days visiting all the locations in Crime and Punishment. I also went out to the site of Pushkin's duel in the woods and I visited Dostoyevsky's grave. When I moved to New York the first thing I did was visit all the haunts of the beats and when I was at Oxford I decided that my local was going to be The Eagle and Child because that was the local of CS Lewis and JRR Tolkien (and I made a little map of all the places those two guys had lived in in North Oxford). I can't help it, I'm a book geek and I like maps which is why Following The Detectives is definitely my kind of volume. Twenty literary detectives and their tales are unpacked cartographically by several well known crime writers and critics. It is not meant to be a comprehensive guide, it's edited by Maxim Jakubowski and thus reflects what Maxim likes and is into...the good (Dashiell Hammett's San Francisco, James Lee Burke's New Orleans, Raymond Chandler's LA), the bad (Peter James's Brighton) and the ugly (Peter James again, sorry).
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I particularly enjoyed Peter Rozovsky's brilliant look at Icelandic crime fiction (one of the things I liked about Jar City was the map at the start) and Dec Burke's intelligent take on Dec Hughes's Dublin. In fact all the contributions are excellent and Maxim has done a fine job editing this book. Following The Detectives is definitely crying out for a volume 2 (an iPhone Ap would be fantastic!) and hopefully next time Maxim will broaden his range a little and not leave as much of the heavy lifting to the commendable Barry Forshaw. (Yeah that's right, that was a hint). You can get Following The Detectives at the old rogue's Murder One bookshop in London or at Torrans's No Alibis in Belfast or at Otto's Mysterious Bookshop in NYC or, of course, on Amazon.

9 comments:

seana said...

I've got the book, and though I am sorry to say that I haven't gotten to it yet, it is indeed a beautiful thing to behold.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

Yes its a very nice tactile object which is something you would miss on a kindle edition.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Damn you, nobody calls me brilliant except my mother.

Many thanks!
======================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://www.detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

Peter Rozovsky said...

In re what one would miss in a Kindle version of this book, my newspaper recently published a piece about expensive, high-end books. Maybe’s that’s a glimpse into the future of a book market with e-books at one extreme, luxury productions at the other, and not much in between.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

I also really liked your Sicily chapter but in all honesty I couldn't tell if it was brilliant or not because I was utterly unfamiliar with the material. Was it well written and interesting? It certainly was.

seana said...

I should at the very least get around to reading Peter's and Declan's articles. And probably the New Orleans one while I'm at it.

This of course entails finding the book where it's buried in one these piles...Could be awhile.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Adrian, I was more excited by what I was able to come up with for the Iceland essay.
======================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://www.detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

solo said...

Adrian, you loved The Cold Six Thousand, I loathed it. Big fucking deal.

Have you ever read the novellas of Heinrich von Kleist? If you haven't I'd recommend them ahead of making you a three time loser by reading another Indridasson.

I read Camilleri on Peter's recommendation. And didn't regret it. A much better writer than Indridasson.

adrian mckinty said...

Solo

The only one I've read is Michael Kohlhaus, but then thats a masterpiece.

I'm still waiting for a good movie to be made of that.