Reading the Detectives discussion

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General chat > Donnish Mysteries/Detectives

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message 1: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 350 comments Does anyone have any favourite books which fall into this category?

I'm thinking of books set in or around universities or places associated with them like Oxford and Cambridge, or featuring an academic, professor, student or similar as the detective - or sidekick.

I was reminded while reading a review of one of Edmund Crispin's books that my favourite types of detective fiction used to be those in either an academic or church setting, but I've rather lost touch with these aspects in the last few years and I'd like to reacquaint myself with some of the books and find some new ones.

I love the wordplay and literary games in Edmund Crispen's books, and I also generally enjoy seeing quotes and latin and greek phrases littered around even if I've no idea what they mean!


message 2: by Abigail (new)

Abigail Bok (regency_reader) | 1036 comments Have you read the mysteries of Michael Innes (whose real name was J. I. M. Stewart, and he wrote some serious novels under that name in addition to the many Michael Innes books)? Of the Innes books, most are not centered on academia though they have some academic themes, but one, The Paper Thunderbolt, is set in the Bodleian Library.

If you are interested in an academic setting for books that are not detective stories, read J. I. M. Stewart’s A Staircase in Surrey series: the first is The Gaudy. They certainly widened my vocabulary!


message 3: by Sandy (new)

Sandy | 4205 comments Mod
I read the first of the Peter Shandy series by Charlotte MacLeod, Rest You Merry as part of my Xmas reading. He is a professor at a college and lives on campus. I enjoyed it as much for the college "politics" as for the mystery, but have not continued the series.


message 4: by Jan C (new)

Jan C (woeisme) | 1820 comments Simon Said by Sarah R. Shaber is the first story featuring Professor Simon (I don't recall his last name), possibly a history or archaeology professor at a Southern college/university. It was okay. Possibly a touch cozier than I was prepared for. Maybe future volumes aren't as bad as the first. I think I may have started the second one.


message 5: by Abigail (new)

Abigail Bok (regency_reader) | 1036 comments I am also very fond of the series of mysteries by Joanne Dobson, set in a fictional New England college town and with a professor sleuth. The first is Quieter than Sleep. They were written in the late 1990s and early 2000s.


message 6: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 350 comments This is great - lots of new authors for me to try! Keep it coming :-)


message 7: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 600 comments Abigail wrote: "Have you read the mysteries of Michael Innes (whose real name was J. I. M. Stewart, and he wrote some serious novels under that name in addition to the many Michael Innes books)? Of the Innes books..."

The first one is definitely an academic one, Death at the President's Lodging, published in the U.S. as Seven Suspects.

Amanda Cross wrote a good academic mystery series featuring Professor Kate Fansler.

And slightly less academic are the anthropology/sleuth duo in Margot Arnold's books (less academic because the murders tend to take place while the profs are doing field work rather than at the university itself).


message 8: by Lesley (new)

Lesley | 384 comments There are the Colin Dexter books set around Oxford University that led to the television series Morse.


message 9: by Jan C (new)

Jan C (woeisme) | 1820 comments Abigail wrote: "I am also very fond of the series of mysteries by Joanne Dobson, set in a fictional New England college town and with a professor sleuth. The first is Quieter than Sleep. They were wr..."

I enjoyed this series.


message 10: by Jan C (new)

Jan C (woeisme) | 1820 comments Leslie wrote: "Abigail wrote: "Have you read the mysteries of Michael Innes (whose real name was J. I. M. Stewart, and he wrote some serious novels under that name in addition to the many Michael Innes books)? Of..."

I tried one of the Cross books - I think it related to Joyce - I just couldn't make it through. I may have given up after just a chapter or two. It may be that this was in the middle of the series and I needed information that I just didn't have. But I swore off her then.


message 11: by Jan C (new)

Jan C (woeisme) | 1820 comments A few others I thought of - actually was reminded of when I was looking something up at SYKM - Jefferson Bass writes of Dr. Bill Brockton, a professor at University of Tennessee and forensic anthropologist. Bill Bass (the Bass portion of the writing team with Jon Jefferson) is the founder of The Body Farm, located at UT.

I also like Beverly Connor's Lindsay Chamberlain series. She is also a forensic anthropologist connected to some southern university, possibly in Georgia. She spends a lot of time in the field; although at least one, possibly more, dealt with administration politics.

Aaron Elkins' Gideon Oliver series. Believe he is connected to a university in the Pacific Northwest, in Washington. Also a forensic anthropologist - "the bone doctor". He has a new one that has just come out.

And, the last one that comes to mind, is Elly Griffiths' Dr. Ruth Galloway series. She is a forensic archaeologist.


message 12: by Everyman (new)

Everyman | 540 comments Well, of course there's Sayers's Gaudy Night, not only deeply embedded in Oxford, but with the culminating moment being a Latin phrase from the Oxford degree granting ceremony.


message 13: by Susan (new)

Susan | 13288 comments Mod
I also like academic mysteries. My nephew is currently studying at Oxford and I was surprised that they do still go to dinner in gowns...


message 14: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 350 comments Kell wrote: "From the cozy mysteries site:

http://www.cozy-mystery.com/blog/teac...

and

http://www.cozy-mystery.com/blog/myst......"


There's a few on those two lists I'm going to look into.

Thanks to everyone for all your suggestions on this thresd and the clerical mysteries thread. They are both going to be such great resources that I can refer to.


message 15: by Judy (new)

Judy (wwwgoodreadscomprofilejudyg) | 11195 comments Mod
I've just come across an interesting article about academic mysteries and the Golden Age:

https://www.timeshighereducation.com/...


message 16: by HJ (new)

HJ | 207 comments I read a series set in an American university a while ago, which I enjoyed: the Nick Hoffman series by Lev Raphael.

https://www.goodreads.com/series/6920...

The first is Let's Get Criminal


message 17: by HJ (last edited Apr 02, 2016 10:57AM) (new)

HJ | 207 comments Judy wrote: "I've just come across an interesting article about academic mysteries and the Golden Age:

Thank you for this! It reminded me of another book I really enjoyed, by Ruth Dudley Edwards: Matricide at St. Martha's. I remember it was particularly good at sending up politically-correct language.

It's one of the Robert Amiss series, which manages to deal with number of different institutions and their foibles, including the English Civil Service (Corridors of Death), gentlemen's clubs (Clubbed to Death), the House of Lords (Ten Lords A-Leaping), Cathedrals (Murder in a Cathedral) and literary prizes (Carnage on the Committee). They are particularly good as audiobooks, narrated by Bill Wallis.


message 18: by Miss M (new)

Miss M | 101 comments Thanks much for the article, Judy. I'm fascinated by the idea of Isaiah Berlin as a detective, so I ordered the first in series mentioned by Jocelyn Davey, A Capitol Offense. Apparently takes place in the British Embassy in DC right after the war. Excited to get this one!


message 19: by Miss M (last edited Apr 02, 2016 02:02PM) (new)

Miss M | 101 comments A few other possibilities:

Death Among the Dons by Janet Neel - London setting...enjoyed this series many years ago and re-read this recently
Murder At The College by Victor Whitechurch...two stars, so-so
An Oxford Tragedy by JC Masterman...three stars
Murder Is Academic by Christine Poulson...three stars

On my list but haven't read yet: The Cambridge Murders by Dilwyn Rees

Entertaining read on the oddities of Oxbridge dons:
The Dons: Mentors, Eccentrics and Geniuses by Noel Annan


message 20: by HJ (new)

HJ | 207 comments Miss M wrote: "A few other possibilities:

Death Among the Dons by Janet Neel - London setting...enjoyed this series many years ago and re-read this recently
Murder At The College b..."


Thank you for reminding me of Janet Neel! I'm off to re-read some of hers.


message 21: by Miss M (new)

Miss M | 101 comments I really liked the Neel series--need to re-read some more!


message 22: by Damaskcat (new)

Damaskcat | 186 comments HJ wrote: "Judy wrote: "I've just come across an interesting article about academic mysteries and the Golden Age:

Thank you for this! It reminded me of another book I really enjoyed, by [author:Ruth Dudley E..."


I love Ruth Dudley Edwards' series - they are marvellous for sending up institutions.


message 23: by Susan (new)

Susan | 13288 comments Mod
Some great books/authors I have not read and on kindle too :)


message 24: by Damaskcat (new)

Damaskcat | 186 comments Susan wrote: "Some great books/authors I have not read and on kindle too :)"

I can wholeheartedly recommend Ruth Dudley Edwards - Baroness 'Jack' Troutbeck is a marvellous character as is Plutarch the cat.


message 25: by Susan (new)

Susan | 13288 comments Mod
I think I read the first one, Damaskcat. Another series I really need to go back to...


message 26: by Damaskcat (new)

Damaskcat | 186 comments Susan wrote: "I think I read the first one, Damaskcat. Another series I really need to go back to..."

I now have a long list of series I want to read or re-read as a result of this thread :-)


message 27: by Miss M (new)

Miss M | 101 comments Few more...

Joan Smith's Loretta Lawson is a feminist professor/amateur sleuth, somewhat similar to the Amanda Cross books. (I gave the first one only two stars when I re-read it recently, but still mention it because most of the time something may not be my cuppa tea, but perfect for someone else's tastes...and vice versa!)
A Masculine Ending

VC Clinton-Baddeley's series features Cambridge don Dr. RV Davie. I've only read the first so far but thought it was pretty good.
Death's Bright Dart

There's also High Table by Joanna Cannan which I've heard is interesting, but still on my WL. (Also not sure if it's crimefic.)


message 28: by Miss M (new)

Miss M | 101 comments New one coming out 12 April:
The Age of Treachery by Gavin Scott
During World War II, the brightest and best Oxbridge dons were eagerly snapped up by British Intelligence. The guns have fallen silent, but in 1946 the Russians, Americans and English are busy picking over the bones of a shattered Europe. Duncan Forrester leaves his post with the Special Operations Executive and returns to what he thinks will be a quieter life under Oxford’s dreaming spires. When a controversial and much disliked academic is murdered, there is no shortage of suspects, but the police home in on just one – Forrester’s oldest and most valued friend. Determined to find the real killer, he is forced to follow a trail of academic jealousy and double dealing which leads him to Berlin. There, the seeds of the Cold War are germinating and he’s in the middle of it.


message 29: by Susan (new)

Susan | 13288 comments Mod
Oh, that looks good, Miss M!


message 30: by Miss M (new)

Miss M | 101 comments Does look promising, right? Have to wait and see what the Look inside' shows...


message 31: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 350 comments I've really enjoyed the Ruth Galloway series by Elly Griffiths and wonder if anyone has come across anything similar i.e. involving an archaeologist, (or even a conservationist or historian) set in modern Britain?


message 32: by Alwynne (new)

Alwynne | 159 comments There's Andrew Taylor's Caroline Minuscule featuring murdered tutors and medieval manuscripts which I read a while ago and enjoyed.


message 33: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 350 comments That sounds like the sort of thing I'm after, thanks Alwynne.


message 34: by Susan (new)

Susan | 13288 comments Mod
I loved The Stranger Diaries (Harbinder Kaur #1) by Elly Griffiths The Stranger Diaries also by Elly Griffiths, which features an English teacher. I loved The Postscript Murders even more.


message 35: by Susan (last edited Apr 22, 2021 04:20AM) (new)

Susan | 13288 comments Mod
Special Topics in Calamity Physics Special Topics in Calamity Physics by Marisha Pessl is set in the US but also features an academic setting.

Black Chalk is set in Oxford, but I haven't read it. Just come across it...


message 36: by Alwynne (new)

Alwynne | 159 comments Susan wrote: "I loved The Stranger Diaries (Harbinder Kaur #1) by Elly Griffiths The Stranger Diaries also by Elly Griffiths, which features an English teacher. I loved The Postscript Murders even..."

I quite liked the first one, although I thought the representation of British-Asian culture was a bit laboured and close to stock. I didn't think they were as good as her early Ruth Galloway novels though.


message 37: by Sandy (new)

Sandy | 4205 comments Mod
Ruth wrote: "I've really enjoyed the Ruth Galloway series by Elly Griffiths and wonder if anyone has come across anything similar i.e. involving an archaeologist, (or even a conservationist or historian) set in..."

Picking up on the archaeologist theme, this series was mentioned in Martin Edwards' book:

The Merchant's House by Kate Ellis

From GR:

Detective Sergeant Wesley Peterson's first day in his new posting in South Devon finds him investigating the brutal death of a young woman on a cliff path while his new colleagues are searching desperately for a missing child. Then Wesley's old friend from university, archaeologist Neil Watson, unearths the bodies of a strangled young woman and a new-born baby on the site of a seventeenth century merchant's house: though luckily for the overstretched police force the skeletons are centuries old. But as the search for the missing child intensifies and the true identity of the body on the cliff path is established, Wesley begins to suspect a tragic link, spanning the centuries, between his investigations and Neil's: for motives of jealousy, sexual obsession and desperate longing are as old as time. And when the dark secret of the merchant's house is finally revealed, Wesley must act swiftly to avert a further tragedy.


message 38: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 350 comments Thanks for all the suggestions. The Kate Ellis series looks promising.


message 39: by Jill (new)

Jill (dogbotsmum) | 2687 comments That is encouraging as I seem to have 20 books in that series. Thanks


message 40: by Susan (new)

Susan | 13288 comments Mod
Alwynne wrote: "Susan wrote: "I loved The Stranger Diaries (Harbinder Kaur #1) by Elly Griffiths The Stranger Diaries also by Elly Griffiths, which features an English teacher. I loved [book:The Postscript Murders|..."

I only read the first Ruth Galloway and didn't much like it, as I recall, but loved The Stranger Diaries and Postcript.

Jill, you must have picked up the Kate Ellis books as a Kindle Deal of something - always worthwhile picking up a series.


message 41: by Diane (last edited Apr 22, 2021 11:07AM) (new)

Diane Lending (dianefromvirginia) | 22 comments I just read Blood On The Backs (The Midge Carrington Mysteries #2) by Margaret Suckling Blood On The Backs by Margaret Suckling, the second in the Midge Carrington series. It takes place in Cambridge in the 1930s where an undergraduate student has just fallen on the roof of one of the buildings. Two of the major detectives are Midge who is a student and her cousin John who is a don. The dons are wonderful and dialog amongst them is great. Also good courtroom scenes.


message 42: by Margaret (new)

Margaret Suckling (margaret_suckling) | 41 comments Diane wrote: "I just read Blood On The Backs (The Midge Carrington Mysteries #2) by Margaret Suckling Blood On The Backs by Margaret Suckling, the second in the Midge Carrington series. It takes place in Cambridge in the 1930s wher..."

Absolutely thrilled to hear that you loved the dons and their dialogue! I had great fun writing those scenes (especially any of the scenes with Dr Hartismere). Thank you so much.


message 43: by Alwynne (new)

Alwynne | 159 comments I've been meaning to try this one, set in a fictional Oxford women's college Death on the Cherwell


message 44: by Judy (new)

Judy (wwwgoodreadscomprofilejudyg) | 11195 comments Mod
Death on the Cherwell is a fun read as far as I remember, Alwynne - I think we did all the books by that author as group reads a while back. I will check the details when I'm on my computer next!


message 45: by Judy (new)

Judy (wwwgoodreadscomprofilejudyg) | 11195 comments Mod
Oops, looks like I'm wrong and we didn't do a group read of Death on the Cherwell - I must have read it on my own. We have read others by Mavis Doriel Hay in the group, though.


message 46: by Jill (new)

Jill (dogbotsmum) | 2687 comments Seems like a good one to be put up for nomination some time


message 47: by Alwynne (new)

Alwynne | 159 comments Judy wrote: "Death on the Cherwell is a fun read as far as I remember, Alwynne - I think we did all the books by that author as group reads a while back. I will check the details when I'm on my computer next!"

Great, I read her Murder Underground but don't remember it very well.


message 49: by Margaret (new)

Margaret Suckling (margaret_suckling) | 41 comments Alwynne wrote: "Judy wrote: "Death on the Cherwell is a fun read as far as I remember, Alwynne - I think we did all the books by that author as group reads a while back. I will check the details when I'm on my com..."

I felt that Death on the Cherwell was the best of her three books. The university setting is convincing and I think that the frivolous approach of the undergraduates is believable for the time in which the book was written.


message 50: by Alwynne (new)

Alwynne | 159 comments Thanks Margaret, I read an extract and it does sound very promising, but it's nice to have recommendations!


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