3.0
Golden Age Whodunits
ByPublisher Description
Fifteen puzzling tales from the masters of the mystery genre
Depending on who you ask, the term “whodunit” was first coined sometime around 1930, but the literary form predates that name by several decades. Still, it was in the years between the two World Wars—the so-called “Golden Age” of mystery fiction—that the style flourished. Short mysteries were published far and wide by a variety of authors, not just those primarily associated with the genre. They appeared in The Saturday Evening Post, Cosmopolitan, The New Yorker, and other high-end periodicals that still exist today. These tales were, in short, among the most popular diversions in literature and were of the highest caliber.In this volume, Edgar Award–winning anthologist Otto Penzler collects some of the finest American whodunits of the era, including household names and welcome rediscoveries. F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ellery Queen, and Mary Roberts Rinehart are all included, as are Ring Lardner, Melville Davisson Post, and Helen Reilly. The result is a cross section of the whodunit tale in the years that made it a staple in mystery fiction.
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3.0

Laura
Created 7 months agoShare
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“Reviewing short stories is always difficult - do I go story by story? review the entire book, even with inconsistent writing?
What I'll say here is that if you're a fan of the Golden Age mysteries, or if you're interested in reading some as an introduction, this is a good volume. There are several authors I've never thought of before (F. Scott Fitzgerald? Stephen Vincent Benet?) and authors that are of course part of that era (Mary Roberts Rinehart and Ellery Queen), but also - warning! - attitudes and phrasing that are definitely of their time. That may disturb modern sensibilities, which may take readers away from what, at heart, are good, short mysteries.
eARC provided by publisher via Edelweiss.”
About Otto Penzler
Otto Penzler, the creator of American Mystery Classics, is also the founder of The Mysterious Press (1975); MysteriousPress.com (2011), an electronic-book publishing company; and New York City’s Mysterious Bookshop (1979). He has won a Raven, the Ellery Queen Award, two Edgars (for the Encyclopedia of Mystery and Detection, 1977, and The Lineup, 2010), and lifetime achievement awards from NoirCon and The Strand Magazine. He has edited more than 70 anthologies and written extensively about mystery fiction.
Other books by Otto Penzler
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