Travel quiz
a) One month
b) One week
c) Twenty minutes
d) One and three-quarters legs of a two-leg journey
e) None of the above. No piece of wheeled luggage has ever lasted that long.
© Peter Rozovsky 2012
Labels: what I did on my vacation
"Because Murder is More Fun Away From Home"
Labels: what I did on my vacation
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| ... your humble blogkeeper |
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| All photos by ... |
Labels: England, images, noir photos, what I did on my vacation, York
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| (Photo by your humble blogkeeper) |
Labels: Crimefest 2012, CWA, Daggers, Georges Simenon, Italy, noir photos, River of Shadows, Valerio Varesi
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| (A singular street) |
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| (Photos by your humble blogkeeper) |
Labels: ancient history, Crimefest 2012, history, images, noir photos, what I did on my vacation, York

A gentle spring wind dissipates the gin fumes over College Green, and Bristol is an eerily quiet place now that Ali Karim has left town.Labels: Ali Karim, Alison Bruce, conventions, Crimefest, Crimefest 2012, Dashiell Hammett, Declan Burke, Gunnar Staalesen, Isaac Babel, Laura Wilson, Parker, Peter Guttridge, Richard Stark, Stav Sherez, William Ryan
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| (P.D. James in conversation with Barry Forshaw at Crimefest 2012) |
Labels: Anne Zouroudi, Barry Forshaw, conventions, Crimefest, Crimefest 2012, P.D. James, Peter James
Labels: Arnaldur Indriðason, Asa Larsson, Barry Forshaw, conventions, Crimefest, Crimefest 2012, Gunnar Staalesen, Helene Tursten, Iceland, Norway, Ragnar Jonasson, Scandinavian crime fiction, Sweden, Thomas Enger
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| Sounds better than "pulp." |
Labels: Anders Roslund, Anne Zouroudi, Börge Hellström, Chris Ewan, conventions, Crimefest, Crimefest 2012, Declan Burke, Frederick Forsyth, Michael Stanley, P.D. James, Sue Grafton
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| (Photo by your humble blogkeeper) |
Labels: England, images, London, noir photos, what I did on my vacation
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| (David Tidhar: Police officer, private detective, scholar, activist, crime-fiction protagonist) |
Labels: A short history of crime fiction in Israel, David Tidhar, history, Israel, Israel crime fiction, Uri Kenan
Dashiell Hammett's very first Continental Op story, "Arson Plus," twice uses the word meaning or a form thereof early on, both times in a negative sense:"I had never known him to miss an opening for a sour crack, but it didn't mean anything."and
"Mr. Coons was a small-boned, plump man with the smooth, meaningless face, and the suavity of the typical male house servant."What does Hammett mean by this? I say he's stating clearly and with breathtaking concision the proposition that appearances are not only deceptive, as they would be in a conventional detective story, but utterly and existentially unrelated to whatever truth the detective pursues.
Labels: Dashiell Hammett
Back to Iron Monkey for a moment: What, I wonder, would Communist Party officialdom think of this Hong Kong movie? Labels: Asia, Bottoms Up Club, China, Hong Kong, Iron Monkey, Luk Yu teahouse, martial arts movies, movies
The 1993 Hong Kong martial-arts movie Iron Monkey is marginally more realistic than some others that I've seen. There's a bit of blood now and then, and characters occasionally appear injured from chopping, kicking, and bashing hell out of each other with hands, fists, feet, bamboo poles, office equipment, and household objects, for example.Labels: comics, Iron Monkey, martial arts movies, movies
"I think our familiarity (at least until recently) with holding and flipping through magazines and newspapers gives these works an intriguing intimacy."That makes a nice case for printed books, magazines, and newspapers over whatever machine you're using to read this now. Forget the advantages of e-books for a moment; what have we lost?
A wonderful little book called Un Certain Style Ou Un Style Certain? Introduction a l'etude du style francais includes excerpts from Émile Zola's novel Thérèse Raquin (1867). "Here is a tale of adultery, murder and madness," according to an introduction to the Penguin Classics edition of the novel, "set mainly in a single location and with a cast of four leading characters and four minor ones."Sounds like 1950s crime melodrama to me. Has anyone ever cited Zola among those authors whose work includes elements of crime fiction?"Built into the left wall are dark, low, flattened shops which exhale the dank air of cellars. There are secondhand booksellers, toyshops and paper merchants whose displays sleep dimly in the shades, grey with dust. The little square panes of the shop windows cast strange, greenish reflections on the goods inside. Behind them, the shops are full of darkness, gloomy holes in which weird figures move around."
Labels: blogs, Booklist, Émile Zola, Mystery Month, proto-crime fiction
Labels: acting, Brant, comic crime fiction, England, Humor, Ireland, Jason Statham, Ken Bruen, London, movies, Paddy Considine
I finally watched The Big Lebowski from beginning to end. The Coen brothers know their Dashiell Hammett (and they want you to know that they do), and the movie beautifully captures the melancholy and excitement of Raymond Chandler when the Coens want it to.Labels: acting, Coen brothers, Dashiell Hammett, Ethan Coen, Joel Coen, movies, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Raymond Chandler, The Big Lebowski, The Big Sleep
Another reason to like David Owen's Franz "Pufferfish" Heineken:
"Are you inferring that I—"Misuse of infer for imply has long been a common mistake, and correcting it can get a copy editor in trouble. I loved the exchange.
"Implying."
As good as the actors are on The Thick of It, the show has me thinking about writing.
Labels: Armando Iannucci, Australia, comedy, copy editors, David Owen, editing, Humor, Larry David, Pufferfish, Seinfeld, Tasmania, television, The Thick of It, things that drive me nuts
"The nickname's Pufferfish. A prickly, toxic bastard, ability to inflate and even explode when severly provoked."This one comes with a big, fat review blurb from me; click here then scroll down for my previous posts about Owen and his prickly protagonist. Click here for Crime Factory: Issue Ten, which includes an interview with David Owen.
Labels: Australia, comic crime fiction, Crime Factory, David Owen, Franz Heineken, Humor, Pufferfish, Tasmania

Even if I hadn't known that postwar masculine anxiety was one of the staples of American pop culture and psychology, I might have guessed it from Lester Dent's Honey in His Mouth (1956) and Charles Runyon's Color Him Dead (1963); each has a castrated character.Labels: American Library Association, Booklist, Charles Runyon, Color Him Dead, Honey in His Mouth, Lester Dent, Mystery Month
| Mannion |
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| Pearson |
Labels: Alan Glynn, Bloodland, buzzwords, Peter Mannion, Stewart Pearson, television, The Thick of It, Veep
"Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye is narrated by Ralph Cotter, a hardened convict who’s serving time, and when we meet him, he’s just about to break out of jail with fellow prisoner Toko."I took special note because I'm reading Charles Runyon's 1963 novel Color Him Dead, which begins with a prologue from the point of view of Drew Simmons, a hardened convict who's serving time and who, when we meet him, is just about to break out of jail.
Labels: Charles Runyon, Gold Medal Books, Horace McCoy, paperback originals
"I would thou didst itch from head to foot and I had the scratching of thee; I would make thee the loathsomest scab in Greece."Those are my favorite examples; what are yours? And what distinguishes good swearing from tedious, offensive swearing in books, movies, and plays and on television?
Labels: Andrea Camilleri, BBC America, Salvo Montalbano, Shakespeare, television, The Thick of It, Troilus and Cressida
Labels: Batman, Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, comics, Frank Miller, graphic novels, National Comic Book Day, Superman
"She had been somewhere with someone, but she couldn’t quite remember the place or the person. As a matter of fact she had a feeling that she had been a number of places with a number of persons, but she couldn’t quite remember that for certain either."
"(I)t it was a small, sad, lovely face of fine structure in which sadness and loveliness would survive as a shadow of themselves after the erosions of gin and promiscuous love and nervous breakdowns."
ibid.
"She was tall, blackhaired, with creamy skin and what I thought of simply as `Mexican' eyes. Dark eyes, soft, big, shadowed eyes with both the question and the answer in them."
The Sleeper Caper, Richard S. Prather
Before you sneer at "Mexican eyes," think about the words that went before: "what I thought of simply as." Sure, Prather has his protagonist, Shell Scott, engage in what some might call ethnic stereotyping and objectification of women today, but by God, he's redeemed by his awareness of what he's doing and by Scott's enjoyment of this Elena's beauty. And who could resist the melodramatic appeal of a pair of eyes that contain not just answers but also questions? Damned efficient, I'd say."You never can tell what a big, tough Polish boy will do when he finds a nude blonde in his bathroom."Goodnight!
To Kiss, Or Kill, Day Keene
Labels: 1950s, Asia, Day Keene, e-books, Fletcher Flora, Gold Medal Books, Japan, Keigo Higashino, paperback originals, Richard S. Prather, Shell Scott, The Devotion of Suspect X

The classic handbook Elements of Style (Strunk and White) includes the injunction that "the expression the fact that should be revised out of every sentence in which it occurs," and I see no reason to disagree.Labels: Alexander O. Smith, Anne Holt, Elements of Style, Elye J. Alexander, Keigo Higashino, Marlaine Delargy, Strunk and White, things that drive me nuts, translation, translators, Who needs copy editors?
“`Get out of here!' a voice replied. `I’ve had enough of you hoodlums!'”
“It was a venerable voice, from another Ireland, from the 30's or even earlier, but age gave it no weight or assurance — only a frail, impatient, dangerous doubt.”© Peter Rozovsky 2012
Labels: Adrian McKinty, Ireland, Northern Ireland