Showing posts with label Sue Grafton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sue Grafton. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Mysteries

Mystery is my favourite genre of literature.  Which is why the novel I am working on is a murder mystery.  (I write what I like!)  I got my hands on my mom's copy of  The Hidden Staircase - the second Nancy Drew mystery - when I was 5 or 6.  I was hooked!  My wish lists for birthdays and holidays consisted of Nancy Drew books.  I bought as many as I could afford from the book sales at school. I'm talking about the yellow-spined hardcover books - not these new fangled paperbacks!  One Christmas I hit the jackpot!  I received a parcel that included about 6 new Nancy Drews.  I was in heaven!  I read Nancy Drew, Trixie Belden, Hardy Boys, Encyclopedia Brown, Dana Girls - all the young adult mysteries I could get my hands on.  I read other stuff - mostly science fiction and fantasy - but, mysteries were still my favourite.  Then, one day, I picked up my mom's copy of A is for Alibi by Sue Grafton.  I might have read some 'grown-up' mysteries before that one, but I really remember my first Kinsey Millhone story.  She was a strong woman - flawed in all kinds of ways - yet smart, independent, tough, funny, and just enough like me for me to want to be her.

I have since read dozens of mysteries - some of them great, some of them good, some that made me wonder how they got published.  Still, I love them.  I'm reading stuff from the 1920s and 1930s to get a feel for the era - the language, the culture, what was acceptable in literature.  I found Dashiell Hammett's The Thin Man a little hard to follow actually.  A little too much dialogue and not enough description for my liking.  However, it is a good study in 1930s mystery.  I am interested to read Red Harvest and The Dain Curse - two novels whose main character is the Continental Op, a character with no other name.  I will move on to Raymond Chandler and others soon.  Though on some level I think I have the hardboiled style well engrained in my mind as it is my favourite.

I'm looking forward to my summer as I plan to do as much mystery reading and writing as possible!

Cheers,
Laura