A Taste for Murder: The Curious Case of Crime Fiction
Author(s) -
Rachel Franks
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
m/c journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1441-2616
DOI - 10.5204/mcj.770
Subject(s) - knight , taste , detective fiction , literature , art , history , space (punctuation) , art history , philosophy , psychology , neuroscience , linguistics , physics , astronomy
Crime fiction is one of the world’s most popular genres. Indeed, it has been estimated that as many as one in every three new novels, published in English, is classified within the crime fiction category (Knight xi). These new entrants to the market are forced to jostle for space on bookstore and library shelves with reprints of classic crime novels; such works placed in, often fierce, competition against their contemporaries as well as many of their predecessors. Raymond Chandler, in his well-known essay The Simple Art of Murder , noted Ernest Hemingway’s observation that “the good writer competes only with the dead. The good detective story writer [...] competes not only with all the unburied dead but with all the hosts of the living as well” (3). In fact, there are so many examples of crime fiction works that, as early as the 1920s, one of the original ‘Queens of Crime’, Dorothy L. Sayers, complained:
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