Those of us who have passed through the groves of academe all know a professor like the doomed Kevin Boyle in Helen Eustis’s 1946 novel, The Horizontal Man. A professor of English and a middling poet at Connecticut’s all-female Hollymount College, Boyle’s true passion is lasciviousness. Boyle is well known as the campus Don Juan, so when he winds up dead in his apartment with a nasty gash on his forehead, the rumor mill begins speculating about which one of the professor’s many lovers was responsible for the murder.
The Horizontal Man, which was reprinted in 2020 by Library of America with a splendid introduction from mystery wunderkind Charles Finch, is a lot of things at once: a cozy mystery with a whiff of the locked-room conundrum, a campus thriller featuring an assortment of oddballs, and a black comedy about the type of neurotic and nervous souls who find succor in academia. Some of these lost and awkward souls include Leonard Marks, a lickspittle extraordinaire who practically worships the handsome rake Boyle; the publicity-obsessed President Bainbridge; the tortured, but brilliant Professor George Hungerford; and the smart, independent proto-feminist Freda Cramm. And these are just the teachers. The students are out-there, too! There’s Molly Morrison, the ward of a psychiatric hospital and the coed that everyone suspects of Boyle’s murder; Honey Sacheveral, the Southern belle with a profound thirst for Alexanders; and the frumpish Kate Innes, whose intellect and doggish determination helps New York City newsman Jack Donnelly to solve the case.
Denne historien er fra Summer #168 2021-utgaven av Mystery Scene.
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Denne historien er fra Summer #168 2021-utgaven av Mystery Scene.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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6 New Writers to Watch
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CARLENE O'CONNOR
“Anyone can play Snow White. It takes real talent to play the Wicked Witch.”
Mystery Scene MISCELLANY
FIRST USE OF FINGERPRINTS
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HILARY DAVIDSON
Call it The Case of Life Imitating Art.
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S.A. COSBY
In Razorblade Tears, two aging men—one Black, one white, both with criminal pasts—join forces to seek revenge for the murders of their gay sons. The themes of fathers and sons and toxic masculinity will be familar to fans of Cosby’s 2020 breakout Blacktop Wasteland.
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A slip of the tongue is a dangerous thing. Not only does it expose indiscretions, it also can lead to murder. The latter especially applies to me.