| |
Books about Crime Fiction |
| |
|
- Crimes
of the Scene : A Mystery Novel Guide for the International Traveler.
by Ning Kins with Robin Winks. St. Martin's, 1997.
- The
Crown Crime Companion : The Top 100 Mystery Novels of All Time.
Crown, 1995.
- The
Deadly Directory 2000. Ed. By Kate Deire. Deadly Serious
Press, 868 Arlington Ave., Berkeley, CA 94707-1938, 2000.
- Detecting
Men : A Readers Guide and Checklist of Mystery Series Written by
Men by Wilmetta L. Heising. Purple Moon Press, 3319
Greenfield Road, Suite 317, Dearborn, MI 48120-1212,1998.
- Detecting
Women 2 Pocket Guide : A Readers Guide and Checklist of Mystery
Series Written by Women by Wilmetta L. Heising. Purple
Moon Press,1998.
- Killer
Books: A Reader's Guide to Exploring the Popular World of Mystery
and Suspense bv Jean Swanson and Dean James. Berkeley Prime,
1998.
- Multicultural
Detective Fiction: Murder from the "Other" Side.
Adrienne Johnson Gosselin, ed. Garland, 1998.
- Mystery
and Suspense Writers: The Literature of Crime, Detection, and Espionage.
Robin W. Winks and Maureen Corrigan, eds. Charles Scribner's Sons,
1998.
- St. James Guide to Crime and Murder. 4th ed. St. James,
1996.
- Silk
Stalkings : More Women Write of Murder by Victoria Nichols
and Susan Thompson. Scarecrow, 2000.
- Sleuths,
Sidekicks and Stooges:
An Annotated Bibliography of Detectives, Their Assistants, and Their
Rivals in Crime, Mystery and Adventure Fiction, 1795-1995
by Joseph Green and Jim Finch. Ashgate, Old Post Road, Brookfield,
VT 05036-9704,1997.
- Spooks,
Spies, and Private Eyes: Black Mystery, Crime and Suspense Fiction
of the 20th Century by Paula Woods. Doubleday, 1996.
- True
Crime Narratives: An Annotated Bibliography by Ben Harrison.
Scarecrow, 1997.
|
| |
Crime Fiction
Organizations |
| |
|
- Sisters in Crime, PO Box 44224, Lawrence, KS 66044-8933.
|
| |
|
*List adapted from "Readers
Advisory Tools: A Selected Bibliography," compiled by Mary K.
Chelton, Associate Professor, Graduate School of Library and Information
Studies, Queens College, New York; from "Internet Sites for Fiction
Lovers" created by Roberta S. Johnson, Des Plaines Public Library,
Illinois; and from the Genreflecting links on Diana Tixier Herald's
Genrefluent web page.
|
|