SMRC for 7/4/07 - Mystery Anthologies, Part 2
I almost never think to pick up mystery anthologies, but invariably like them when I do. These collections of short stories are a great way to try out different authors you may not be familiar with. Which is why we are featuring anthologies today and Thursday.
Today we have historical anthologies. Let me know about the ones I have missed!
MURDER THROUGH THE AGES: A BUMPER ANTHOLOGY OF HISTORICAL MYSTERIES. With a wide array of talent, such as Kate Ellis, author of the West County Murder Mysteries, Peter Tremayne, author of A Mystery of Ancient Ireland series, Ian Morson, author of theWilliam Falconer Medieval Mystery books and Dead Letter Mysteries, and Manda Scott, author of The Boudica Trilogy, among others, Murder Through the Ages is a compendium of not-to-be-missed historical mysteries.
THE MAMMOTH BOOK OF JACOBEAN WHODUNNITS. The seventeenth century was a time ripe with murder, anarchy, war, and political and religious intrigue, of which the Gunpowder Plot is only one example. This unputdownable new anthology from Mike Ashley presents 25 whodunits set in those turbulent times—also the age of the Witchfinder General, ‘revenge’ tragedies, and the colonization of America. Stories of murder and mayhem centre on the true role of Guy Fawkes, the English Civil War and the fate of Charles I, plus the lost colony of Roanoke and the tale of Pocahontas. The Mammoth Book of Jacobean Whodunits is a fast paced anthology about a thrilling time in British history.
THE MAMMOTH BOOK OF HISTORICAL WHODUNNITS. Three dozen mystery writers–among them Elizabeth Peters, Edward D. Hoch, Tom Holt, Margaret Frazer, Susanna Gregory, Derek Wilson, Marilyn Todd, and Michael Jecks–contrive deadly conundrums in the original stories commissioned especially for the volume. Its chilling, suspenseful pages include lethal doings in old Byzantium, the case of a serial killer loose in Elizabethan London, and terror in Celtic Wales, while inexplicable killings in medieval Sherwood Forest make sleuths of Robin Hood and Maid Marion and a perplexing murder in ancient Rome turns the orator Quintilian into Perry Mason. Readers of the immensely popular first Mammoth Book of Historical Whodunnits will welcome back Steven Saylor’s Gordianus the Finder and his occasional employer, the lawyer Cicero (in a story never collected before in book form), Peter Tremayne’s Sister Fidelma in medieval Ireland, and Mary Reed and Eric Mayer’s John the Eunuch, the Emperor Justinian’s Lord Chamberlain. Edward Hoch, Keith Taylor, and Cherith Baldry also turn such familiar historical figures as Christopher Columbus, John de Mandeville, and Geoffrey Chaucer into detectives in this new Mammoth collection of historical mysteries.
THE MAMMOTH BOOK OF ROMAN WHODUNNITS. A host of totally new stories written by some of the most popular writers of historical mysteries brings to life the glorious and nefarious world that for nearly a thousand years—from the founding of the Republic in 510 B.C. to the deposing of the last emperor, Romulus, in 476 A.D.—was ancient Rome. Events from the turbulent reigns of Julius Caesar, Augustus, Caligula, and Nero provide the colorful background to tales ingeniously contrived by contributors like Paul Doherty, Gillian Bradshaw, and Richard Butler. While John Maddox Roberts offers a new SPQR story, Steven Saylor, Marilyn Todd, Rosemary Rowe, Darrell Schweitzer, and Michael Kurland challenge their sleuths Gordianus the Finder, Claudia, Libertus, Pliny the Younger, and Quintilian with baffling new cases. Mary Reed and Eric Mayer conjure new intrigue for John the Eunuch, and Peter Tremayne sends his Fidelma on the trail of a Roman legion lost in Ireland. In addition to the original stories specially commissioned for this volume, this book also includes such rare reprints as a Slave Detective story by Wallace Nichols and one of the earliest historical mysteries to be set in Rome, “De Crimine” by Miriam Allen de Ford. which features Cicero as the investigator.
THE MAMMOTH BOOK OF EGYPTIAN WHODUNNITS. From Cleopatra and Herodotus to Howard Carter and the Curse of the Pharaohs, the investigators in The Mammoth Book of Egyptian Whodunnits uncover the murder mysteries of Ancient Egypt in over two dozen stories. Master anthologist Mike Ashley has gathered hidden gems and specially commissioned pieces from the genre’s favorite practitioners like Elizabeth Peters, Suzanne Franke, Michael Pearce, and featuring such favorite ancient-world investigators as Lynda Robinson’s Lord Meren, “the Eyes and Ears” of Nefertiti and Tutankhamun, Paul Doherty’s judge Amerotke from the 18th Dynasty, and Lauren Haney’s Lieutenant Bak of the Medjay police under Queen Hatshepsut, to beguile and confound historical mystery readers.
If you haven’t signed up for the Summer Mystery Reading Challenge yet, click here for directions. You are welcome to read along on your own, of course, but only registered participants are eligible for the prizes. No matter what your mystery preference - cozy, noir, hard-boiled, soft-boiled, thriller, suspense - we have it on revewiedbyliz this Summer.
If you would like to comment on a book by a featured author or ask them a question, please leave the comment on their daily page so they can find it easily. Comments about what you are reading, books you have finished, requests for readalikes or recommendations, or mystery related links can be made on the SMRC post for that day so we can all see them. Thanks!
Mystery Book Reviews by Liz at http://reviewedbyliz.com ©2007
Posted: July 4th, 2007 under Summer Mystery Reading Challenge 07.
Comments: 4
Comments
Comment from Pat Reid
Time: July 4, 2007, 8:44 am
All books I haven’t heard of - thank you Liz for bringing these to our attention.
Comment from Jon L. Breen
Time: July 4, 2007, 9:22 pm
Mike Ashley, who edits those “mammoth” anthologies, has also done a MAMMOTH BOOK OF ROARING 20S WHODUNNITS among others. And there are also others edited by Maxim Jakubowski, who did MURDER THROUGH THE AGES. A search on Amazon will turn up numerous titles from these editors. There have also been several anthologies of Sherlock Holmes pastiches. I’ve contributed to the six edited by Martin H. Greenberg, Jon Lellenberg, Daniel Stashower, and others in various combinations. There are also Holmes collections edited (separately) by Michael Kurland and Marvin Kaye, among others. The first anthology of historical mysteries may have been the Mystery Writers of America collection DEAR DEAD DAYS (1972), edited by Edward D. Hoch.
Comment from -V-
Time: July 5, 2007, 1:39 am
I think I am the same way, Liz, about not thinking to pick up the anthologies and then loving them when I do get one, or several. One anthology I have on my wishlist, Dublin Noir: The Celtic Tiger vs the Ugly American edited by Ken Bruen. I love Ken Bruen anyway and this is full of some fine writers: Ken Bruen, Eoin Colfer, Jason Starr, Laura Lippman, Olen Steinhauer, Peter Spiegelman, Kevin Wignall, Jim Fusilli, John Rickards, Patrick J. Lambe, Charlie Stella, Ray Banks, James O. Born, Sarah Weinman, Pat Mullan, Gary Phillips, Craig McDonald, Duane Swierczynski, Reed Farrel Coleman, and others.
I can’t wait to find it and add it to Mt Git’r'Read.
I have several anthologies, just can’t think of the titles off the top of my cranium. Thank you for the reminder to pull them and enjoy!
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Time: January 13, 2009, 11:10 am
[…] I recommend the “Mammoth” anthologies edited by Mike Ashley. Book reviewer Liz provides a nice summary of various titles in this […]
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