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Malice Domestic 2: An Anthology of Original Traditional Mystery Stories
 
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Malice Domestic 2: An Anthology of Original Traditional Mystery Stories [Mass Market Paperback]

Mary Higgins Clark (Editor)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

2004
An anthology of 17 tradidtional mysteries collected by master mystery writer Mary Higging Clark. Pages 6.38" x 4.12"

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Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 255 pages
  • Publisher: Pocket Books; 2004 edition (2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1416507035
  • ISBN-13: 978-1416507031
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #352,831 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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4.0 out of 5 stars THREE EXCELLENT STORIES AND FOUR CLUNKERS IN A COLLECTION OF SIXTEEN, March 22, 2011
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This review is from: Malice Domestic 2: An Anthology of Original Traditional Mystery Stories (Mass Market Paperback)
So far, there are 9 other volumes in this series. MALICE DOMESTIC 2: AN ANTHOLOGY OF ORIGINAL TRADITIONAL MYSTERY STORIES (1993) has a very short introd. by Mary Higgins Clark (less than 2 pages) and contains 16 original short stories of varying merit: (1) "Who Shot Mrs. Byron Boyd?" by Amanda Cross (pen name of Prof. Carolyn Heilbrun); (2) "Dog Television" by Robert Barnard; (3) "Goodbye, Sue Ellen" by Gillian Roberts; (4) "Even Steven" by Taylor McCafferty; (5) "Water" by Sally Gunning; (6) "You Never Know" by Sarah Shankman; (7) "The Return of Ma Barker" by Gary Alexander; (8) "A Romance in the Rockies" by K. K. Beck; (9) "Checkout" by Susan Dunlap; (10) "The Nieman Marcus Body" by Lucretia Grindle; (11) "Anna and the Snake People" by Ed Gorman; (12) ". . . That Married Dear Old Dad" by Margaret Maron; (13) "Parris Green" by Carole Nelson Douglas; (14) "Kim's Game" by M. D. Lake (pen name of Prof. Allen Simpson); (15) "Arsenic and Old Ideas" by Jan Grape; and (16) "Cold and Deep" by Frances Fyfield.

Overall, if I were giving this anthology a letter grade, I would rate it as a "B-" and would be giving extra credit to one story that is NOT in any sense a "traditional mystery story." The ninth story, "Checkout," is a fairly clever, semi-humorous afterlife Fantasy with a punning title; it contains no mystery or crime or detection in any ordinary sense of these terms--but it is an enjoyable piece nevertheless. (And, despite its unusual subject and approach, "Checkout" was awarded both an ANTHONY and a MACAVITY in 1994.)

Otherwise, I would give an "A-" to the second story, which is cleverly told from a dog's viewpoint, and a solid "A" to the sixth and sixteenth stories (Shankman's tale about New Orleans commuters is excellently plotted and very well written, while Fyfield's is a brilliant character disclosure story, slightly marred when the author forgetfully calls one character by the name of another several times at the end). I would give a solid "C" to three stories--the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth: the first two seem surprisingly amateurish in their characterization and plotting, unlike other stories I've read by Gorman and Maron, while "Parris Green" (an Irene Adler "case" involving Oscar Wilde, an artist, and a dead model) has an excess of historical detail weighing it down. The four weakest stories--which I'd give a "D" to--are the first (a Swiss-cheese plot with zero detection, that's way below Cross/Heilbrun's usual standard), the third (far too flippantly "cute" for my taste), the fifth (in which a nasty man is supernaturally punished by "the spirit of the ocean" in a Stephen King-type Premise Story), and the fifteenth (where luck and amazing coincidences help a middle-aged mystery writer and her husband "solve" a totally implausible array of crimes).

All the other six (including "Checkout") would get a solid "B" grade from me. "Even Steven" is a skillful situation-disclosure piece with a plausible ending; "The Return of Ma Barker" is an enjoyable fair-play Puzzle Story; "A Romance in the Rockies" has well-drawn, likable characters and a very plausible mystery; "The Nieman Marcus Body" succeeds at doing (with skillful plotting and logic) the kinds of things "Arsenic and Old Ideas" misses by fifty-seven miles; and "Kim's Game" provides us with a surprisingly upbeat murder mystery, solved by a spunky, intelligent young girl at summer camp.
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