A New Omnibus of Crime

by Tony Hillerman (Editor)

Other authorsRosemary Herbert (Editor)
Paperback, 2010

Publication

Oxford University Press (2010), Edition: Reprint, 412 pages

Description

This fantastic new collection picks up where Dorothy L. Sayers' landmark 1929 anthology The Omnibus of Crime left off, bringing together monumental, important, and entertaining works of short crime fiction published over eight decades from the era of the Great Depression to the first yearsof the twenty-first century.In lively introductory essays, celebrated crime writer Tony Hillerman and critic Rosemary Herbert place each story in the context of the author's work and the genre's literary history. Their extraordinary collection is international in scope and emphasizes the most exciting styles and voices,rather than taking a typical decade-by-decade approach. As a result A New Omnibus of Crime is packed with page-turning, engaging, and spine-tingling selections. Stories in this collection include Patricia Highsmith's "Woodrow Wilson's Necktie," Sue Grafton's "A Poison That Leaves No Trace," andmany more, including never-before-published works from Jefferey Deaver, Catherine Aird, and Alexander McCall Smith.A New Omnibus of Crime is a marvelous achievement that brings together some of the greatest crime and mystery short fiction ever collected. Showcasing the work of such revered authors as Dashiell Hammett, P.D James, Ross Macdonald, Sara Paretsky, Ruth Rendell, and Elmore Leonard, it is adefinitive volume that will be treasured by all fans of the genre."Essential for anyone with more than a passing interest in detective fiction. Brilliantly assembled, and beautifully edited by people who know what they're doing."--Robert B. Parker, author of Cold Service and Resolution"This recent anthology boldly evokes the title of Dorothy Sayers's classic anthology of 1920. The editors aim to showcase the work of the four-score-and-seven years since. Here you'll find the whole gamut, from the tough-guy patter of hard-boiled Raymond Chandler ('He looked tough, but he looked asif he thought he was a little tougher than he was') to the more decorous detection practiced by Miss Sayers."--David Lehman, Wall Street Journal"The best and most satisfying mystery bargain to come along in years. It will give readers countless hours of pleasure and surprise in one volume."--Cleveland Plain Dealer"Not a clunker in the bunch.... There have been numerous collections since [Dorothy L. Sayers'], but until now, none has had the depth, intelligence and chutzpah to call itself A New Omnibus of Crime."--Bloomberg News"Catch this Omnibus."--Booklist… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member rybie2
I bought this book because the contents looked wonderful, as an omnibus of great crime fiction by a host of top-notch writers. Unfortunately, the book has been printed with extremely small type, making it a chore to read. What's more, the book has been bound cheaply and poorly; the text runs so
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close to the inner binding as to make it a struggle to read. Even the cover is badly done; the print runs over the edge of the book. I had hoped that my copy was a cheap printing of a more adequate product, but I can find no evidence of such. And this is an "Oxford Press" book! What a disappointment. I'm giving it away, unread.
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Language

Original language

English

ISBN

9780195370713

Physical description

412 p.; 7.9 inches

Pages

412

Rating

(9 ratings; 3.3)
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