Saturday, February 11, 2012
Stock-taking
Time, I felt, for The Passing Tramp to do a bit of stocktaking of recent and forthcoming work:
I have written introductions to forthcoming editions by Coachwhip Publications (about which see All Hail Max! my review of Coachwhip's Ernest Bramah Max Carrados short story collection) of three J. J. Connington (Alfred Walter Stewart) Sir Clinton Driffield detective novels: Murder in the Maze (1927), The Castleford Conundrum (1932) and The Tau Cross Mystery/In Whose Dim Shadow (1935). These are limited to American distribution. If sales are good more titles may be made available and the distribution widened, I hope. These titles should be available in a few weeks.
I also have a short book on another mystery author that will appear by April, I hope. I will have more details in a few weeks.
My recent essays "J. J. Connington on Detective Fiction: The Gould-Stewart Correspondence, September 1935-December 1936" and "T. S. Eliot: Detective Fiction Critic" appear in volumes 61 and 62 respectively of CADS (Crime and Detective Stories). These issues can be ordered from the editor, Geoff Bradley, through his email address, Geoffcads@aol.com.
My fifty-four page CADS Supplement, Was Corinne's Murder Clued? The Detection Club and Fair Play, 1930-1953, also can be ordered through the above email address. I believe the individual issues and the pamphlet each cost about 10-12 U.S. dollars with air mail. Corinne is, I believe, the longest piece ever published on England's venerable Detection Club.
Finally, May 31 is the listed publication date for my book with McFarland Press, Masters of the "Humdrum" Mystery: Cecil John Charles Street, Freeman Wills Crofts, Alfred Walter Stewart and the British Detective Novel, 1920-1961. See here for my book's McFarland page. I plan to blog a bit more on these authors as we get nearer to the actual publication date. In addition to the material on these three authors, there is a great deal of detail on the English detective novel in general. Nearly ten years of research and reading when into this book, so that should give you some idea!
Happy reading! I will be back soon with Part Two in my Then and Now series: a discussion of the short stories of past master Dashiell Hammett and modern master Bill Pronzini. After that will be the commencement of yet another series: Crippen & Landru Cavalcade, wherein I review a different book each installment by the exquisite mystery short story publisher, Crippen & Landru. One of the Pronzini books I write about, in fact, was published by Crippen & Landru. The late and great Edward D. Hoch will be the first author I discuss in this series, followed by Ross Macdonald. Finally, there will be another in-depth exploration of the life and work of a neglected Golden Age traditionalist mystery writer, another American.
Busy weeks ahead for The Passing Tramp! I hope you enjoy the stuff I bring back from my travels.
You're making Erle Stanley Gardner (and me) look like slackers! Keep up the work.
ReplyDeleteGood to see the Connington books back in print. I'll probably buy one or two of those. I had never heard of Coachwhip Publications. Just visited their website and discover they have affordable paperback editions of some very hard to find books, including Thornley Colton, Blind Detective by Clinton Stagg, The Achievements of Luther Trant by Balmer & MacHarg (a Queen's Quorum title), and the very much deserved reissue of Average Jones by Samuel Hopkins Adams (also in the QQ). Bravo for Coachwhip!
ReplyDeleteJohn,
ReplyDeleteYes, by all means support Coachwhip, they are doing good work.
Jeff,
thanks! We'll have every last Golden Age book covered one day!