Robin Biznis May 29 Belgrade
Detective stories are like a wedding, once we read them, we become dependent on them. But, from this marriage, he does not die, but lives.
If you are a lover of reading and you also love criminal novels, then you must have read some of the novels from below mentioned writers.
If you are not here now, you have the opportunity to briefly meet with them. So decide for yourself if you will read them.
My choice for reading is:
1. Raymond Chandler (1888-1959) is an unavoidable name for the criminal genre. His detective, Philip Marlowe, is a wolf-lonely man who can not be deprived of anything to solve the case. Philip Marlowe is not brutal, in that sense. He was even sometimes a sentimental man, somewhat chaotic, without a lot of friends, studious especially when it comes to chess games, as well as a passionate classical listener. Apparently, ordinary but also unusual, especially when he refuses money from the client just because he is not satisfied because he did not do a good job. How important this writer is that Raymond Chandler Square is a cultural and historical monument. The square is at the intersection of Boulevard Kauenga and Hollywood, where Philip Marlowe’s office is in Chandler’s novels.
2. About Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930) and his pre-emptive opium-based creation that became synonymous with the detective and should not be talked too much. In addition to being responsible for the popularization of crime, Doyle has created one of the most recognizable tandem of world literature. Holmes et al. Watson are read all over the world. There are many series about the famous detective.
<a href="http://planetaveka.com/index.php/tv/210-serlok-holms-da-li-je-veliki-detektiv-unistio-dzeremi-breta" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Source</a><span style="font-size: 16px;"> </span>
3. There is also an inevitable queen of the detective story Agatha Christie (1890-1976) whose novels are not some transmitted reading, but they have given birth to two mascots of genre – Miss Marple and Mr. Poirot. Miss Marple and Monsieur Poirot have been successfully screened multiple times. Among the numerous films are the Murder in Orient Express with Albert Finney in the role of Poirot and Death at the Nile, where Poirot cast Peter Ustinov. Books Agathe Christie have been sold in millions of circulations.
4.The Belgian Georges Simenon (1903-1989) is an absolute master of the genre. This prolific writer has written more than 300 criminal novels. His literary creation, the modest detective Maigret, with the aforementioned two Holmes and Poirot, makes the holy trinity of the detective novel. Personally I like to read the books of Georges Simenon because of the psychological elements that he introduces into his novels.
<a href="http://planetaveka.com/index.php/tv/210-serlok-holms-da-li-je-veliki-detektiv-unistio-dzeremi-breta" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Source</a>
5. John Dickson Carr (1906-1977) Written about fifty novels .. He adores inexplicable crimes in confined spaces, and is regularly solved by Detective Gideon Fall.
6. Italian Andrea Camilleri (1925) dedicated his career to writing and criticizing Sicilian mafia. Inspector Montalbano, who appears in the book of Camilleri’s books, is an embodiment of a typical Sicilian, a fighter for justice, who does not take the dangerous mob of elites.Two series were shot: Comessar Monteblano and Djovani Monteblani.You can also watch the series on Fos Crime TV.
7. The American writer of the criminal novel is Sue Grafton, who celebrated the novels about the cases of private detective Kinsey Millhone. Romans from the “alphabetical” series of private detectives and former police officer Kinsey Millhone are housed in Santa Teresa, a romanced version of Santa Barbara, the birthplace of Sue Grafton, in southern California. Grafton received numerous awards for her work and her books were translated into 26 languages.
8. JU NESBE (Jo Nesbø) is definitely the most successful Norwegian writer of all time – his books have been translated into fifty languages and sold in more than twenty five million copies and certainly represents one of the most important representatives of the “new wave” of the Scandinavian triloger. In the last six months I have read all his works and can recommend it to you.
<a href="http://www.netknjizara.rs/5859-sne-ko?page=867" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Source</a>
Of course, this is not the end because there are many more writers who deserve our attention.Of those I read to mention Edgar Walas, Frederick Eston. Peter Cini, etc. I hope that at least this summer you will take a book in your hands of the above mentioned authors.
I wish you a good party.
I do enjoy novels where the writer gives you everything you need to determine what is going on, but sometimes I enjoy an unreliable narrator…
What an impressive list. Another reminder I need to make time to read more often. I keep putting it off. Chandler sounds very interesting.