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Topic: Crime fiction


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In the News (Mon 16 Nov 09)

  
  Crime Fiction (2007)
Crime Fiction doesn't look that bad actually - it's a weird combination of comedy and crime movie with dirty low budget set at $160 000 which hardly allowed producers to hire professional actors, but it's quite popular for some reason.
Crime Fiction was written by current Comparative Literature Ph.D. student Jonathan Ullyot and is described as a "perverted crime drama" by the filmmakers.
The plot of Crime Fiction centers on James Cooper, a young literary failure, who is forced to relocate to Chicago from New York City after his first novel flops.
www.imdb.com /title/tt0481497   (307 words)

  
  Crime fiction   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Crime fiction is a generic term used in literature for a genre of fiction that deals with crimes, their detection, criminals and their motives.
Crime fiction began to be considered as a serious genre only as late as 1900.
Some of the crime novels generally regarded as the finest, including those which are regularly chosen by experts as belonging to the best 100 crime novels ever written (see bibliography), have been out of print ever since their first publication, which often dates back to the 1920s or 30s.
www.webenglish.com.tw /encyclopedia/en/wikipedia/c/cr/crime_fiction.html   (2178 words)

  
 Crime fiction - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Crime fiction is the genre of fiction that deals with crimes, their detection, criminals, and their motives.
Crime fiction began to be considered as a serious genre only around 1900.
The evolution of the print mass media in the United Kingdom and the United States in the latter half of the 19th century was crucial in popularising crime fiction and related genres.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Crime_fiction   (2536 words)

  
 Hardboiled - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hardboiled crime fiction is a uniquely American style pioneered by Dashiell Hammett, refined by Raymond Chandler, and endlessly imitated since by writers such as Mickey Spillane.
It is distinguished by an unsentimental portrayal of crime, violence and sex.
The counterpart detective would be stylistically referred to as an "armchair detective" and are considered "soft" in contrast because they do not have to deal with the darker themes of deceit and violence in a direct manner.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Hardboiled   (296 words)

  
 Kate's Book Blog: Is Crime Fiction Inherently Reactionary?
But there’s a problem with crime fiction, which is that the form is inherently reactionary.
Crime fiction is about a disturbance to the established order.
Hence the ubiquity of crime drama on television.
katesbookblog.blogspot.com /2006/03/is-crime-fiction-inherently.html   (640 words)

  
 Reference for Crime fiction - Search.com
Crime fiction is the genre of fiction that deals with crimes, their detection, criminals, and their motives.
Crime fiction began to be considered as a serious genre only around 1900.
Some of the crime novels generally regarded as the finest, including those which are regularly chosen by experts as belonging to the best 100 crime novels ever written (see bibliography), have been out of print ever since their first publication, which often dates back to the 1920s or 30s.
www.search.com /reference/Crime_fiction   (2650 words)

  
 Crime Fiction Genre Definition.
First there is the crime, usually a murder; then there is the investigation; and finally the outcome or judgement, often in the shape of the criminal's arrest or death.
Crime is usually distinguished from mainstream fiction and other genres such as science fiction or historical fiction, but boundaries can be, and indeed are, blurred.
Equally as important in the history of the crime fiction genre was Agatha Christie(1890-1976) who was born in Devon and educated at home, studying singing and piano in Paris.
www.findmeanauthor.com /crime_fiction.htm   (637 words)

  
 Murder, they wrote - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
Sarah Weinman, a crime fiction writer and columnist whose blog, "Confessions of an Idiosyncratic Mind," features links to crime and mystery novels, agrees that mysteries and thrillers are not unique in their topical concerns.
Crime and mystery novels, however, seem more reflective of real-life events and situations if only because their subject matter is a newspaper or television news broadcast away.
The golden age of mystery and crime fiction is generally acknowledged to be the period from 1920 until the end of the 1930s, when Agatha Christie, Hammett, Dorothy Sayers, Ellery Queen and Erle Stanley Gardner were at their creative peaks.
pittsburghlive.com /x/tribune-review/entertainment/books/s_312196.html   (1454 words)

  
 Crime Fiction A Pre History
Crime has featured in literature since Cain and Abel but this does not mean there has to be a literature of crime and still less crime fiction in the contemporary sense.
In terms of fiction, the most significant strand in this new literature of crime was the picaresque tale, that loose, episodic, usually autobiographical account of the adventures and tricks of a wandering picaro or rogue.
The movement from the literature of crime to genre "crime-fiction" is broadly a movement from the criminal as hero to the detective as hero.
www.classiccrimefiction.com /pre-history.htm   (2548 words)

  
 Foreign Crime Fiction: The Translators Unedited, , , Bob Cornwell
With crime fiction you have to be especially careful to pick up on and recreate clues that may have been dropped imperceptibly into the text.
If the crime novel is a police procedural or something similar, one needs to have access to some 'authority' familiar with detailed procedures in the country where the book is set: I'd have thought this would usually be the author.
This is something of which the English (particularly the crime fiction reading public) are not very tolerant: it can become very wearing when it is prolonged, although the historic present is something perfectly acceptable to a French readership.
www.crimetime.co.uk /make_page.php?id=526   (13912 words)

  
 Copycat Crimes: Crime Fiction and the Marketplace of Anxieties
Crime fiction, a genre that deliberately exploits anxiety in the reader, taps into topical social concerns using familiar formulas to produce suspenseful narratives.
Crime fiction is popular in part because it addresses our anxieties by taking us beyond the surface of things into its depths, attributing meaning and pattern to elements of the story, suggesting the mysteries of human behavior can be solved.
He deliberately constructs the crime as the work of a serial killer, having read enough true crime books to make it authentic, and he takes pride in his work, eager to confirm with the famous profilers that some aspects of his ritual are unique.
homepages.gac.edu /~fister/copycatcrimes.html   (6179 words)

  
 crime fiction - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about crime fiction
Genre of detective fiction distinguished by emphasis on character and atmosphere rather than solving a mystery.
Examples are the works of US writers Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler during the 1930s and, in the second half of the 20th century, US writer Patricia Highsmith and English author Ruth Rendell.
The English writer William Godwin's Caleb Williams (1794) is a forerunner that points to the continuing tendency in crime fiction for serious psychological exploration to be linked with political radicalism.
encyclopedia.farlex.com /Crime+fiction   (156 words)

  
 The evolution of the detective in crime fiction
In 1929, RA Knox constructed a set of commandments for crime writers, known as the Decalogue, which insist, among other things, that the detective cannot withhold clues from the reader and must not himself be the killer.
Though Christie and Allingham were still going strong, detective fiction as a form was challenged by the espionage novels of Eric Ambler and Graham Greene, by writers such as Patricia Highsmith (whose thrillers contained no detective at all), and by the emerging sub-genre of the police procedural.
Bosch is probably the most rounded, consistently interesting detective in American crime fiction now, his creator ensuring that the character carries the scars of each case to the next book, taking care to re-invent him at regular intervals.
www.markbillingham.com /detective.html   (2738 words)

  
 Site Map of The Crime Library
A look at crime in prison, deep in the cell blocks of the Massachusetts Walpole Penitentiary.
Through an unusual physics experiment, police determine whether a woman was hunted or a victim of a hunting accident.
Tragic story of a man jailed for 15 years for crimes he didn't commit.
www.crimelibrary.com /fiction   (393 words)

  
 Canadian Crime Fiction
Canadian Crime Fiction covers both English- and French-language crime fiction, which is defined as adventure, crime, detective, espionage, mystery, suspense, and thrillers, as well as tales of intrigue, violence and investigation, and covers both adult and juvenile novels and plays.
It is a hybrid of Allen J. Hubin's monumental Crime Fiction; A Comprehensive Bibliography; Jacques Barzun's and Wendell Taylor's A Catologue of Crime; and, Twentieth Century Crime and Mystery Writers.
It encompasses Canadian crime fiction by Canadians set in Canada (+); by Canadians set elsewhere (*); by foreigners set in Canada (!); by foreigners set outside of Canada, but with a Canadian protagonist (#); and, setting is unknown, but perhaps Canadian, by a query mark: (?).
www.batteredbox.com /ReferenceBooks/CanadianFiction.htm   (2216 words)

  
 Open Directory - Arts: Writers Resources: Fiction: Mystery   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Crime Writers - A group for writers of crime fiction/ mysteries to share resources, information, law enforcement or criminal procedural and profiling ideas and research data for use in our books and other writing projects.
Crime Writers of Canada - National association for professional practitioners of the crime writing genre.
Crime Writers of Great Britain - A professional body which sets out to represent writers of crime fiction and non-fiction.
dmoz.org /Arts/Writers_Resources/Fiction/Mystery   (600 words)

  
 Guyana Diaspora: Crime Fiction Writer
He is best known for his crime fiction, including four novels featuring fl journalist Sam Dean: Blood Rights (1989), which was adapted for BBC television, The Late Candidate (1990), winner of the Crime Writers' Association Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction, Point of Darkness (1994) and An Image to Die For (1995).
The crime novel allows Phillips both to self-consciously confront his own relationship to a white English cultural heritage and to challenge essentialist, universal notions of Black subjectivity.
In common with crime fiction more generally, Blood Rights seduces its reader through the agility of its plot and its ability to generate mystery, intrigue and suspense.
guyanadiaspora.blogspot.com /2006/02/crime-fiction-writer.html   (1435 words)

  
 Christmas books: Crime fiction - Telegraph Christmas books: Crime fiction - Telegraph
The best crime this year, though, reacts against that formula, asks questions as well as giving answers, and suggests that, even when the mystery is solved, something remains out of joint.
On her way to commit suicide, she finds herself, from a motive she knows is sound but cannot identify, stabbing a stranger to death.
The increasingly world-weary Zen is palpably gloomy here thanks to the constant crime and enervating bureaucracy; even so, Dibdin's version of Italy is one that merits revisiting, his books as enriching in their own way as a stroll round the Uffizi.
www.telegraph.co.uk /arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2007/11/24/bocrime124.xml   (789 words)

  
 Genre: <i>Crime Fiction</i> | Illiterarty.com
Crime fiction is categorised by its dealings with certain aspects of crime and the criminal—and, of course, the police or detectives who solve them.
Crime fiction is a fairly general genre, and there are sub-genres that are more specific, such as detective fiction, some thrillers, hardboiled, and legal thriller.
As Crime fiction progressed through the twentieth century, there are many authors who are now revered as forerunners of the genre who were, at the time, looked at with disdain—such as Raymond Chandler.
www.illiterarty.com /genre-crime-fiction   (603 words)

  
 Crime Fiction Database - Bibliography.
I have only included those writers who are well known for their crime fiction.
She was born in London and attended The Perse High School for Girls in Cambridge, before returning to London and the Polytechnic for Speech-Training.
His early books were about history but he soon turned to crime fiction.
www.crimefiction.com /cfd1.htm   (2077 words)

  
 N o N i g h t S w e a t s : CRIME FICTION IS SILLY
I've never fully worked out why I used to enjoy the genre of Crime Fiction so much (although there are signposts throughout my life that would probably be superficially indicative).
The best and most effective Crime Fiction is written in the first person which only adds to this subtle subterfuge on the part of the reader.
To be honest, they're not ground breaking bits of fiction and they basically follow the model set out by Raymond Chandler with a highly moral central character railing against modern society (needless to say, this doesn't reflect the realities of private detectives at all but is, as always, a useful thematic device).
www.users.bigpond.com /pturnbul/nns_crim.htm   (1313 words)

  
 French Crime Fiction
There are some specialists who insist that the first French fictional detective was Voltaire’s Zadig who described correctly the king’s horse and the queen’s dog, even though he had never set eyes on either, but simply used logical reasoning while observing their tracks (first published in 1747 - English editions are available- e.g.
A very influential and fascinating character in French crime history was Eugène François Vidocq (1775-1857) who had been a police informer, a thief –turned cop, and became the first head of the Sûreté (the French police Force).
In reality the first French fictional investigator is Monsieur Lecoq in L’Affaire Lerouge (The Widow Lerouge, Scribner, N.Y., 1900)- this mystery is usually considered the first full-length mystery novel (serialized in 1864).
www.dartmouth.edu /~gjdemko/french.htm   (1936 words)

  
 Crime fiction Summary and Analysis Summary
It is usually distinguished from mainstream fiction and other genres such as science fiction or historical fiction, but boundaries can be, and...
Describes the literary genre of crime fiction using certain texts as evidence for the analyses within the essay.
Postulates that while the detective is usually the main character in crime fiction stories, supporting characters are equally important.
www.bookrags.com /Crime_fiction   (396 words)

  
 Early Impossible Crime Fiction - by Michael E. Grost
In pulp magazines, the "weird menace tales", pulpdom's version of impossible crime fiction, which were born around 1930, became the origin of many "hero pulp" writers, and laid a foundation for Cornell Woolrich and the modern suspense tale, as well.
These crimes tend to be committed with mechanical devices, ingenious bad machines that operate on their own, after they are set up, and which kill people or otherwise commit some crime.
There was a quality of ingenuity to her placement: it was not at all obvious that a secret passage anywhere would enable the crime to be possible; the revelation that a secret passage would make the crime possible would startle the reader at the end of the story.
members.aol.com /MG4273/hanshews.htm   (9375 words)

  
 Crime Scene - a crime and mystery ezine
You do not read science fiction – it rots the brain and destroys the critical faculties of the mind – and above all you do not read crime fiction which, according to her analogy, was only one baby-step away from pornography.
The “heroes” of crime – cops and PIs – are brought into contact with death and despair every day, and that contact helps bring them down to their darkest.
Crime fiction affects because the actions of these despicable characters often touches something inside us; the wild animal waiting to break free or the rebel who wants to crack the fabric of society, to escape from the rules.
www.crimescenescotland.com /article_why_crime_fiction_october_november_2003.htm   (919 words)

  
 Crime Fiction, Carol Anne Davis article
Knowledge resonates with the intelligent reader much more than hollow hype, so we crime writers must look beyond the flawed impressions of crime and criminal institutions that are perpetrated by the popular media.
This happens with some crime profiles where the paper decides to always present a certain prisoner as `evil' and will ignore any good things that he or she has done.
Children are the most frequent crime victims but also the forgotten ones as they are abused privately in the family home and often grow up thinking that such beatings happen to everyone.
www.dowse.com /crime-fiction.html   (999 words)

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