home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Path: sparky!uunet!techbook!gummitch
- From: gummitch@techbook.com (Jeff Frane)
- Subject: Re: Sjowall & Wahloo and other series
- Message-ID: <BzzqpE.5rK@techbook.com>
- Organization: TECHbooks --- Public Access UNIX --- (503) 220-0636
- References: <1992Dec28.141208.22661@samba.oit.unc.edu>
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 22:34:23 GMT
- Lines: 41
-
- joan@med.unc.edu (Joan Shields) writes:
-
-
- > I recently started rereading the Martin Beck books by
- >Maj Sjowall and Per Whaloo. They are ten books, a series of police
- >procedurals set in Sweden. Not only are they good mysteries (in the
- >police procedural sub-genre of mysteries) they also chart the life of
- >Martin beck as he goes through some major life changes. There are two
- >threads I'd like to propose: the first is does anyone know of other books
- >that do this (ie: Janwillem Van der Wetering's police procedurals set in
- >Amsterdam and perhaps Nicholas Freeling's books as well) and do it
- >particularly well (I realize that Sayer's did it but I would like to avoid
- >the obvious ones and look for series that aren't as well known) and how
- >this adds or subtracts from the books as a whole.
-
- >The second thread would be a discussion of the Sjowall/Whaloo books
- >themselves.
-
- It's been a long time since I've read Sjowal and Whaloo (is that spelled
- right?) but I remember them very well and very fondly. Wahloo (that
- doesn't look right either) also wrote an intriguing speculative novel,
- titled something like The Seventh Floor.
-
- One suggestion: if you enjoy these, you should also read James McClure's
- South African novels (The Steam Pig, Snake, etc.) about two policemen,
- one white, one black, and their evolving relationship. McClure, too,
- wrote excellent books outside the series, including two fine non-fiction
- books on a British and an American police force.
-
- The most obvious suggestion, of course, is Ed McBain's 87th Precinct
- novels -- which Sjowal and Whaloo (that still doesn't look right) pay
- tribute to. McBain has the procedural part now bang right, but the
- characters require a lot of "willing suspension of disbelief", which is
- not true of McClure, Van der Wetering, or S&W.
-
- --Jeff Frane
-
- --
- gummitch@techbook.COM Public Access UNIX at (503) 220-0636 (1200/2400)
-
-
-