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Detective fiction

Genre of novel or short story in which a mystery is solved mainly by the action of a professional or amateur detective. Where the mystery to be solved concerns a crime, the work may be called crime fiction. The traditional formula for the detective story starts with a seemingly irresolvable mystery, typically a murder, features the astute, often unconventional detective, a wrongly accused suspect to whom the circumstantial evidence points, and concludes with a startling or unexpected solution to the mystery, during which the detective explains how he or she solved the mystery.

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REFERENCES

  • Simpson Amelia Detective Fiction from Latin America, Rutherford, New Jersey: Fairleigh Dickinson Press, 1990[This comprehensive study of the genre in Latin America gives an historical overview followed by an analysis of selected texts].
  • Simpson Amelia (editor and translator), New Tales of Mystery and Crime from Latin America, Rutherford, New Jersey: Fairleigh Dickinson Press, 1992[An introduction that discusses the genre and introduces the eight stories that follow. These are from Argentina, Mexico, Brazil, and Cuba. Authors include Ricardo Piglia, Ignácio de Loyola Brandão, and Rubem Fonseca. Most are published here for the first time in English].
  • Sklodowska Elzbieta La parodia en la nueva novela latinoamericana (1960-1985), Amsterdam and Philadelphia: Benjamins, 1991[Chapter 5 is on varieties of detective fiction].
  • Hernández Martín Jorge Readers and Labyrinths. Detective Fiction in Borges, Bustos Domecq, and Eco, New York: Garland, 1995.
  • Lafforgue Jorge; Jorge B. Rivera Asesinos de papel, Buenos Aires: Calicanto, 1977[This important anthology includes introductory remarks about detective fiction in Argentina, a series of observations about the genre by Jorge Luis Borges, Marco Denevi, Ricardo Piglia and others, and stories by authors such as Horacio Quiroga, Leonardo Castellani, Velmiro Ayala Gauna and Adolfo Pérez Zelaschi].

From Credo

  • Rivera Jorge B. El relato policial en la Argentina, Buenos Aires: Eudeba, 1986[A valuable introduction by Rivera is followed by stories by seven writers including Rodolfo J. Walsh, Juan Carlos Martini and Eduardo Goligorsky. The authors’ responses to written interview questions are also included].
  • Amâncio Moacir Chame o ladrão: Contos policiais brasileiros, Sāo Paulo: Edições Populares, 1978[The introduction to this anthology angrily protests social conditions in Brazil, and the stories, which are examples of detective fiction broadly defined, support that view].
  • Medeiros e Albuquerque; Paulo de O mundo emocionante do romance policial, Rio de Janeiro: Francisco Alves, 1979[The book focuses on the foreign detective fiction Brazilians mostly read. There is one chapter, however, on detective fiction written by Brazilians].
  • Navarro Desiderio “La novela policial y la literatura artística,” inCultura y marxismo: problemas y polémicas, Havana: Letras Cubanas, 1986.
  • Navarro Desiderio “Aspectos comunicacionales de la literatura masiva. El caso de la novela policial en la América Latina,” inEjercicios del criteria, Havana: Unión, 1989.
  • Nogueras Luis Rogelio For la novela policial, Havana: Unión, 1982[This thoughtful, short book argues for the genre's validity in a post-capitalist setting, and analyzes some specific texts].
  • Torres Vicente Francisco El cuento policial mexicano, Mexico City: Diógenes1982[This anthology of Mexican detective stories by authors such as Antonio Helú, María Elvira Bermúdez, and Pepe Martínez de la Vega includes a useful, historical introduction].