As I have said repeatedly, Poul Anderson mastered several genres. Let us consider three:
heroic fantasy;
contemporary detective fiction;
futuristic sf.
I am currently:
rereading Hrolf Kraki's Saga, a heroic fantasy by Anderson;
rereading A Fatal Inversion, detective fiction by Barbara Vine;
reading Zero, futuristic sf by JS Collyer.
Anderson's Trygve Yamamura series is conventional crime fiction in that the viewpoint character is the detective and he apprehends the murderer. A Fatal Inversion is unconventional in that the viewpoint characters are the perpetrators and they are not apprehended. In fact, it is not exactly detective fiction since the police remain off-stage except when they interview our anti-heroes.
Barbara Vine's descriptive passages and psychological insights are worthy of Anderson. With a busy schedule of reading and other activities, I have not read very far into Zero as yet. Hrolf Kraki's Saga has just commented on Beowulf. As somebody said, "The republic of letters is one..." And see here.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteThat certainly seems odd, a "mystery" in which the viewpoint characters are the criminals, and apparently not discovered as the perpetrators of a crime and arrested. I'm not sure I could like a novel about bad people dodging punishment for their crimes. That seems too "noir" for me!
Sean