Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Classics for when you're in the mood for mystery...

Back in 2008, my book "1001 Books for Every Mood" was published. It's out of print now (the publisher went belly up, but copies are amazingly still available on ABEBooks). I often go back to the lists and marvel at my own stamina, and to remind myself of the titles that set the bar for our genre.

These are the books I recommended for WHEN YOU'RE IN THE MOOD TO SIFT CLUES

The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler
A dying millionaire hires Philip Marlowe to deal with his daughter’s blackmailer. This is the book that introduced the world to Marlowe, one of the first hardboiled private dicks. With his “powder-blue suit, with dark blue shirt, tie and display handkerchief, black brogues, black wool socks with dark blue clocks on them,” only the attitude resembles Bogey’s portrayal on the silver screen.

The Black Dahlia by James Ellroy
In postwar LA, burnt-out New York cop and former prizefighter Bucky Bleichert becomes obsessed with a real (and still today) unsolved 1947 Black Dahlia torture-murder case. In this book you get all the gory details of the actual crime. Bleichert cracks the case, but in the process he loses his job and much more. In spare, powerful prose, Ellroy machine guns his story at the reader. In a poignant afterword, he discloses that his own mother was the victim of an unsolved murder.

The Circular Staircase by Mary Roberts Rinehart
The first line says it all: “This is the story of how a middle-aged spinster lost her mind, deserted her domestic gods in the city, took a furnished house for the summer out of town, and found herself involved in one of those mysterious crimes that keep our newspapers and detective agencies happy and prosperous.” Soon our girl’s up to her corset in ghosts, stolen securities, and murder. This 1908 novel was the first from the prolific author and invented the mystery sub-genre “fem jep” in which a heroine is in jeopardy and has to be rescued (in modern versions, she rescues herself).

The Concrete Blonde by Michael Connelly
LAPD detective Hieronymus “Harry” Bosch has killed a man he thinks is a serial killer of prostitutes and porn stars. Then a similar murder occurs. Did Bosch kill an innocent man? Many feel Connelly is our best living American mystery writer, and this is considered one of his best novels.

The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey
Scottish author Tey explores one of the great unsolved mysteries of all time: the murder of Richard III’s two young nephews and heirs to the throne. In this enduring novel written in 1951, a painting of Richard III catches the interest Scotland Yard Inspector Alan Grant while he’s laid up in hospital and bored to tears.: The inspector, something of an expert on faces, “lay a long time looking at that face, at those extraordinary eyes.” He muses, “I can’t remember any murderers, either in my own experience, or in case-histories, who resemble him.” As he tries to solve the murders, Tey provides readers with an enthralling blend of fact and fiction.

The Deep Blue Goodbye by John D. MacDonald
This first Travis McGee novel (there were 21 of them from 1964 to 1985) launched the much beloved salvager of lost causes who lives on the “Busted Flush, a 52-foot houseboat docked in Fort Lauderdale, drives a blue Rolls-turned- truck he calls “Miss Agnes,” and has a soft spot for a desperate woman. In this one, the dame is Cathy Kerr, “a brown-eyed blonde, with the helpless mournful eyes of a basset hound” who seek his help recovering gems belonging to her deceased father.

Devil in a Blue Dress by Walter Mosley
It’s 1948 in a Los Angeles where there’s “still a large stretch of farmland between Los Angeles and Santa Monica.” World War II black army vet Ezekiel “Easy” Rawlins is out of work. He accepts $100 from a white thug to find Daphne Monet, a missing white woman who’s been seen partying in black nightspots. “That girl is the devil, man. She got evil in every pocket,” he says after friends of the missing woman start turning up dead and Rawlins becomes the prime suspect. This first novel won Mosley critical acclaim for the unique voice and post-war setting.

Eight Million Ways to Die by Lawrence Block
Matthew Scudder is not just another hardboiled private investigator, though he certainly fits the mold—an alcoholic ex-cop, divorced and estranged from his family, guilt-ridden by a holdup he couldn’t stop and a little girl’s murder he couldn’t prevent. He’s also one of life’s sardonic observers. A 23-year-old hooker comes to him for help getting out of “the life.” She’s murdered. Scudder is determined to find her killer. Block, one of today’s most prolific and widely read mystery authors, is a writer’s writer who does dark, claustrophobic New York to a T.

The Hard Way by Lee Child
Raymond Chandler meets Hemingway in Child’s spare prose. In this 10th series novel, tough-guy Jack Reacher is in New York at a café, minding his own business, when he sees a man get into a Mercedes Benz and drive off. Turns out he’s witnessed a ransom payoff. Twenty-four hours later, the kidnappers haven’t released millionaire Edward Lane’s wife and daughter, and Reacher gets recruited to find them. Child may be a Brit but he nails American macho.

The Hound of the Baskervilles by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Holmes, Watson, Lestrade, and the legend of a hell hound of Dartmoor. Was Sir Charles Baskerville killed by the infamous Hound of the Baskervilles, a demonic dog believed responsible for killing his ancestor Sir Hugo Baskerville hundreds of years earlier? As Holmes and Watson journey to investigate, they encounter an “enormous coal-black hound, but not such a hound as mortal eyes have ever seen.” If you’ve never read a legendary Holmes book, here’s a good place to start. Read it for pure fun, then read the version annotated by Leslie S. Kilnger for fascinating insights.

The Last Good Kiss by James Crumley
Here’s a tough, ex-army investigator who lives in Montana and has a name you can’t pronounce: C. W. Sughrue, He’s hired to find Abraham Trahearne, a boozing author. When he tracks Trahearne down, he’s “drinking beer with an alcoholic bulldog named Fireball Roberts in a ramshackle joint just outside of Sonoma California, drinking the heart of a fine spring afternoon.” Wow—can this guy channel Chandler or what?

Looking for Rachel Wallace by Robert B. Parker
In this series novel, a man hires PI Spenser to protect a woman author who has rattled a few cages with her tell-all book. She fires him for being too “macho” (he is); but when she’s abducted he comes to the rescue. Parker is a master minimalist. Boston’s his beat, and deadpan dialogue is his winning game. At his best, and he’s at his best in this one, he’s second only to Elmore Leonard.

The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett
Private investigator Sam Spade is out to avenge the death of his partner, Miles Archer. Sinister Joe Cairo offers Spade $500 to retrieve a black figurine. Beautiful Brigid O’Shaughnessy throws herself at Spade (“I want you to save me—from it all.”) Turns out she wants the statue, too. But tough, ruthless, single-minded Spade is immune to her feminine wiles. Hammett wrote only this one novel featuring Spade, but with it he created the mold for the hardboiled private investigator who follows his own moral compass.

Motherless Brooklyn by Jonathan Lethem (National Book Critics Circle 1999)
Lionel Essrog, the narrator of this hybrid hardboiled crime slash literary fiction, has Tourette syndrome, and his verbal pyrotechnics turn the novel into an extended rap. The murder victim is a small-time mobster who is also Essrog’s mentor and his boss at a car service/detective agency. Essrog, armed with tics and screams, infiltrates Brooklyn’s “secret system” to hunt down the killer. Another neurologically impaired detective? He’s anything but. The genre may be familiar, but the territory Lethem explores with it is unique.

Murder Must Advertise by Dorothy L. Sayers

Dorothy L. Sayers set the standard for Britain’s golden age of mystery with her fourteen novels and a passel of short stories starring wealthy, witty Lord Peter Wimsey. In this one, Peter assumes the name “Death Bredon” and goes undercover at Pym’s Publicity to investigate the mysterious death of a copywriter in their employ. Sayers writes a sharply satirical view of the advertising world which she knew well—she worked for in a London advertising agency for seven years.

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie
The apparent suicide of wealthy widow Mrs. Ferrar looks like murder when her fiancé Roger Ackroyd is found dead, too. Hercule Poirot, the diminutive and oh-so-precise Belgian detective, investigates. When Poirot tells the narrator, Dr. Sheppard, that his life’s work is “the study of human nature,” Sheppard concludes that Poirot is a retired hairdresser. Sheppard becomes Poirot’s helpmate in the investigation. There was a great hew and cry about the ending of this novel. No doubt Dame Agatha chuckled all the way to the bank.

The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency by Alexander McCall Smith
Prolific author Alexander McCall Smith struck gold when he conjured Precious Ramotswe, the only lady detective in Botswana. She takes proceeds of the sale of cattle she inherits after her father’s death and sets out to do as he directed: “I want you to have your own business.” She sets up office on the edge of town with a brightly painted sign promising “SATISFACTION GUARANTEED,” brews a pot of red bush tea, and settles in to wait for clients. Hold the noir, hold the violence; this is a wry, delightful mystery series with a wise female sleuth.

The Postman Always Rings Twice by James M. Cain
In this hardboiled/noir classic, young drifter Frank Chambers stops at the Twin Oaks Tavern. He takes one look at the owner’s wife Cora and he’s a goner: “Except for the shape, she really wasn’t any raving beauty, but she had a sulky look to her, and her lips stuck out in a way that made me want to mash them in for her.” Cora talks Frank into helping her kill her husband, but things go awry. Greed, lust, and plenty of kinky moments. The book was banned in Boston.

Presumed Innocent by Scott Turow
Kindle County prosecutor Rusty Sabich is assigned to investigate the rape and murder of a woman colleague. He fails to disclose that he and the victim had had an affair. Compelling physical evidence makes Sabich the prime suspect. This novel defined the legal thriller genre. But it has the kind of characters you expect from a literary novel and an infamous surprise ending that most of us don’t see coming.

A Thief of Time by Tony Hillerman
An anthropologist vanishes. Navajo Tribal Policemen Lt. Joe Leaphorn and Officer Jim Chee investigate the ravaged ancient burial site where she was last seen. One of Hillerman’s best novels, the mystery is woven into a tapestry of earth-tone landscape and shot through with the convincing detail of Native American life.

Whip Hand by Dick Francis (Edgar Award 1981)
Dick Francis was jockey to Queen Elizabeth from 1953 and 1957. Lucky for us, he had to retire from racing after a serious fall and took up writing. His prodigious body of work combines horseracing with action-packed mystery. In this one, ex-jockey and private investigator Sid Halley looks into allegations of foul play at a stable. It has one of Francis’s signature, eye-popping opening lines: “I took the battery out of my arm and fed it into the recharger, and only realized I’d done it when ten seconds later the fingers wouldn’t work.”

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins
On Hampstead on a moonlit night, drawing teacher Walter Cartwright encounters a “solitary Woman, dressed from head to foot in white garments, her face bent in grave inquiry on mine, her hand pointing to the dark cloud over London, as I faced her.” He helps her, and later discovers that she escaped from a nearby asylum. This complicated tale of murder, madness, and mistaken identity is narrated from multiple viewpoints and was inspired by a true crime. One of the most popular novels of the 19th Century, this is considered the first true mystery novels.


A little quiz: Which book is this opening line from?
“It was about eleven o'clock in the morning, mid October, with the sun not shining and a look of hard wet rain in the clearness...”

AND who is this character?

“I am tall, and I gangle. I look like a loose-jointed, clumsy hundred and eighty…As far as clumsiness and reflexes go, I have never had to use a flyswatter in my life.”

What books would you add to recommend to someone looking to sample THE BEST of what the crime fiction genre has to offer?

70 comments:

  1. What a perfect list! Several I need to read . . . .
    The opening line is from "The Big Sleep" and the character is Travis McGee??????

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    1. I have read The Big Sleep, but couldn’t recall the first line. Fantastic list.
      So happy to see Tony Hillerman on the list! And Thief of Time is my favorite of his. (Heather S )

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  2. Read most of them, Sometimes age plays to win. Don't recall the opening line but agree with Joan it sounds like Chandler. Travis Magee who taught me about Florida before I moved here. Nice list Hallie. congrates on that PhD. I would have tattooed that on my forehead. You are the modest one.

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    1. PhD: It was a slog. And for awhile I was actually doing what I'd studied.

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  3. I enjoy this list! WHIP HAND is a fine Dick Francis; it's the sequel to one I like even better, the original novel that introduced Sid Halley: ODDS AGAINST.

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  4. This list reinforces the fact that I arrived late to crime fiction. I have read few of the classics. Nevermind.
    I have a stack of books, both physical and ebooks with more arriving every day. (Thanks Reds.) There is no such thing as catching up.

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    1. Right?!? There are so many diverse voices that I enjoy reading now that I rarely go back to the classics.

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    2. For awhile I was reviewing crime fiction for the Boston Globe and it helped to dip back into the classics from time to time to gain some perspective.

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  5. What a list! No idea of either quiz question. I would add a book from each Jungle Red, plus a Shetland book from Ann Cleeves and a Louise Penny. Plus City of Lies by Victoria Thompson ( miss her...). Your list is short on female authors.

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  6. Rex Stout - The Doorbell Rang
    John Dickson Carr - The Burning Court
    Charlotte Armstrong - Mischief
    Ellery Queen - Calamity Town
    and a sadly lesser known title, Steven Torres, Precinct Puerto Rico

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    1. Jerry, I listen to Nero Wolfe every summer while working outside. THE DOORBELL RANG is a favorite -- among many. Apparently there is a large section of Rex Stout's FBI file devoted to it! (Selden)

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    2. Love Nero Wolfe, too. And surprisingly have never read Charlotte Armstrong.

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  7. Edith, I didn't notice the absence of women, but you're right. I find it remarkable that some of the people writing in 2008 are still going strong!

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  8. Morning all Paula B here ~ what a fabulous list and the additions from the readers. I thought when I retired I’d get through my TBR pile faster. Silly. It grows faster. I listen to books while I clean the house. The one sure way to tell if the story is fabulous is that I stop cleaning, sit in my chair, pick up my crocheting and drift away into the book. Paula Munier’s newest has been preordered as audio and I won’t even plan to clean. Just immerse into it on a story vacation.

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    1. I also listen to a lot of audiobooks, and Paula Munier's narrator is one of my favorites. Happy to know there's a new book in her Mercy Carr series.

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    2. I have the ARC, lucky me! And it is SO good!!!

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    3. Ha ha! Yes, my TBR pile grows faster, too.

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  9. What a great list! I've read some but have missed out on some classics. Many years ago a friend gave me a mystery starter pack as a present--she included Tony Hillerman and Dick Francis along with GK Chesterton and many others. Two of my favorites from that original gift were Thus was Adonis Murdered by Sarah Caudwell and a Frances Fyfield (can't remember which one now)

    Mom was a big fan of Dorothy Sayers and Josephine Tey. She encouraged us to read Daughter of Time, which became a favorite of ours. Margaret (twin) and I went on to read The Sunne in Splendour by Sharon Kay Penman, historical fiction that takes a very sympathetic view of Richard III.

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    1. I loved both DAUGHTER OF TIME and THE SUNNE IN SPLENDOUR, the latter of which I own but have not reread in many years. Thank you for reminding me! I foresee a great winter weekend with it! (Selden)

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    2. And while we're on Josephine Tey, how about Brat Farrar? A precursor to Patricia Highsmith's Ripley.

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    3. I love Josephine Tey and have read all her books many times--I think Brat Farrar is my favorite, but Miss Pym Disposes is very, very good as well.

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    4. I would add Sue Grafton and probably Marcia Muller. (Heather S)

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  10. Wow, evaluating, sifting, and recommending 1001 books! Your stamina was incredible! We're all big readers here but that effort must have been all-consuming for some time. (Selden)

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    1. Took about six months to compile... longer to edit and check.

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  11. What an ambitious project, Hallie!

    I've read at least half of your list, but so long ago I have little memory of them. Especially the series ones. At one time the Mystery Guild of America and a paperback mystery book club meant I bought and read a steady stream of Hillermans, Parkers, Kellermans, and the like.

    The description does sound like Travis McGee. I had a bit of a crush on him!

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  12. I remember when you did this, don’t I? Didn’t you have index cards?
    And I would add GONE GIRL, does that count? or is it not a classic yet and not enough a mystery? Had Gone Girl even been written when you wrote this?

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    1. And now that I am typing this I see what a weird title that is.

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    2. I'd add GONE GIRL, too. Definitely.
      I did have index cards packed into a library card file drawer.

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    3. I remember that! So impressive!

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  13. Have read many, but not all of your selections, Hallie. Thief of Time is one of my favorites of Hillerman's mysteries. For historical mysteries, following up on my comments earlier this week, I'd include Ellis Peters' Brother Cadfael mysteries. Two of my favorites are The Virgin in the Ice and The Leper of St. Giles. I'd include Charlotte MacLeod's Boston duo as well--Sarah Kelling and Max Bittersohn and the whole Kelling clan. And I'd add Martha Grimes--The Old Silent is one of her best in my opinion.

    And no clue on the questions!

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  14. I've read quite a few of them, but not in a long time - except for THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD because I did a Christie revisit earlier this year.

    No clue on the quiz questions. I'm so bad at things like that.

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  15. Hallie this is brilliant - I must get a copy. I wish I had had this book years ago!
    Sayers, Christie, McCall Smith (love Precious, her hub, her sect'y with her 98% grade at sec'y school!)
    and so many other great authors you've just touched the surface on.

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    1. I know, I know... so hard to come up with a small list. And for all of them to be truly "classic"

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  16. oh, me again from above ^ - I am going to call Powell's in Portland, Or - if anyone would have copies they certainly should!

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  17. Now I’d also add CITIZEN VINCE by Jess Walter. And if we are doing a new list, MY SISTER THE SERIAL KILLER by Oyinkan Braithwaite.

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    1. CITIZEN VINCE!!! Omg I loved that book.

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    2. Oh, that was me, Hank!

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  18. Just ordered 1001 Books...Amazon has it.

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  19. Great list, really anything by Josephine Tey works. Don't know the answer to your questions.

    More by women:
    Ngaio Marsh - Death at the Dolphin, one of her theatre-based ones with Roderick Alleyn
    Martha Grimes - The Man with a Load of Mischief, the first Richard Jury & Melrose Plant mystery
    Jane Haddam - Somebody Else's Music, to me the best of the Gregor Demarkian books.

    And I'd add some with more humour:
    Dorothy Gilman - The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax
    Charolotte McLeod as Alisa Craig - A Pint of Murder
    Evelyn E. Smith - Miss Silver Regrets
    Sharon McCrumb - Bimbos of the Death Sun
    Elizabeth Peters - Crocodile On the Sandbank. Or, to go with Tey's Daughter of Time - The Murders of Richard the III with the wonderful Jacqueline Kirby

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    1. Now yo have me wishing I could update the list...

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  20. How about River of Darkness by Rennie Airth or all of his books. Atlanta

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    1. Confession: I am not familiar with Airth. Something to rectify.

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  21. While I love all the JRR authors, there is one mystery that I would put at the absolute top of my list, which is A Place of Execution by Val McDermid. Probably the most complex and engrossing plot of any mystery I have ever read. And virtually anything by Peter Robinson (RIP) -- although if I had to pick one, it would be In a Dry Season. And coming closer to home, The Sniper's Wife by Archer Mayor.

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    1. McDermid. Robinson. I agree worthy or clssic status

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    2. McDermid and Cleeves are amazing! (HeatherS)

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  22. Sue Grafton! Annette

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  23. What a fabulous list, Hallie! I’m to see how many of these I’ve read. Now I have to look for a copy of the book so I can be certain I haven’t missed any good ones!

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    1. And who is this new blogger, Jennifer McKinlay?!! — Pat S

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  24. I’ve had THE CIRCULAR STAIRCASE on my shelves for years without reading, but now that I know that opening line, it’s moving up the TBR. I got it when I was haunting my dearly departed favorite used book store with the list of 100 Best Mysteries of the 20th Century from the Independent Mystery Booksellers.

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  25. It's a sobering reminder to read a list of classics in crime fiction and see almost no womwn weiters from those earlier days. Thanks in part to Sara Paretsky and the handful of women writers who gathered to form Sisters in Crime, more books by women got reviewed and therefore more of those got bought and therefore publishers were more likely to take on women writers and here we are today! (Susan Shea)

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    1. You are so right about that. And now today it's very much a womens' game.

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  26. Hallie, I am in awe! I can't imagine having the stamina--or the organization!--to have written this book. What a fabulous project! I have read many of those listed, but not all. I did get Travis McGee--thanks for the reminder of how much I loved those books!

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  27. Taking time out from language studies to thank you, Hallie Ephron, for this wonderful list! I've copied and pasted it and printed it out to go on my bulleting board for whatever I need to read next. (I've read many of the books on this list, but hardly all of them, and after reading your summaries, some of them invite re-reading for sure.

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  28. It's a great list, Hallie. I've read eleven of them and feel inspired to read the classics that I've missed. Thinking about what books to add, it's hard to judge which are old enough to qualify as classics. Are any of Ann Cleeves's Vera books tried-and-true enough? Or what about something from Reginald Hill's Dalziel and Pascoe series? Michael Gilbert's SMALLBONE DECEASED? PD James? Ruth Rendell? There are so many good mystery writers---it's overwhelming. I'm so impressed that you made a selection.

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  29. Wonderful list -- a few I have read and loved, a few I only know through films, and a few new suggestions! Thank you!! Also a great reminder of your writing voice, teaching voice! -- Denise Terry

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  30. I so want to go back and read some of the older classics, or some more. I've read all of the Agatha Christie books, but I'm sure I've forgotten most of the who-done-its in them. Josephine Tey's Daughter of Time and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Hound of the Baskervilles are two of my favorite books. Tey's book put me solidly on the side of Richard III's innocence, and I'd love to read The Sunne in Splendour by Sharon Kay Penman along these lines, too. Other books on your amazing list here, Hallie, that I've read are The No.1 Ladies Detective Agency by Alexander Smith and Presumed Innocent by Scott Turow,. I have had The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins on my list for years, and I also wanted to read The Circular Staircase by Mary Roberts Rinehart.

    One classic I read because it is a novel credited with being the first critically acclaimed and successful in the sub-genre of police procedural. (Note: first critically acclaimed and successful) What was challenging to me was the characteristic of this new sub-genre of non-development of the characters, no background study of who they are. I realize this is how the police procedural started out, but don't you agree it's morphed into character development beyond the basics.

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  31. Kerry Greenwood's two mystery series, Phryne Fisher and Corinna Chapman are wonderful. I got two books off the list that I haven't read yet, thanks. I am going to try to buy your book.

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  32. Regarding the comment about not many woman writers of classics isn’t there a comparison between UK and USA. Many more classic writers in golden age in UK were women. Nicola from Sydney

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  33. So many wonderful books on your list, Hallie.

    My favorites:
    DEAD BODY LANGUAGE by Penny Warner

    UNSOLICITED by Julie Kaewert

    THE KINGSBRIDGE PLOT by Maan Meyers

    I think they all are now out of print now?

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