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Showing posts with label mysteries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mysteries. Show all posts

Friday, April 13, 2018

My Favorite Short Story Collections



As much as I love reading novels, I also really enjoy short stories.  They're especially good when you don't know what to read and don't want to commit to a lengthy work.  Here are a few of my favorite short story collections.  I'd love to hear your favorites in the comments!

The Complete Works of O. Henry





O. Henry's short stories speak eloquently of the pains and joys of the human experience.  His characters deal with familiar themes--love, poverty, misunderstanding, and so forth.  The settings for the stories vary; O. Henry's characters may live in the middle of bustling New York City or the vast plains of the West.  His writing style is humorous with a touch of pathos.  A couple of my favorite O. Henry stories are "The Ransom of Red Chief" (a classic) and "Madam Bo-Peep, Of the Ranches." 


End of the Drive by Louis L'Amour


If you like Westerns, you should try Louis L'Amour's short stories.  He wrote a lot of them, and I haven't been able to read many of his collections yet, but one that I really like is End of the Drive.  It contains seven fantastic short stories and one novella, "Rustler Roundup."  In L'Amour's stories, brave men and women of the Wild West face incredible odds from outlaws, rich men running towns, corrupt judges, and the like.  The suspense in the stories is enough to keep you on the edge of your seat, but at the same time you can read with the comfortable knowledge that in a L'Amour story good will always triumph over evil in the end.


The Complete Father Brown by G. K. Chesterton


I've mentioned these stories before on this blog in my post about fictional detectives.  They're not just mysteries; they're also studies in character.  Father Brown, the hero of the stories, understands human nature through shepherding the people of his parish.  He can solve crimes because he understands the motivations behind the criminals' actions.  The stories are often scary, usually humorous, and full of Catholic wisdom.  Some of my favorites are "The Blue Cross," "The Queer Feet," and "The Flying Stars."


All Creatures Great and Small by James Herriot
 
 
It may be cheating to put this book on here, because All Creatures Great and Small has an ongoing storyline as well as individual stories.  But in general it behaves like a short story collection, so I'm putting it in this list.  Herriot's tales of his life as a veterinarian in the Yorkshire Dales of England are exciting, entertaining, and heartwarming.  (One warning: he does talk about animal diseases and operations in a lot of detail, so if that bothers you you probably don't want to read this book!) If you like this book, you'll enjoy its sequels: All Things Bright and Beautiful, All Things Wise and Wonderful, The Lord God Made Them All, and Every Living Thing.


Lord Peter by Dorothy L. Sayers
 

 

Usually Lord Peter Wimsey mysteries run to hundreds of pages.  This book is the one exception.  Lord Peter's cleverness and wit shine through every one of these short mysteries, which range from mysterious hieroglyphics on tile floors to little boys accused of stealing peaches to murders.  (I just bought this book at a used bookstore a couple weeks ago and can hardly wait to start re-reading it!)


 

 

Thursday, January 18, 2018

My Favorite Fictional Detectives


I've always loved detective stories.  As a child, I read every "Happy Hollisters," "Hardy Boys," and "Nancy Drew" book I could get my hands on.  I always tried to figure out the mystery before the end of the book.  Sometimes I was successful, but most of the time I was completely mystified until the detective revealed the truth.  Then (finally) I was old enough to read classic mystery stories written for adults.  I devoured stacks of mystery books and discovered three detectives that became favorites (and remain favorites to this day): Father Brown, Lord Peter Wimsey, and Miss Marple.

Note: In the selection of those three detectives as my favorites, I have no ill-will towards Sherlock Holmes or Hercule Poirot.  I have also read and enjoyed books featuring those detectives (and spent considerable time researching to figure out how to say Poirot's name...it's pronounced "air-KYOOL pwa-ROH").  


Father Brown

“But, as a matter of fact, another part of my trade, too, made me sure you weren’t a priest.” “What?” asked the thief, almost gaping. “You attacked reason,” said Father Brown. “It’s bad theology.” 
(G.K. Chesterton, The Blue Cross)

 Father Brown is, first and foremost, a Catholic priest with a firm grasp of theology and a great zeal for the conversion of sinners.  But he's also an expert at solving mysterious crimes.  From his dealings with vast numbers of people in various states of sin and repentance, Father Brown has learned a lot about human nature.  His secret to solving crimes is that he can put himself in the criminal's shoes; he knows just what he would do if he were the man stealing the diamonds.  And he's not as interested in bringing criminals to justice as he is in getting them to see where they've done wrong. 
 
Father Brown also has a sense of humor.  For instance, in The Blue Cross, he leaves a trail of ridiculous things behind him for the French detective Valentin to follow...mixing up apples and oranges, putting salt in a sugar bowl, and paying for a windowpane first and breaking it afterwards!

Father Brown is incredibly humble and innocent.  He will capture a criminal and then slip away before anyone gets a chance to thank him.  The criminals that he confronts don't know what to make of him; he's nothing like any detective they've ever seen.  One of them, Flambeau, repents after he's caught and becomes fast friends with Father Brown, helping him solve more crimes.

G.K. Chesterton did a marvelous job with Father Brown's character!  The only thing I'm sad about is that I've read all the Father Brown stories...I wish there were more!


Lord Peter Wimsey

“But to Lord Peter the world presented itself as an entertaining labyrinth of side-issues.”
(Dorothy L. Sayers, Clouds of Witness)

British aristocrat.  Bibliophile.  Master of Arts from Oxford.  John Donne enthusiast.  Champion cricket player.  Expert pianist.  Crime solver.  Lord Peter Wimsey is the Renaissance man of detectives.  Everything interests him, and no detail is too small for him to notice.  With his butler, Bunter (a man much like P.G. Wodehouse's Jeeves), he continually finds himself getting involved in detective cases.  Those around him say indulgently that it's a hobby he has.  Lord Peter knows better...he doesn't solve crimes because he likes to.  He solves crimes because he knows how to do it and people ask him to help them.  

Lord Peter is a human character, despite his nearly superhuman powers of observation.  He has difficulties with his brother and sister-in-law, who don't like his detective work.  He has nervous breakdowns caused by PTSD from World War I.  He is madly in love with Harriet Vane, whom he saved from the gallows and who continually maintains she will never marry him. (He proposes to her at intervals...on April Fool's Day, on her birthday, or in the middle of a group of police...sometimes very seriously, sometimes jocosely.) 

Lord Peter is also full of quotations.  In Have His Carcase, he says, "I always have a quotation for everything--it saves original thinking."  I always love it when book characters quote other books I've read!  He talked so much about Kai Lung and about John Donne's poetry that I went and checked out both books from the library.  (I was not disappointed.)  

Some say that Dorothy Sayers must have been in love with the character of Lord Peter Wimsey while she was writing those books.  I believe it!  His character is incredibly well-done.


Miss Marple

“Miss Marple is a white-haired old lady with a gentle appealing manner- Miss Wetherby is a mixture of vinegar and gush. Of the two Miss Marple is the more dangerous.”  
(Agatha Christie, Murder at the Vicarage)

No one who didn't know Miss Marple would ever think she had anything to do with solving crimes.  She's an elderly lady with a meek, kindly attitude and a propensity for listening to village gossip.  And she's lived in the same village for almost all of her long life.  But she has an uncanny knack for spotting a criminal.

Miss Marple's secret lies in her knowledge of the people in her own village.  According to her, “Everybody is very much alike, really. But fortunately, perhaps, they don't realise it." When a crime is committed, Miss Marple can remember a similar situation from when she was young.  By remembering the sort of person who committed the similar crime long ago, she can figure out who must have committed this crime.  

She doesn't stay at home trying to solve crimes, either.  She travels around, poking her nose into all kinds of situations to find out what's going on.  People tell her things because they don't have any idea she's doing detective work.  Sometimes her work is dangerous and she has to flee, but she remains determined to figure out the truth.  She has more bravery and perseverance than someone a quarter of her age.  And through it all, she stays sweet and kind.  Agatha Christie invented a fantastic character in Miss Marple!