Just Finished Reading: Crime Fiction – A Very Short Introduction by Richard Bradford (FP: 2015) [122pp]
Science-Fiction was, and will remain, my first literary love, but Crime Fiction is probably a close second. As with SF one of the things I love about it is the variety – from Golden Age classics, to Hard-boiled American, to historical, translated and even as far-fetched as Vampire detectives and much else besides. Quite a lot of these variants – with the notable exception of vampires – are covered in this interesting slim volume.
Starting with the origins of the genre – which turns out not to be either as obvious not as agreed upon as I first thought – we swiftly ended up discussing two of my favourite areas, Golden Age and Hard-boiled. I’m getting more familiar with Golden Age crime novels thanks to the British Library series I’m enjoying so much. Before that I’d been fixated on Agatha Christie novels almost exclusively. This section gave me some more authors to explore there. Naturally (as I’ve mentioned several times) I’m a HUGE fan of Noir/Hard-boiled US crime fiction and, again, the author gave me some pointers towards new (to me!) authors to try out.
After that the author focused on the transition to more modern crime formats on both sides of the Atlantic and how the two dominant styles adapted to the new world, played off each other and morphed into the variety of the modern crime novel we know today. Part of this, of course, was the expansion – indeed explosion – of translated works from Europe and especially from Scandinavia – known as Nordic Noir. Interestingly the author was at a total loss to explain the sudden emerge of this particular sub-genre!
Inevitably gender roles were brought up looking both at the history of female detectives and the role of women both as protagonists and victims through the decades. The female detective is something I’m going to be looking at later (fictionally and analytically), so it’ll be interesting applying some of his viewpoints to my reading. As of now I’m inclined not to agree with his PoV.
Before topping out on the literary ‘value’ of crime fiction (personally I hate the idea that some fiction has ‘merit’ and the rest is mere entertainment for the masses and, by definition, of lessor or no ‘value’) the author discussed several crime adjacent genres particularly legal fiction, thrillers and the spy novel.
Overall, this was an interesting, informative and valuable read. It highlighted a good selection of authors I can investigate and gave me some new perspectives on the genre. Well worth a read if you’re interested in the genre or are wondering where to start your criminal reading. Recommended and more literate based VSI books to come.