My mystery book club is meeting today and our subject is Catharina Ingelman-Sundberg's "International Bestseller" The Little Old Lady Who Broke All the Rules. One of the club members suggested it, and it's a fun book but it is not super mysterious. Here's the sales copy:
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel meets The Italian Job
in internationally-bestselling author Catharina Ingelman-Sundberg’s
witty and insightful comedy of errors about a group of delinquent
seniors whose desire for a better quality of life leads them to rob and
ransom priceless artwork.
Martha Andersson may be
seventy-nine-years-old and live in a retirement home, but that doesn’t
mean she’s ready to stop enjoying life. So when the new management of
Diamond House starts cutting corners to save money, Martha and her four
closest friends—Brains, The Rake, Christina and Anna-Gretta (a.k.a. The
League of Pensioners)—won’t stand for it. Fed up with early bedtimes and
overcooked veggies, this group of feisty seniors sets about to regain
their independence, improve their lot, and stand up for seniors
everywhere.
Their solution? White collar crime. What begins as a
relatively straightforward robbery of a nearby luxury hotel quickly
escalates into an unsolvable heist at the National Museum. With police
baffled and the Mafia hot on their trail, the League of Pensioners has
to stay one walker’s length ahead if it’s going to succeed….
Told with all the insight and humor of A Man Called Ove or Where’d You Go Bernadette?, The Little Old Lady Who Broke All the Rules
is a delightful and heartwarming novel that goes to prove the adage
that it’s not the years in your life that count, it’s the life in your
years.
Reading the book made me think--where are all the books featuring older sleuths? Yes, yes, there's Agatha Christie's "Miss Marple" series and Dorothy Gilman's wonderful Emily Pollifax novels. But the only books that came to mind were Daniel Friedman's terrific Buck Schatz novels, Don't Ever Get Old and Don't Ever Look Back. I reviewed Don't Ever Look Back for Criminal Element nearly three years ago and I've been waiting for another book in the series ever since.
I decided to go Googling around to see what else is on offer and the answer is, not a whole lot. Rita Lakin and Madison Johns and Lorena McCourtney all write cozy mysteries staring LOL (Little Old Lady) detectives. And the books sound like fun reads. But where are the books that feature senior citizens who aren't cozy and cuddly. I have a strong dislike for all the euphemisms used to describe old people. I grew up in a three-generation household and believe me when I tell you, I learned early that being old is not fun and it's not for the weak-willed. But I also learned that old people could be fearless and tough and wily and smart and funny and inventive. I learned to value them. Every time I see movie ticket prices broken out into "child/adult/senior" I think--is a senior a defective adult? Why not just do the age group thing? Under 12/Over 50? And if I ever hear the phrase "Ninety years young" applied to me, I might vomit all over the person who says it.
But I digress--a habit I have that will likely only get worse as I age but I tell you now, it's been with me since I was a child, so you won't be able to attribute it to my advancing years. Where are the mystery books with protagonists who are no longer young? If you have any suggestions, I'd love to hear them.
Showing posts with label Dorothy Gilman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dorothy Gilman. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
Thursday, April 17, 2014
P is for Mrs. Pollifax
Another of the mystery series I really liked were the "Mrs. Pollifax" books by Dorothy Gilman. They weren't really mysteries so much as they were "cozy" spy novels. Emily Pollifax was a widow in her 60s who ended up recruited as a CIA agent. the series includes a delightful cast of recurring characters and there's a nice freindship that grows between Mrs. Pollifax and a young agent she works with.
Gilman was named a "Grand Master" by the Mystery Writers of America in 2010, two years before she died. She also wrote a slew of other mysteries. I've read some but none of them engaged me as much as the Pollifax series. Rosalind Russell starred in a movie version of The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax, and Angela Lansbury starred in a TV-movie version. I think the series would make a dandy television series, kind of a Scarecrow and Mrs. King for an older audience. (Or put it another way, Murder, She Wrote with an international setting.) The books might be a little old-fashioned and cozy for today's readers but I loved them.
Gilman was named a "Grand Master" by the Mystery Writers of America in 2010, two years before she died. She also wrote a slew of other mysteries. I've read some but none of them engaged me as much as the Pollifax series. Rosalind Russell starred in a movie version of The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax, and Angela Lansbury starred in a TV-movie version. I think the series would make a dandy television series, kind of a Scarecrow and Mrs. King for an older audience. (Or put it another way, Murder, She Wrote with an international setting.) The books might be a little old-fashioned and cozy for today's readers but I loved them.
Saturday, August 20, 2011
More Praise for Women Crime Writers
It may surprise people who know my fiction that I really have a taste for "cozies." I am very fond of the "Hamish Macbeth" series by M.C. Beaton (aka Marion Chesney). A new one is coming out next February and I can't wait. Oddly enough, I really don't like her "Agatha Raisin" books. They're just a little bit too "twee" for me.
I am a huge fan of Ellis Peters (aka Edith Pargeter) who wrote under half a dozen pseudonyms (some of them male) and wrote dozens of books. She was also known as a scholar and a translator. Before I knew her as the author of the Brother Cadfael novels, I had read her "Brothers of Gwynedd" quartet, brilliant historical fiction. In addition to almost 20 novels about Cadfael, former Crusader-turned-monk, she wrote 13 novels featuring Inspector George Felse. I have not yet had the pleasure of reading those and look forward to it.
I am a huge fan of Ellis Peters (aka Edith Pargeter) who wrote under half a dozen pseudonyms (some of them male) and wrote dozens of books. She was also known as a scholar and a translator. Before I knew her as the author of the Brother Cadfael novels, I had read her "Brothers of Gwynedd" quartet, brilliant historical fiction. In addition to almost 20 novels about Cadfael, former Crusader-turned-monk, she wrote 13 novels featuring Inspector George Felse. I have not yet had the pleasure of reading those and look forward to it.
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