Harp
I'll Lock Up
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- Chicago, IL US
KittyT said:"A Confederacy of Dunces" by John Kennedy Toole. The only "modern" novel that I consider to an American masterpiece.
Reallytrullynotwowaysaboutit?
KittyT said:"A Confederacy of Dunces" by John Kennedy Toole. The only "modern" novel that I consider to an American masterpiece.
Slate Shannon said:I've started reading a couple of series-type novels by two lady writers.
I'm almost finished with the first of the Jade Del Cameron series, entitled The Mark of The Lion by Suzanne Arruda, which is set in post World War I East Africa.
And I recently finished the first of the Amelia Peabody series, entitled Crocodile On the Sandbank by Elizabeth Peters, which concerns a lady Egyptologist. The series spans the late 19th Century thru the early 20th Century.
I've enjoyed both of them and will continue thru the other books in the series.
Slate Shannon said:I've started reading a couple of series-type novels by two lady writers.
I'm almost finished with the first of the Jade Del Cameron series, entitled The Mark of The Lion by Suzanne Arruda, which is set in post World War I East Africa.
Slate Shannon said:And I recently finished the first of the Amelia Peabody series, entitled Crocodile On the Sandbank by Elizabeth Peters, which concerns a lady Egyptologist. The series spans the late 19th Century thru the early 20th Century.
Feraud said:I am just about finished reading my Chandler. Can anyone recommend similar hardboiled mystery writers of the era?
LocktownDog said:The Bishop Murder Case - Van Dyne. Good mystery series, if you can find it in print. The only ones I've been able to find and read are the original 1930s printings found in thrift stores.
Joan said:SS Van Dine was the pseudonym of Willard Huntington Wright, who was essentially a self-absorbed, pretentious nut. The detective, Philo Vance, appears (to me) to be modeled on Lord Peter Wimsey, but where Wimsey is endearing, Vance is (to me, again) annoying. I find the stories amusing, though.