BEAUTY AND THE (RAINCOATED) BEAST: TWO MORE COLUMBO ADVENTURES

“How could I have known that murder could sometimes smell like honeysuckle?” (Walter Neff, Double Indemnity) The film Double Indemnity plays quite a bit in the background of Columbo’s second pilot episode, “Ransom for a Dead Man.” Why not? It contains one of the most fascinating murderesses to appear onscreen. Ace attorney Leslie Williams may … Continue reading BEAUTY AND THE (RAINCOATED) BEAST: TWO MORE COLUMBO ADVENTURES

FOUL PLAY, THE FAIR PLAY WAY: My Book Club Reads The Maze

“In a ‘fair play’ puzzle plot mystery, the author provides the reader with all the clues, allowing the reader to match wits with the detective. All the pieces of the puzzle are hidden in plain sight.” (Gigi Pandian, for Crimereads) “This is a fair story. If you get the right answer – not merely a guessed answer, … Continue reading FOUL PLAY, THE FAIR PLAY WAY: My Book Club Reads The Maze

I DO, I DO – OH NO, YOU DON’T! The Case of the Dubious Bridegroom

If you only associate Perry Mason with the TV series that ran successfully for nine seasons, you could be forgiven for assuming that author Erle Stanley Gardner wrote traditional whodunits with a legal setting – a murder is committed, the wrong person is arrested, and then Mason gathers all the suspects together in court and … Continue reading I DO, I DO – OH NO, YOU DON’T! The Case of the Dubious Bridegroom

THE TRACKS OF MY TERRORS: Everyone on This Train Is a Suspect

Poor Ernest Cunningham! Saddled with a dysfunctional family, each of whom have been responsible for somebody else’s death, the “how-to-write-a-mystery” author risks arrest and death at the reunion from hell in a snowbound Australian ski resort when the Cunningham clan is targeted by an insane serial killer! Oh, but lucky Ernest! He survives, unmasks the … Continue reading THE TRACKS OF MY TERRORS: Everyone on This Train Is a Suspect

“I’ve Got a Little List . . . “: THIRTY-NINE CLASSIC MYSTERIES

After months of preparation, it was on a rainy morning on May 4 (and we’re talking rain from California to London, folks, with a soggy Pennsylvania in-between!) that three mystery nerds scholars gathered together, albeit virtually, to play a game that would determine which titles from the Golden Age of Detection were, according to Sergio, … Continue reading “I’ve Got a Little List . . . “: THIRTY-NINE CLASSIC MYSTERIES

ACDC, PART THIRTEEN: “You’re Starting to Get Sleepy” . . . Seeing Is Believing

“One night in midsummer, at Cheltenham in Gloucestershire, Arthur Fane murdered a nineteen-year-old girl named Polly Allen. That was the admitted fact.” Earlier this year, I crossed the halfway point in my spasmodic celebration of John Dickson Carr’s alter ego, Carter Dickson. Nine – And Death Makes Ten was definitely a highlight of my journey … Continue reading ACDC, PART THIRTEEN: “You’re Starting to Get Sleepy” . . . Seeing Is Believing