Crime
fiction is a typically 19th and 20th century genre,
dominated by British
and American
writers. This article explores its
historical development as a genre.
Crime fiction in history
It was only from the 19th century that novels and stories depicting
crime and its consequences came to be
recognised as a distinct
literary
genre, and spawned specialist writers. The earlier novels and
stories were typically devoid of systematic attempts at
detection: There was no private
detective, whether
amateur
or
professional, trying to figure out
how and by whom a particular crime was committed; there were no
police trying to solve a case; neither was
there any discussion of
motive,
alibis, or the
modus operandi, or any of the other
elements which make up the crime novels of subsequent ages.
Early Arabic crime stories
The earliest known example of a crime story was "
The Three Apples", one of the tales
narrated by
Scheherazade in the
One Thousand and One
Nights (
Arabian Nights).
In this tale, a
fisherman discovers a heavy, locked chest along the Tigris
river and he
sells it to the Abbasid Caliph,
Harun al-Rashid, who then has the
chest broken open only to find inside it the dead body of a young
woman who was cut into pieces. Harun orders his
vizier,
Ja'far ibn
Yahya, to solve the crime and find the murdererer within three
days, or be executed if he fails his assignment.
Suspense is generated through multiple
plot twists that occur as the story progesses.
This may thus be considered an archetype for
detective fiction.
The main difference between Ja'far in "The Three Apples" and later
fictional detectives such as
Sherlock
Holmes and
Hercule Poirot,
however, is that Ja'far has no actual desire to solve the case. The
whodunit mystery is solved by the murderer
himself confessing his crime, which in turn leads to another
assignment in which Ja'far has to find the culprit who instigated
the murder within three days or else be executed. Ja'far again
fails to find the culprit before the deadline, but as a result of
his chance discovery of a key item, he eventually manages to solve
the case through reasoning, in order to prevent his own
execution.
Early Chinese crime stories
Other
early crime stories include the Ming Dynasty
Chinese detective fiction such as Bao Gong An (Chinese:包公案) and the 18th century novel Di Gong An (Chinese:狄公案). The latter was translated into
English as
Dee Goong An
(
Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee) by Dutch sinologist
Robert Van Gulik, who then used the
style and characters to write an original
Judge Dee series.
The hero of these novels is typically a traditional judge or
similar official based on historical personages such as Judge Bao
(
Bao Qingtian) or Judge Dee (
Di Renjie).
Although the historical characters may have
lived in an earlier period (such as the Song or Tang
dynasty) the novels are often set in the later Ming
or Manchu
period.
These novels differ from the Western tradition in several points as
described by van Gulik:
- the detective is the local magistrate who is usually involved
in several unrelated cases simultaneously;
- the criminal is introduced at the very start of the story and
his crime and reasons are carefully explained, thus constituting an
inverted detective story
rather than a "puzzle";
- the stories have a supernatural element with ghosts telling
people about their death and even accusing the criminal;
- the stories were filled with digressions into philosophy, the
complete texts of official documents, and much more, making for
very long books;
- the novels tended to have a huge cast of characters, typically
in the hundreds, all described as to their relation to the various
main actors in the story;
- little time is spent on the details of how the crime was
committed but a great deal on the torture and execution of the
criminals, even including their further torments in one of the
various hells for the damned.
Van Gulik chose
Di Gong An to translate because it was in
his view closer to the Western tradition and more likely to appeal
to non-Chinese readers.
Description of crimes and detectives
There were of course forerunners of today's crime fiction, most
notably the ghost story, the horror story, and the revenge story.
Early examples of crime stories includes
Steen Steensen Blichers The Rector of Veilbye (1829),
Philip Meadows Taylor's
Confessions of a
Thug (1839) and Maurits Christopher Hansen's
Mordet
paa Maskinbygger Roolfsen (1839).
An example of an early crime/revenge story is the American poet and
short story writer
Edgar Allan Poe's
(1809-1849) tale "
The Cask of
Amontillado", published in 1846. Poe created the first
fictional detective (a word unknown at the time) as the central
character of some of his short stories (which he called "tales of
ratiocination"). In the words of
William L. De Andrea (
Encyclopedia
Mysteriosa, 1994), he
- was the first to create a character whose interest for the
reader lay primarily (even solely) on his ability to find hidden
truths.
- [...] Poe seems to have anticipated virtually every important
development to follow in the genre, from the idea of a lesser
side-kick to the detective as narrator (later epitomised in the
Dr. Watson of the Sherlock Holmes stories) to the concept of
an armchair detective to the prototype of the secret service
story".
In other words, he suggests that this is where crime fiction proper
begins.
The "Locked Room" mysteries
One of the early developments started by Poe was the so-called
locked room mystery in
"
The Murders in the Rue
Morgue". Here, the reader is presented with a puzzle and
encouraged to solve it before finishing the story and being told
the solution.
These stories are so-called because they involve a crime — normally
a murder — which takes place in a "locked room." In the simplest
case this is literally a hermetically sealed chamber which, to all
appearances, no one could have entered or left at the time of the
crime. More generally, it is any crime situation where — again, to
all appearances — someone
must have entered or left the
scene of the crime, yet it was
not possible for anyone to
have done so. (For example, one such Agatha Christie mystery
(
And Then There Were None)
takes place on a small island during a storm; another on a train
stalled in the mountains and surrounded by new-fallen, unmarked
snow.) One of the most famous locked room mysteries was
The Hollow Man. The
resolution of such a story might involve showing how the room was
not really "locked"; or that it was not necessary for
anyone else to have come or gone; that the murderer is still hiding
in the room; or that the person to "discover" the murder when the
room was unlocked in fact committed it just then.
Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson mysteries
In 1887,
Scotsman Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
(1859-1930) gave fresh impetus to the emerging form of the
detective story by creating Sherlock
Holmes, resident at 221B Baker Street, London
— probably
the most famous of fictional detectives and the first one to have
clients, to be hired to solve a case. Holmes's art of
detection consists in logical
deduction
based on minute details which escape everyone else's notice, and
the careful and systematic elimination of all clues that in the
course of his investigation turn out to lead nowhere. Conan Doyle
also introduced
Dr.John H. Watson, a
physician who
acts as Holmes's assistant and who also shares Holmes's flat in
Baker Street with him. In the words of William L De Andrea,
- Watson also serves the important function of catalyst for
Holmes's mental processes. [...] From the writer's point of view,
Conan Doyle knew the importance of having someone to whom the
detective can make enigmatic remarks, a consciousness that's privy
to facts in the case without being in on the conclusions drawn from
them until the proper time. Any character who performs these
functions in a mystery story has come to be known as a
"Watson".
Many of the great fictional detectives have their Watson:
Agatha Christie's
Hercule Poirot, for example, is accompanied
by Captain Arthur Hastings. Hastings, however, appeared only
intermittently in those Poirot novels and stories written after
1925 and only once in those written after 1937.
(See also
Sherlock Holmes and
Dr. Watson for further
explication.)
The Golden Age - Development by later writers
The 1920s and 30s are commonly known as the "
Golden Age" of
detective fiction. Most of its authors
were British –
Agatha Christie (1890
- 1976),
Dorothy L. Sayers (1893 - 1957), and many more; some
of them were American, but with a British touch. By that time
certain conventions and clichés had been established which limited
any surprises on the part of the reader to the twists and turns
within the plot and of course to the identity of the murderer. The
majority of novels of that era were
whodunnits, and several authors excelled, after
successfully leading their readers on the wrong track, in
convincingly revealing to them the least likely suspect as the real
villain of the story. What is more, they had a predilection for
certain casts of characters and certain settings, with the secluded
English country-house at the top of the list.
A typical plot of the Golden Age mystery followed these
lines:
- A body, preferably that of a stranger, is found in the library
by a maid who has just come in to dust the furniture.
- As it happens, a few guests have just arrived for a weekend in
the country – people who may or may not know each other. They
typically include such stock
characters as a handsome young gentleman and his beautiful and
rich fiancée, an actress with past glory and an alcoholic husband,
a clumsy aspiring young author, a retired colonel, a quiet
middle-aged man no one knows anything about who is supposedly the
host's old friend, but behaves suspsiciously and a famous
detective.
- The police are either unavailable or incompetent to lead the
investigation for the time being.
Hard boiled American crime fiction writing
A U.S. reaction to the cosy conventionality of British murder
mysteries was the American
hard-boiled
school of crime writing (certain works in the field are also
referred to as
noir fiction). Writers
like
Dashiell Hammett (1894 -
1961),
Raymond Chandler (1888 -
1959),
Jonathan Latimer (1906 -
1983),
Mickey Spillane (1918 -
2006), and many others decided on an altogether different,
innovative approach to crime fiction.
This created whole new stereotypes of crime fiction writing. The
typical American investigator in these novels, was modelled
thus:
- He is a private investigator working alone. He is between 35
and 45 years or so, and both a loner and a tough guy.
- Displaying numerous macho attributes, he is certainly no family
man and he does not associate with lots of friends either. Alone at
home, his usual diet consists of fried eggs, black coffee and
cigarettes.
- He meets his casual acquaintances at his favourite haunts,
which are shady all-night bars where he turns out to be a heavy
drinker without ever getting too drunk to be unaware of his
surroundings or unable to defend himself when attacked.
- He always "wears" a gun and does not mind shooting criminals if
the necessity arises, or being beaten up if it helps him solve a
case. He certainly has a penchant for attractive "dames",
especially the gorgeous blonde clients, many a femme fatale among them, who come to his shabby
little office on one of the upper floors of a downtown highrise to
have their unfaithful husbands shadowed by a private eye.
- He is always short of cash and invariably asks for a down
payment. Cases that at first seem easy and
straightforward, often turn out to be quite complicated, forcing
him to embark on an odyssey through the
urban landscape which often involves having to deal with organized
crime ("rackets") and low life of all sorts crowding the "mean
streets" of urban America, preferably Los Angeles
, New
York
, or Chicago
. This
is how he acquires his reputation as a troublemaker.
- A hard-boiled private eye has an ambivalent attitude towards
the police. On the one hand, he realizes that both the "cops" and
he himself are fighting on the same side. On the other hand,
especially where police corruption and foul play are involved, it
is his ambition to save America and rid it of its mean elements all
by himself.
Also, as Raymond Chandler's protagonist
Philip Marlowe -- immortalized by actor
Humphrey Bogart in the movie
adaptation (1946) of the novel
The Big
Sleep (1939) -- admits to his client, General Sternwood,
he finds it rather tiresome, as an individualist, to fit into the
extensive set of rules and regulations for police detectives:
- 'Tell me about yourself, Mr Marlowe. I suppose I have a right
to ask?'
- 'Sure, but there's very little to tell. I'm thirty-three years
old, went to college once and can still speak English if there's
any demand for it. There isn't much in my trade. I worked for Mr
Wilde, the District Attorney, as
an investigator once. [...] I'm unmarried because I don't like
policemen's wives.'
- 'And a little bit of a cynic,' the old
man smiled. 'You didn't like working for Wilde?'
- 'I was fired. For insubordination. I test very high on
insubordination, General.'
As can be deduced from the above paragraph, hard-boiled crime
fiction just uses a different set of clichés and stereotypes.
Generally, it does include a murder mystery, and there is no reason
why the readers, while they are reading along, should not try to
have guesses at whom the murderer is. However, the atmosphere
created by hard-boiled writers and the settings they chose for
their novels are diametrically opposed to those of, say, English
country-house murders or mysteries surrounding rich old ladies
elegantly bumped off on a cruise ship, with a detective happening
to be on board. Ian Ousby writes -
- "Hard-boiled fiction would have happened anyway, even if Agatha
Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers [...] had not written the way they
did or Knox had not formulated his rules. The impetus came from the
conditions of American life and the opportunities available to the
American writer in the 1920s. The economic boom following the First
World War combined with the introduction of Prohibition in 1920 to encourage the rise of the
gangster. The familiar issues of law and lawlessness in a society
determined to judge itself by the most ideal standards took on a
new urgency. At the same time, the pulp
magazines were already exploiting a ready market for adventure
stories -- what Ronald Knox would have called 'shockers' -- which
made heroes of cowboys, soldiers, explorers and masked avengers. It
took no great leap of imagination for them to tackle modern crime
and detection, fresh from the newspaper headlines of the day, and
create heroes with the same vigour [...].
Ever since its independence from Britain, the U.S.A. had been proud
of its image as a land of freedom and opportunity, as a "free
country" to all intents and purposes. Among many other things, this
kind of all-inclusive freedom includes the right to own, carry, and
use firearms, the relatively unbureaucratic procedure people have
to undergo if they want to set up their own business, the habit of
moving away without leaving a forwarding address, but also about
the lack of a national health system and a social safety net in
general.
As opposed to the "closed" society
experienced in Britain - the village of St Mary Mead, where
Miss Marple lives; the small island off
the coast of England which becomes the scene of a capital crime;
the Orient Express or any other train travelling through Europe;
even London's West
End
, including Soho
-- America
stands for an "open" society (not in the Popperian sense), consisting of rootless and
uprooted people coming and going, with no boundaries to keep them
in check, a society characterised by shifting loyalties and radical
individualism. America either
stands for wide open spaces -- as presented in countless
westerns and, at a later point,
road movies -- or the anonymous big city with all
its dangers lurking round each and every corner. The works
resounded with messages that seemingly said "Careful, young man,
it's a jungle out there!"
It is only natural that all this should be reflected in the fiction
of the day. As early as the turn of the century -- almost a century
before the
BSE
crisis hit Europe --
Upton Sinclair
attacked the U.S. meat-packing industry in his
muckraking novel
The
Jungle (1906).
In this powerful exposé‚ Sinclair depicts the
capitalist entrepreneurs who own the slaughterhouses and
meat-processing plants of Chicago
. The
novel depicted criminals forming giant
trusts
and
syndicates and exploiting virtually
everyone who works for them, whether office clerk, foreman, farmer,
simple labourer, or animal. It is the big bosses who are
responsible for the lack of safety measures, which results in
frequent accidents among their employees who operate machinery,
with able workers turning into useless invalids within seconds. The
lack of
hygiene in the stockyards, causes
innumerable cases of food poisoning and death all over the country.
The Chicago of
The Jungle -- this is the Chicago before
the days of arch-villain
Al Capone (1899 -
1947) -- is a city certainly beyond control and almost beyond hope:
The
unemployed, the sick, the
homeless, the
evicted,
many of them
immigrants, crowd the dirty
streets of the slum districts; con men, thieves, robbers, rapists,
quacks performing illegal
abortions; loan
sharks, greedy landlords, illegal prostitutes, and corrupt
policemen and government inspectors are everywhere, but are never
brought to justice. It seems to the onlooker that everyone has
their price, everyone can be bought, everyone who is in a position
of power "takes graft", including the judges and the local
politicians. (As Sinclair sees it, the only solution to all these
problems is
socialism, which he advocates
as an undercurrent theme.)
Literature and journalism authored by muckrakers informed the U.S.
public about the plight and the grievances of certain sections of
the population. At the same time, they set the stage for the
writers of the hard-boiled school. It was city life of the sort
described in
The Jungle which formed the background to
many a novel to be published in the years to come. When one leaves
the big city, however, and travels into the country, the idyllic
picture expected vanishes when he becomes aware of all the misery
that can be found there as well. Very soon on the trip he
encounters the
tramp, or
hobo, who roams the country, carrying all his worldly
possessions with him, a man willing to work wherever he is needed
-- for a meal, a bed, or a few cents.
John Steinbeck (1902 - 1968), a U.S. author
of
mainstream fiction, described two
itinerant farm workers in his novel
Of Mice and Men (1937), and
James M. Cain
(1892 - 1977) made use of the hobo tradition in his classic novel
The Postman Always
Rings Twice (1934): A tramp comes across a small service
station situated somewhere along a lonely country road and gets a
job there from the owner. The proprietor, a middle-aged Greek, is
either too stupid, or too drunk, or both, to realize that his
beautiful young wife, bored stiff by the life she is forced to lead
in the middle of nowhere, very soon is more than just on friendly
terms with the tramp. Together, the two lovers start planning the
Greek's murder. Unforeseen events intervene, and they have to start
scheming against her husband all over again.
Another author who enjoyed writing about the sleazy side of life in
the U.S.A. is
Jonathan Latimer. In
his novel
Solomon's
Vineyard (1941), private eye Karl Craven aims to rescue a
young heiress from the clutches of a weird cult. Apart from being
an action-packed thriller, the novel contains open references to
the detective's sex drive and, worse still, allusions to, and a
brief description of, kinky sexual practices. The novel was
considered "too hot" for Latimer's American publishers and was not
published until 1950, and then in a heavily
Bowdlerized version. (The unexpurgated novel came
out in Britain during the
Second World
War though.) From an early 21st century point of view, the
reasons for declining publication of
Solomon's Vineyard
seem absurd. For example, these are the opening lines of the novel,
with Karl Craven, the narrator, describing his first encounter with
a young woman called Carmel:
- From the way her buttocks looked under the black silk dress, I
knew she'd be good in bed. The silk was tight and under it the
muscles worked slow and easy. I saw weight there, and control, and,
brother, those are things I like in a woman. I put down my bags and
went after her along the station platform.
- She walked towards the waiting-room. She had gold-blonde hair,
and curves, and breasts the size of Cuban pineapples. [...]
Later, when Craven and Carmel are already on more intimate terms,
they find themselves alone in some shack, and the following scene
unfolds:
- 'I like big men,' she said.
- Her voice was raspy, like she had a cold. She came up to me and
grabbed my arm. Her fingers hurt the muscles. I could smell her
perfume. She came close to me. I thought I knew what she wanted. I
tried to kiss her. She jerked away.
- 'No.'
- 'I'm sorry.'
- She slapped me. She was strong; my cheek stung. She moved in,
swinging both arms. Now she had her fists closed. She hit my arms
and my chest. I tried to hold her.
- 'Hit me!' she said.
- It was goddamn queer. I held her arms, but she got loose. She
struck my chest.
- She said: 'Hit me.'
- [...]
- I ripped the shirt off her, she fighting all the time and
liking it. I ripped at her clothes, not caring how much I hurt her.
She squirmed on the dirty floor, panting. There was blood on her
mouth. I don't know if it was mine or hers. It tasted sweet.
Suddenly she stopped moving.
- 'Now,' she said. 'Now, goddamn you. Now!'
- Later we lay on the floor.
At least two more authors are worth mentioning here. One is
Mickey Spillane, who is often seen
as an
epigone, as a mere imitator of
the hard-boiled style of writing. It cannot be denied, however,
that Spillane has made a genuine contribution to the development of
American crime fiction. His novel
I, the
Jury (1947), for example, combines action, a wisecracking
private eye, a murder mystery and a lot more.
The other author is
Kenneth Fearing
(1902 - 1961), not necessarily a hard-boiled writer, whose novel
The Big Clock (1947)
exemplifies the
individualism
prevalent in American society around the middle of the 20th
century. In addition,
The Big Clock is remarkable in
regard to the
narrative
technique employed by Fearing: A multiple first-person
narration, the novel presents the same events seen from various
perspectives and angles.
The military veteran as hardboiled protaganist
Several hardboiled heroes have been war
veterans.
H. C. McNeile
(Sapper)'s
Bulldog
Drummond from
World War I,
Mickey Spillane's
Mike Hammer and many others from
World War II, and
John D. MacDonald's
Travis
McGee from the
Korean War.
In
Bulldog Drummond's first appearance
he is a bored ex-serviceman seeking adventure, Spillane's Mike Hammer avenges an old buddy who saved his
life on Guadalcanal
. The frequent exposure to death and hardship
often leads to a
cynical and callous
attitude as well as a character trait known today as
post-traumatic stress characterises
many hardboiled protagonists.
Modern crime writing
A shift from plot-driven themes to character analysis
Over the decades, the detective story metamorphosed into the crime
novel (see also the title of
Julian
Symons' history of the genre). Starting with writers like
Francis Iles, who has been described as
"the father of the
psychological suspense novel as
we know it today," more and more authors laid the emphasis on
character rather than plot. Up to the present, lots of authors have
tried their hand at writing novels where the identity of the
criminal is known to the reader right from the start. The suspense
is created by the author having the reader share the perpetrator's
thoughts -- up to a point, that is -- and having them guess what is
going to happen next (for example, another murder, or a potential
victim making a fatal mistake), and if the criminal will be brought
to justice in the end. To name two randomly chosen examples,
Simon Brett's
A Shock to the System (1984) and
Stephen Dobyns'
Boy in the Water (1999) both are
thrilling to read although they reveal the murderer's identity
quite early in the narrative.
A Shock to the System is
about a hitherto law-abiding business manager's revenge which is
triggered by his being passed over for promotion, and the intricate
plan he thinks up to get back at his rivals.
Boy in the
Water is the psychological study of a man who, severely abused
as a child, is trying to get back at the world at large now that he
has the physical and mental abilities to do so. As a consequence of
his childhood
trauma, the
killer randomly picks out his victims, first terrifying them and
eventually murdering them. But
Boy in the Water also
traces the mental states of a group of people who happen to get in
touch with the lunatic, and their reactions to him.
Crime fiction in specific themes
Apart from the emergence of the psychological thriller and the
continuation of older traditions such as the
whodunnit and the private eye novel, several new
trends can be recognised. One of the first masters of the
spy novel was
Eric
Ambler, whose unsuspecting and innocent protagonists are often
caught in a network of
espionage, betrayal
and violence and whose only wish is to get home safely as soon as
possible. Spy thrillers have continued fascinating readers even if
the
Cold War period is over now. Another
development is the courtroom novel which, as opposed to courtroom
drama, also includes many scenes which are not set in the courtroom
itself but which basically revolves around the
trial of the protagonist, who claims to be
innocent but cannot (yet) prove it. Quite a number of U.S. lawyers
have given up their jobs and started writing novels full-time,
among them
Scott Turow, who began his
career with the publication of
Presumed Innocent (1987) (the phrase
in the title having been taken from the age-old legal principle
that any defendant must be considered as not guilty until s/he is
finally convicted). But there are also authors who specialise in
historical mysteries -- novels which are set in the days of the
Roman Empire, in medieval England, the United States of the 1930s
and 40s, or whenever (see
historical whodunnit) -- and even in
mysteries set in the future. Remarkable examples can be found in
any number of
Philip K. Dick's stories or novels.
LGBT crime fiction
LGBT has also left its mark on the genre of
crime fiction. Numerous private eyes -- professionals as well as
amateurs -- are now women, some of them
lesbians. Tally McGinnis, for example, is the young
gay heroine of a series of novels by U.S. author
Nancy Sanra (born 1944).
Sanra's Tally
McGinnis mysteries, such as No
Escape (1998), which is set in San Francisco
, are quite traditional in other respects.
Other female novelists include
Sara
Paretsky (born 1947), whose private detective
V.I. Warshawski
roams the streets of Chicago
linking
crimes to their perpetrators, who always seem to want to kill her
for her efforts. In Britain, Scottish-born
Val McDermid created lesbian
journalist-cum-sleuth Lindsay Gordon, and
Joan Smith (born 1953)
has gained popularity as the author of a series of Loretta Lawson
novels. Lawson is a university teacher and an amateur sleuth.
In
Full Stop (1995), she stops over
at New
York
and is quickly devoured by the city.
Police investigation themes
By far the richest field of activity though has been the police
novel. U.S. (male) writer
Hillary
Waugh's (1920–2008)
police
procedural Last Seen Wearing
... (1952) is an early example of this type of crime
fiction. As opposed to hard-boiled crime writing, which is set in
the mean streets of a big city,
Last Seen Wearing ...
carefully and minutely chronicles the work of the police, including
all the boring but necessary legwork, in a small American college
town where, in the dead of winter, an attractive student
disappears. In contrast to armchair detectives such as Dr. Gideon
Fell or Hercule Poirot, Chief of Police Frank W. Ford and his men
never hold back information from the reader. By way of elimination,
they exclude all the suspects who could not possibly have committed
the crime and eventually arrive at the correct conclusion, a
solution which comes as a surprise to most of them but which, due
to their painstaking research, is infallible. The novel certainly
is a whodunnit, but all the conventions of the cosy British variety
are abandoned. A lot of reasoning has to be done by the police
though, including the careful examination and re-examination of all
the evidence available. Waugh's police novel lacks "action" in the
form of dangerous situations from which the characters can only
make a narrow escape, but the book is nonetheless a page-turner of
a novel, with all the suspense for the readers created through
their being able to witness each and every step the police take in
order to solve the crime.
Another
example is American writer Faye
Kellerman (born 1952), who wrote a series of novels featuring
Peter Decker and his daughter by his first marriage, Cindy, who
both work for the Los Angeles
Police Department. Local colour is provided
by the author, especially through Peter Decker's
Jewish background. In
Stalker (2000), 25 year-old Cindy
herself becomes the victim of a
stalker, who
repeatedly frightens her and also tries to do her
bodily harm. Apart from her personal
predicament, Cindy is assigned to clear up a series of murders that
have been committed in the Los Angeles area. Again, the work of the
police is chronicled in detail, but it would not be fiction if
outrageous things did not intervene.
References
- Sova, Dawn B. Edgar Allan Poe: A to Z. Checkmark
Books, 2001. ISBN 081604161X p. 45