Thumper Posted January 16, 2010 Report Posted January 16, 2010 Hello All, If you have read my review of Sleep Don't Come Easy, you'll notice that I wondered where all of the AA detectives have gone. I started looking around and really, where are they? I would have thought with all of the shoot 'em books that the publishers swear we, the AA reading audience, can't seem to do without; I would have thought that there would have been a couple of detective supermen to go along with that. Are mysteries to hard to write, to hard to read, what is going on?
Guest soul sister Posted January 19, 2010 Report Posted January 19, 2010 Hey Thumper, That is a good question. I know there were a few "one hit" wonders. The Blackbird Papers - by the 5,000 lbs weight loss doctor - and another series by Chris Chambers set in DC a "two hit" wonder -- the protag -- Angela Bivens. I know there were series throughout the 1990s Gloria Mallett, Penny Mickelberry and others. I have pooh-poohed the rise of ghetto/urban-lit as the undoing of good Black fiction - and the dearth of good mystery might be the first casuality in this battle. I have moved to historical fiction - and will remain there - but one could always use a good mystery - Not sure if this answers the question or creates more -- peace Soul Sister
Crystal Posted January 19, 2010 Report Posted January 19, 2010 Hey Soul Sister - Happy New Year! I'm not much of a mystery fan but I'd love to hear some of the historical fiction titles you have in your stack of goodies. I've recently been on a Chinese kick with Anchee Min: Becoming Madame Mao, Wild Ginger, Empress Orchid and The Last Empress.
Thumper Posted January 20, 2010 Author Report Posted January 20, 2010 Hello All, Soul Sister: I hear you on the historical fiction tip. I've been in that bent for a long time and I don't see an end to that any time soon. But, I'm missing my detectives. Oh, well, maybe they'll show up soon.
Guest soul sister Posted January 20, 2010 Report Posted January 20, 2010 Hip-hip-Hooray for Historical fiction lovers. I have completed Wench - just yesterday in a marathon read - since there was nothing on TV until NCIS-LA with LL Cool J. Don't hate - smile. I LOVE Laura Rowland - she dropped her 13th installment in the Sano Ichiro series - a policeman/archivist turned chief investigator in 1500s Japan - INCREDIBLE. The beauty of her work is in the telling and the ability that all 13 books can be read independent of each other. I have on my shelf - Triangle by Katherine Webbber - its been there a while - about some "horrific" family secret learned about an ancestor in the Triangle Shirtwaist factory. Another - half-read work is the Pearl Diver by Jeff Talarigo about a leaper colony. Then I am toying with another title - Moses, the Monster and Miss Anne - non-fiction about the lives of three women in 19th century Maryland, Harriet Tubman, Patty Cannon and Anna Carroll. Respectively, about an enslaved woman, slave catcher/trader, and plantation mistress. Currently, I am cracking open the Private Papers of the Eastern Jewel - a fictional account of true person "Eastern Jewel," princess, spy and feminist. Lastly, I came across this website and they have a great listing of forthcoming titles -- in historical fiction. Enjoy! http://www.historicalnovelsociety.org/
Guest Crystal Posted January 20, 2010 Report Posted January 20, 2010 This is great Soul Sister! I've read a couple of the Sano Ichiro books and enjoyed them. I didn't realize there were 13 of them - I'm way behind. Moses, the Monster and Miss Anne - what a title! And thanks for the historical novel society site. I'll be using it.
Guest guest Posted January 26, 2010 Report Posted January 26, 2010 This is great Soul Sister! I've read a couple of the Sano Ichiro books and enjoyed them. I didn't realize there were 13 of them - I'm way behind. Moses, the Monster and Miss Anne - what a title! And thanks for the historical novel society site. I'll be using it.
Guest guest Posted January 26, 2010 Report Posted January 26, 2010 For AA mysteries, try Kwei Quartay's Wife of the Gods. It's a wonderful mystery set in Africa and the lead detective is named Darko Dawson. Quartay's second Darko Dawson mystery - Children of the Streets - will be released in fall 2010.
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