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Malcolm J. Turnbull
This book provides significant new material on the work of crime and detection fiction writer Anthony Berkeley Cox, a popular and prolific English journalist, satirist, and novelist in the period between World Wars I and II. Cox has been called one of the most important and influential of Golden Age detective fiction writers by such authorities as Haycraft, Symons, and Keating, yet he occupies a surprisingly ambivalent position in the history of the crime genre. To enthusiasts he has attained cult status, and rates among the all-time greats, including Dorothy L. Sayers and Agatha Christie, but to others he is a little-known and unjustly underrated figure - in part because of his preoccupation with anonymity. . In addition to Cox's contribution to popular literature of a genre now undergoing close scholarly attention and a wide general readership, he wrote comic material, detective puzzles, and studies of the criminal mind, assuming a different pseudonym for various styles of writing - in this case, suggesting the writer's delight in enigma and his direct participation in it. Turnbull examines the full range of this writer's achievement in his three literary personae.
| Publisher | Bowling Green State University Popular Press |
|---|---|
| Pages | 156 |
| Search language | english |
| ISBN_10 | 0-879-72715-2 primary |
| ISBN_10 | 0-879-72716-0 primary |
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