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Martha Grimes Walks Into a Pub: Essays on a Writer With a Load of Mischief
(2011)
  • Sarah D. Fogle, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Abstract
Since the 1979 discovery of her work in a slush pile at Little, Brown, Martha Grimes has gone on to publish more than 30 books, win international acclaim (and a Nero Wolfe Award) for her detective series, and develop a following of readers whose loyalty translates to repeated stays on the best-sellers lists.

This collection of 10 critical essays provides an in-depth analysis of Grimes’ oeuvre, principally the Richard Jury, Emma Graham, and Andi Oliver series. The essays address Grimes’ themes of parental abandonment, loneliness, obsession, greed, mistaken and dual identity, the resilience of children, stunted romantic relationships and animal cruelty. Particular attention is paid to her engaging characters, strong sense of place and the comedy, which feature so strongly in her novels.
Keywords
  • Martha Grimes,
  • criticism and interpretation,
  • detective fiction
Disciplines
Publication Date
2011
Editor
Sarah D. Fogle
Publisher
McFarland
ISBN
978-0-7864-4286-7
Citation Information
Sarah D. Fogle. Martha Grimes Walks Into a Pub: Essays on a Writer With a Load of Mischief. Jefferson, NC(2011)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/sarah-d-fogle/3/