Murder and Your Library: Crime Fiction Readers’ Advisory Presented for Innovation Experts September 20,2011 1-4 pm Becky Siegel Spratford

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Books: The Top 5 of the Top 5 With your hosts: Kaite Mediatore Stover on Horror Neil Hollands on Fantasy Rebecca Vnuk on Womens Fiction Barry Trott on.
Advertisements

The Top 5 Things to Know in 5 Top Genres
Using the Library Catalogue for RA Services Exploring, discovering and finding what readers want By Laurel Tarulli Collections Access Librarian, HPL.
Genres.
By Edgar Allan Poe The Tell-Tale Heart.
Talking About SPECULATIVE FICTION. Karen Burns SW Iowa Library Service Area Katie Dunneback East Central Library Services
Agatha Christie and the Mystery Genre. Never attended school; her mother believed that a child’s mind ought to be left alone to receive its own impressions.
Literary Genres An Overview. Based on our target population of our students, we chose the overview as the pre-instructional strategy most likely to be.
Mystery Fiction “The Whodunit” Invented by Edgar Allan Poe ( )
Thrillers have been seen since the early 1900’s when a man called Alfred Hitchcock who was one of the first people to explore the thriller genre. He understood.
1. Overview of Unit (What you are doing now) 2. Introduction and Review of Literary Genres Presentation (Terms, parts of plot lines, & characteristics.
Crime Fiction Session Five: Martin Amis, Night Train.
DEFINING GENRES Start Presentation. What is a genre?  Genres are used to group books together by their similarities. Books typically fall predominantly.
Genres and Literature When you speak about genres and literature, genre means a category, or kind of story.
NOVEL A literary look at the novel as a literary genre at the intermediate level.
 Neither reader nor protagonist (detective, amateur sleuth, etc.) know who the killer is. Goal is to find the bad guy.  Basically a puzzle waiting.
The History of the Detective Story from Poe to modern-day television…
How do thriller/mystery authors hook and hold their readers? By creating that sensation of excitement and suspense that makes the reader want to know what.
MICHAEL CONNELLY’S BIOGRAPHY. Michael Connelly decided to become a writer after discovering the books of Raymond Chandler while attending the University.
Mysteries & Detective Fiction. Elements of mystery are found in great literary works of the past (Bible, Shakespeare) Elements of mystery may be main.
Book Genres Kat Goldin.
A Quick Review.  By the end of the lesson, students should be able to identify which genre they would most like to first read.
 Psychological - James Patterson, Dean Koontz  Medical - Robin Cook, Tess Gerritsen  Political/Espionage - David Baldacci, Tom Clancy  Science Fiction/Horror.
Let’s Write a Mystery. What is a Mystery? A mystery is a secret, a riddle, or a puzzle. You have to find out the secret, and solve the riddle or puzzle.
The History of Mystery From Edgar Allen Poe ToGoosebumps.
Genre Exploration: What key ingredients does the film have to make it a particular genre?
The HORROR Formula.
Literary Elements & Devices English 9. Class Business 1. Take out your composition book & glue stick. 2. Take out your signed syllabus sheet and plagiarism.
What do you Read?. Genre is a French word meaning kind or group It is pronounced jon-ra.
Mystery Fiction Created by Kathryn Reilly. Mystery Genre Background Mystery fiction focuses on the “what” instead of the “who” in a story. Mystery fiction.
How do the authors of this genre hook and hold the readers? In writing a romance genre book, you have to first familiarize yourself with the genre by reading.
Narrative Elements Lesson 6.
English research Paper. How do Thriller-suspense Authors hook and hold readers? According to Jack King, the author of many thriller books, authors start.
The Mystery of “Mystery”. Types of mystery Detective- Edgar Allan Poe Auguste Dupin -Ellery Queen, Miss Marple, Perry Mason -amateur detectives.
History of the Detective Genre 1841-Present. Edgar Allan Poe 1841: Murders in the Rue Morgue – First locked room mystery – First fictional detective –
 Genre is a category of music, art or movies. With in these genres of movies etc. there are sub-genres.  Thriller is one of the movie genres, to make.
NOTES By Lance Andrako. How do the authors of psychological thrillers hook and hold readers? "Whether you're a fan of the genre that is psychological.
Question 1: How do adventure authors hook and hold readers? “Many readers prefer adventure stories because of their fast-paced plot and the fact that.
Question 1: How do suspense fiction authors hook and hold readers? Skip background data in favor of beginning with an action scene. Rather than explaining.
FICTIONAL Genre Notes. GENRE A category or group used to sort or organize something. –Music –Books –Movies –Etc.
RA TOOLBOX: CONVERSING WITH THE READER: THE RA INTERVIEW.
Identity (James Mangold, 2003) The sound of the voice over gives the spectator enigmas straight into the opening of the films title sequence. Also the.
What do you Read?. Genre is a French word meaning kind or group It is pronounced jon-ra.
The History of Mystery. What is a MYSTERY? 1.What do you think makes a good mystery? 2.When you think about mysteries, what comes to mind? 3.What is your.
Fiction Shorts stories Novels Plays Poetry Etc. Definition of a Short Story Tells about a single event or experience Fictional (made up) 500 to 15,000.
GENRE CHARACTERISTICS Definition A category or type of book/music.
Classification Notes Mystery & Suspense.
Shutter Island opening title sequence textual analysis (2010) directed by Martin Scorsese By Mahli Macwana View here:
NOTES.
Question 1 The Long Game Our opening title sequence is very typical to the Thriller Genre. Indeed, the narrative involves the murder of female victim;
Research task 1 By Rhys Funnell. Genre  In French genre means ‘kind’ or ‘sort’ which in film is used to define what genre the film is for example thriller,
What makes a. REQUIREMENTS Pace- strenuous Good writing skills –you have little ‘space’ to build convincing characters –Wide range of thriller types Realism.
Short Story Terms. What is a Short Story? A short story is : a brief work of fiction where, usually, the main character faces a conflict that is worked.
A03 – My Adaptation: Person Of Interest Sundeep Singh.
ELEMENTS OF FICTION. What is a Short Story?  A short story is : a brief work of fiction where, usually, the main character faces a conflict that is worked.
Narrative Writing English Language Arts 8. What is CONFLICT? Conflict is the problem in the story. Conflict is the problem in the story. It is the drama.
What’s in a word? Objectives: Language self-awareness To be aware of the lexical approach as a method of language acquisition [methodology] To be able.
Title and Author Photo of book or some other Relevant illustration.
Adventures in Storytelling: Mystery Michele Leininger, State Library of Iowa Katie Dunneback, Southeastern Library Services.
Thriller Genre By Harry Thorpe and Luke Rowland. Definition Thriller is a genre of media, in which suspension, tension and excitement are used as key.
“The Whodunit” Invented by Edgar Allan Poe ( )
MUSTANG LIBRARY PRESENTS: SUSPENSE!
The Tell Tale Heart By Edgar Allen Poe
“The Whodunit” Invented by Edgar Allan Poe ( )
“The Whodunit” Invented by Edgar Allan Poe ( )
Thriller, Terror, horror
An Introduction to Readers’ Advisory
Bells Ferry Media Center 2015
Introduction to The Hounds of Baskervilles
CRIME FICTION.
Presentation transcript:

Murder and Your Library: Crime Fiction Readers’ Advisory Presented for Innovation Experts September 20, pm Becky Siegel Spratford

Just the Facts “Crime is terribly revealing. Try and vary your methods as you will, your tastes, your habits, your attitude of mind, and your soul is revealed by your actions.” -- Agatha Christie “I think to be driven to want to kill must be such a terrible burden.” -- Ruth Rendell

The Line-Up Intro to RA Principles and Practices What is Crime Fiction? – Appeal and RA Interview Tips – Genre, Subgenre and Format Distinctions Whole Collection RA – Key Authors, Resources, and Trends Collection Development Marketing Tips for Crime Fiction – Lists and Display Ideas

Just the Facts: RA Best Practices This class assumes an understanding of appeal factors and basic RA interviewing skills. Vocabulary of Appeal Match books by appeal and not plot Understand your own reader profile Understand genre classification – Genres are not separated by walls.

Collecting Clues: How Can I Read Everything? You cannot read everything! Speed Reading – by Georgine Olson but available in this book.this book Read in varied genres; look for connections “Genre a Day” Reviews for appeal Magazines, newspapers and other popular media. Read what your patrons are reading.

What is Crime Fiction? Definitions (from Trott’s Read On… Crime Fiction; see handout)handout Classic Authors mentioned – Edgar Allen Poe – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle – G. K. Chesterton – Agatha Christie – Dorothy Sayers – Ellery Queen

Crime Defined s – Dashiell Hammett – Raymond Chandler – Mickey Spillane – Ross MacDonald Police Procdeural – Hilary Waugh – J.J. Marric – Ed McBain

Crime Define s and 80s: Women and Minorities – Marcia Muller – Sue Grafton – Gar Anthony Haywood – Joseph Hansen and Richard Steveson – Sara Paretsky

Crime Defined 4 Genres We Will Consider – Mystery – Suspense and Romantic Suspense – Thriller – Adventure – Psychological Suspense – Nonfiction: True Crime Formats: Audio and Graphic Novels Further Crime Resources: HandoutHandout

Setting the Scene of the Crime The Appeal of Crime Fiction (Generalizations) – Fast paced and engrossing often because of the compressed time frame – Identification with the investigator, but other characters can range from stereotypical to eccentric and unique; series characters also common – Often multiple points of view with the hero and villain – Investigative elements are key

General Crime Fiction Appeal Continued Plots can range from story centered to character centered, but all require plot twists and a resolved if not closed ending Can contain violence and strong language, but there have never been more “cozy” options. The setting can range from ancient times (Steven Saylor’s Gordianus the Finder) to the future (J.D. Robb’s Eve Dallas) Readers may crave a certain frame The tone, style and language run the gamut Series are a huge appeal factor

In the Box The RA Conversation for Crime Fiction Readers – Type of investigator – Subgenre considerations Historical (time and place) and Cozy are big – Level of violence – Tone, style, language, frame – Character vs. plot – TV or Movie comparisons – Fiction vs. Nonfiction – Format preferences

Stop, You’re Killing Me! The Appeal of Mystery Puzzles with clues provided Crime, generally murder, solved by investigator Battle of wits (investigator v. villain; investigator v. reader) Good v. evil Series characters Stories are intricately plotted Full spectrum of pacing Resolved, if not always closed, ending Judge a book by its cover

Case Files: Mystery Subgenres Amateur detective (including but not limited to cozy) Classics Historical International Police Procedural Police Detective Private Investigator Humorous

Mystery Key Authors Michael Connelly Diane Mott Davidson Henning Mankell Louise Penny Jacqueline Winspear

Mystery: Other Authors to Know Nevada Barr Janet Evanovich Donna Leon P.D. James Anne Perry Elizabeth Peters Peter Robinson C.J. Box Each Library will have specific authors who are locally popular And don’t forget “classic” (dead) authors. I have particular luck with: – Agatha Christie – Dashiell Hammett – Robert Parker – Rex Stout

Mystery Trends and Resources Special Interests More development of the main character Cozy and Humorous Mysteries are huge – Intelligent Cozies– new sub-sub genre? – Not much actual mystery Historical – Especially WWI to 1960 Blurring between suspense and mystery within novels and authors writing both Paranormal Resources: HandoutHandout

Suspense: Mystery’s Step-Sister A plot in which tension builds; menacing atmosphere permeates throughout (prologue) Multiple points of view: hero and villain Compressed time frame Protagonist in peril Twists Fast paced, resourceful heroes Good v. evil Closed happy ending

Suspense Subgenres Not really subgenres but nuances Soft Suspense – Mary Higgins Clark Harder-edged suspense – James Patterson, Jeffrey Deaver, John Sandford Romantic Suspense

Suspense Authors Suspense Lee Child Harlan Coben Lisa Gardner Tess Gerritsen Karin Slaughter Romantic Suspense Christine Feehan Iris Johansen Jayne Ann Krentz/Amanda Quick/Jayne Castle J.D. Robb /Nora Roberts Lauren Willig

Suspense: Other Authors to Know Suspense – Names 2 slides ago – Tami Hoag – Julie Garwood – Erica Spindler – Tana French – Kate Atkinson – Stieg Larsson – John Hart Romantic Suspense – Sandra Brown – Linda Howard – Karen Robards – Catherine Coulter (FBI Series) – Suzanne Brockman

Suspense Trends and Resources Stalking, Stalking, Stalking More graphic and bloody Lots of views into the “bad guy’s” mind Used to only be stand alone; now lots of series. Supernatural and Literary options on the rise More investigative; blurring into Mystery Established Romantic Suspense moving to Suspense while new Rom. Suspense coming from Romance Resources: HandoutHandout

Thrillers Subgenres Legal Thriller Medical/Forensic Thriller Techno Thriller Espionage/Terrorism Thriller Crime/Caper Thriller Conspiracy Thriller Financial/Corporate Thriller Bio/Eco Thriller Political Thriller Supernatural Thriller

Thrillers Authors David Baldacci Linda A. Fairstein Mira Grant Carl Hiaasen Daniel Silva

Thriller: Other Authors to Know Robin Cook John Grisham John LeCarre Alan Furst Lisa Scottoline Brad Meltzer Jonathan Maberry (Joe Ledger Series) Continued Series – Robert Ludlum – Ian Fleming

Thrillers Trends and Resources Terrorism TV shows (All of those legal dramas) Ancient Conspiracies catching up to Contemporary Lots of Nonfiction Crossovers to think about Resources: HandoutHandout

Adventure Traditional Adventure will not be as appealing to your Mystery readers, but genre is changing What you need to look for – Adventure can be more over the top than other genres– solves crime and saves world – Exotic locales or military settings – Not much characterization; fast paced and action oriented with a happy ending – “Clues” not always there; outrageous solutions – Sea-faring adventure does not fit Crime appeals

Adventure Authors Adventure authors who may appeal to Crime Fiction readers: – Dan Brown – Clive Cussler – Jack DuBrul – WEB Griffin (now with son) – Jack Higgins – Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child – Matthew Reilly – James Rollins

Adventure Trends Thriller is slowly absorbing traditional adventure which is increasing its crossover appeal with crime fiction fans More women readers True Adventure Resources on HandoutHandout

Psychological Suspense A mix of Mystery, Thriller, and Horror Tension derived from mental fears Produce a chill and play with our minds Claustrophobic worlds; unease Literary style; lots of twists Character and mood at forefront Endings unresolved and could be unhappy

Psychological Suspense Authors Peter Abrahams Carol Goodman Jeff Lindsay Chelsea Cain Ruth Rendell New Names To Watch: – Gillian Flynn – S.J. Watson

Psychological Suspense: More Authors Alfred Hitchcock Thomas H. Cook Frances Fyfield Patricia Highsmith Dean Koontz Thomas Harris Val McDermid Minette Walters Single titles of note: – Full Dark, No Stars by Stephen King – Await Your Reply by Dan Chaon – A Simple Plan by Scott Smith – The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters

Psychological Suspense Tips &Trends Used to be only standalone; now lots of series More twisted and violent “Hero” is not all good like in suspense; has dark issues Many traditional mystery writers and literary fiction authors are exploring this genre Do natural language searches to find titles Some sources classify it as psychological horror Specific resources are limited: HandoutHandout

Nonfiction for Crime Fans True Crime – May be more appealing to some fans-- Truth – Killer caught and brought to justice – Date quickly – No detail spared – Safe exploration of dark side of humanity – Readalikes for authors and specific titles – In Cold Blood by Capote started the narrative nonfiction genre

True Crime Authors of Note Ann Rule John Douglas Diane Fanning Joe McGinniss Robert Graysmith Vincent Bugliosi James B. Stewart James Swanson Erik Larson

True Crime: Types, Trends, and Awards Types – Forensic, journalistic, bio/autobio, famous/infamous – FBI, police, reporters, lawyers, mafia…pov is wide – Appeal: old books as good as new ones, maybe better Trends – Whole Collection RA – Readalikes for titles and authors – Compilations Awards and Resources: HandoutHandout – Edgar and Dagger for True Crime (see Mystery)

Audio and Graphic Novels Mystery and Suspense work well on audio – Tension builds slower – Can’t skip ahead as easily Patrons will cross genres more with audio Some of the best readers ply trade here Don’t forget that superheroes fight crime Frank Miller and Alan Moore do more sophisticated GNs for crime fans

The Holding Cell: Crime Fiction Collection Development Don’t forget: this is a part of Customer Service Take pulse of your collection at least once a year – What are your most popular titles/authors? – Where are you lacking? – Who is winning the awards? – What are the trends? Keep shelves neat and clean Replace classic and popular titles Weed

Bring Out Your Dead: Crime Fiction Marketing – Merging Crime Collections More space Patron displeasure/education Clearer catalog records and stickering – Display Ideas Overlooked stars (Use Overbooked) Show off new popular subgenres (Use Stop You’re Killing Me) Crime stories not from the mystery section Sure bets (by title or author) – Use face out options whenever available – Post series lists for most popular authors – Consider special paperback shelving, not just spinners

Sure Bet Investigative Tales Erik Larson – Devil in the White City Ann Rule – The Stranger Beside Me Harlen Coben – Tell No One Michael Connelly – The Black Echo Ruth Rendell – 13 Steps Down Mary Higgins Clark – On the Street Where You Live P.D. James – A Taste for Death Diane Mott Davidson – Dying for Chocolate Nevada Barr– Choose by location preference Louise Penny– Still Life