Tag Archives: Edmund Crispin

Sarah Caudwell, “Thus Was Adonis Murdered”

Sarah Caudwell wrote a short series of mysteries in the 1980s that featured a group of young, attractive barristers who managed to stumble into and out of murderous situations. The books are clever, arch, drenched in irony, not even faintly … Continue reading

Posted in mystery | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Edmund Crispin, “The Case of the Gilded Fly”

Stop the presses for a startling literary discovery — the first inklings of meta-fiction in a Golden Age English murder mystery! Yes indeed: in the early pages of The Case of the Gilded Fly professor/detective Gervase Fen says “In fact … Continue reading

Posted in mystery | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Magdalen Nabb, “Vita Nuova”

I had almost forgotten about Magdalen Nabb; I’d certainly given up on her.  She was one of those mystery writers who surfaced in the 1980s – Edmund Crispin, Sarah Caudwell, Julian Barnes writing as Dan Kavanagh – who brought a … Continue reading

Posted in mystery | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment