Guilty Creatures
A Menagerie of Mysteries
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
"An unusually rewarding anthology whose most dangerous species remain Homo sapiens."— Kirkus Reviews
Feline friends, canine companions and aviary associates are often the truest reflections of their owners and have played a crucial role in classic crime fiction—be they detectives, or delinquents. Martin Edwards reaches into the British Library of Crime Classics to collect mysteries featuring an animal cohort.
Guilty Creatures celebrates an often-overlooked species of classic crime fiction. Since the dawn of the crime fiction genre, animals of all kinds have played a memorable part in countless mysteries, and in a variety of roles: the perpetrator, the key witness, the sleuth's trusted companion. This collection of fourteen stories corrals plots centered around cats, dogs, and insects alongside more exotic incidents involving gorillas, parakeets, and serpents—complete with a customary shoal of red herrings.
The collection includes an introduction on animals in detective fiction by Martin Edwards. “From the first detective story, Edgar Allan Poe’s locked room puzzle ‘The Murders in the Rue Morgue’ onwards, animals, birds, and insects have played a memorable part in countless mysteries, and in a wide variety of ways. Count Fosco, the brilliantly characterized villain in Wilkie Collins’s The Woman in White was surrounded by “a cockatoo, two canary-birds and a whole family of white mice,” while the hound of the Baskervilles famously terrorised Dartmoor in Arthur Conan Doyle’s superb Sherlock Holmes novel. Since then, many crime writers have written about members of the animal kingdom.”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The 14 stories in this excellent reprint anthology from Edwards (Settling Scores: Sporting Mysteries) feature animals in a variety of roles, including killer, witness, and source of clues. One highlight is G.K. Chesterton's "The Oracle of the Dog," in which evidence provided by a retriever helps Father Brown solve a baffling impossible murder. In Edgar Wallace's intriguing "The Man Who Hated Earthworms," his vigilante protagonists, the Four Just Men, must figure out why a golfing acquaintance of one of their members stopped to kill earthworms with extreme fury every time he spotted one. Wallace's daughter, Penelope Wallace, provides the most chilling selection: "The Man Who Loved Animals," in which a woman enlists the help of an old man known for being able to calm even the most vicious canine. Christianna Brand's series sleuth, Inspector Cockrill, is on the case in "The Hornet's Nest," another exemplar of the subtle but fair clueing Brand made her trademark in which both insects and mollusks play a part in the solution. Edwards succeeds again in sharing quality classic short mysteries with a common theme. This is another winner from the British Library Crime Classics series.