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Lessons in Crime: Academic Mysteries
by Martin Edwards (editor)
Genres: Crime, Mystery, Short StoriesPages: 336
Series: British Library Crime Classics
Rating:
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Synopsis:An Oxford Master slain on campus during Pentecost. A pupil and teacher face off with a conniving uncle suspected of murder. A sociology student turns the tables on the lies and fictions of an English undergraduate.
In the hush of the college library and the cacophonies of school halls, tensions run higher than is healthy and academic achievement can be to die for. Delving into the stacks and tomes of the British Library collections, Martin Edwards invites you to a course on the darker side of scholarly ambition with an essential reading list of masterful short stories.
With a teaching cohort including esteemed writers such as Dorothy L Sayers, Celia Fremlin, Michael Innes and the commanding Arthur Conan Doyle, this new anthology offers an education in the beguiling art of mystery writing.
Lessons in Crime is a pretty recent collection from the British Library Crime Classics series, edited as usual by Martin Edwards. Unsurprisingly, this one focuses on mystery stories set in academic settings — schools, weekend courses, and of course, universities.
There are some big names here — Sayers, Arthur Conan Doyle — and some lesser-known ones, along with ones that are familiar to me from these anthologies, such as E.W. Hornung. As ever, the whole is greater than the sum of the parts: I’m not a huge fan of Reggie Fortune and A.J. Raffles as characters, but in a collection like this, it all adds up to a feel for how writers viewed and used these settings, the trends in the stories, etc.
I was a little surprised by the heavy anti-Welsh sentiment in one of the stories: it’s been a while since I met that kind of thing so openly. (The Welsh character mutates ps and bs in English, lies habitually, etc, etc; we’re in “Taffy was a Welshman” territory.) I know the British Library Crime Classics series typically doesn’t edit this sort of thing out, and they do say so in a preface — they present the stories as part of their historical context, as well as for entertainment. But it was a little surprising, all the same.
A nicer surprise was a story by Jacqueline Wilson — yes, that one! Her earliest works were crime stories, and one of her short stories is included here to round out the volume with a recent story.
Overall, a collection I enjoyed!
Rating: 4/5
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