Dilys Winn (1939–2016)
Autor(a) de Murder ink: The mystery reader's companion
About the Author
Image credit: at Murder Ink, 1972
Obras por Dilys Winn
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Nome legal
- Winn, Dilys Barbara
- Data de nascimento
- 1939-09-08
- Data de falecimento
- 2016-02-05
- Sexo
- female
- Nacionalidade
- Ireland
USA - Local de nascimento
- Dublin, Ireland
- Local de falecimento
- Asheville, North Carolina, USA
- Causa da morte
- kidney disease
- Locais de residência
- Perth Amboy, New Jersey, USA
New York, New York, USA
Key West, Florida, USA
New Paltz, New York, USA
Asheville, North Carolina, USA - Educação
- The Baldwin School, Philadelphia
Pembroke College, Brown University - Ocupações
- advertising copywriter
bookshop owner
book critic
editor
specialist event planner
writing teacher - Organizações
- Murder Ink bookstore, New York (founder)
Mohonk Mystery Weekend (cofounder)
Miss Marple's Parlour bookstore, Key West
Kirkus Reviews - Prémios e menções honrosas
- Dilys Winn Award (Independent Mystery Booksellers Association)
Fatal error: Call to undefined function isLitsy() in /var/www/html/inc_magicDB.php on line 425- She attended public schools in Perth Amboy, New Jersey, and graduated from the Baldwin School in Philadelphia and Pembroke College before becoming an advertising copywriter.
In 1972, Dilys opened the doors of Murder Ink, America's first bookstore devoted entirely to mysteries. In 1975 Dilys sold the bookstore and began work on Murder Ink, an oversized collection of essays and opinions about mystery fiction. Murder Ink was not the first publication aimed specifically at mystery fans, but Murder Ink immediately became the indispensable companion for the mystery community, which it went far to create. ... In the 1990s Dilys moved to Key West, Florida, and opened another bookstore, Miss Marple's Parlour, where she sold mysteries and orchestrated one-night mystery shows. By then she had already begun a long period reviewing mysteries for Kirkus Reviews, where she eventually passed judgment on hundreds of titles before retiring from Kirkus in 2013.
Membros
Críticas
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Estatísticas
- Obras
- 3
- Membros
- 833
- Popularidade
- #30,661
- Avaliação
- 4.1
- Críticas
- 15
- ISBN
- 11
- Marcado como favorito
- 1
I have learned that Dilys Winn was the founder of a hugely popular book store in the USA, Mystery Ink. This sizeable tome (500 oversized pages, densely packed) contains contributions from scores of mystery writers, detectives, and aficionados of all flavours. The pieces have a decided 'quirk' factor, with the stated aim of being a key source for both readers and writers of crime fiction. Selections include hierarchies of the police on both sides of the pond, notes on the clergy in crime fiction, a 'translation' of hard-boiled detective lit into regular English, pieces on the butler, disguises, a walking tour of country England and key New York sites, notes on editing, important texts from throughout history, room plans, explorations of amusing detectives, guidelines for dressing like Miss Marple, thoughts on the physiology of reading, musings on cracking codes, narratives of the evolution of certain tropes, and much more. Scattered throughout are quizzes, pocket mysteries, and even an essay on gardening! The pages are also littered with quotes from celebrities and notable notables, and such novelty items as a list of "don'ts" should one wish to survive a murder mystery novel. Sections range from a single text box to 5 or 6 pages.
The volume was apparently updated in the 1980s (this is the original text from 1977) but, regardless, after all this time the text is outdated in several ways. Yet it's still a rich read for those of us who grew up with crime fiction. The book is also a neat 'jumping off point', introducing us throughout its pages to countless authors and detectives. It serves as a useful bibliography of crime lit from the 18th century to the 1970s. (Check also if your copy contains a sealed 'answer booklet' stuck on the last page! Mine did - and still unopened - which I suspect is a minor miracle!
For interest's sake, a few of the essay titles below:
"Tempest in a Teapot: the Care and Brewing of Tea"
"An Eyewitness Account of Holmes"
"Marxism and the Mystery"
"Wiretapping: A Session with a Debugger"
"Waylaid in Lonely Places"
"Verses for Hearses, by Isaac Asimov"
"The Busiest Morgue in the World"
"Creating a Mystery Game"
Murder Ink is not the definitive text on crime fiction; its deliberately 'messy' vibe means that you'll want to seek out more structured guides if you like lists that aim for completion. But it's a book like no other, the kind of work devised by a particular mind, and probably something that no mind would commit to in 2020, when a blog would suit their purpose just as much (but with less style). It's no surprise to me that Goodreads reviews suggest this book is cherished by those who discovered it - whether 45 years ago or last week.… (mais)