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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Coetzee, J. M., 1940-
Imprint:New York : Random House, 1990.
Description:198 p. ; 22 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/1092052
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ISBN:0394587855 : $18.95
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Writing as Amanda Cross, English professor Carolyn Heilbrun introduced her female professor sleuth in 1964, endowing Kate Fansler with a gift for urbane conversation, sophisticated taste, literary expertise and a mind for murder, thus inspiring other writers to create a slew of similarly feminine detectives But while female investigators, private eyes and amateur snoopers now proliferate, Cross remains queen of the American literary whodunit. Here, three childhood friends are intimately connected with the work of modernist writer Emmanuel Foxx and his enigmatic wife, Gabrielle. When Fansler is asked to write the biography of Gabrielle in order to bring out the true role of Foxx's ``muse,'' she engages in more than literary detection. A poignant memoir within the novel, attributed to one of the three friends, demonstrates Cross's felicitous ability to create another prose style--and to craft a story that will win her an even wider audience. This compelling novel is about motivation, rather than material motives, about the mystery of human character more than the details of a murder. BOMC and Mysterious Book Club alternates. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Cross' new novel is billed as ""A Kate Fansler Mystery,"" the tenth in her series about the N.Y.C. English prof and amateur sleuth. In fact, however, this time Cross (a.k.a. Columbia prof Carolyn Heilbrun) has used the Fansler character merely as a hook on which to hang a modestly intriguing literary/family study: a feminist inquiry into the psycho-dynamics and domestic secrets of a long-dead Great Writer, his long-suffering wife, and their Anglo-American descendants. The action--such as it is--begins when Kate is asked by a big-time publisher to write the biography of Gabrielle Foxx, wife of British literary giant Emmanuel Foxx, who's ""right up there with Joyce and Lawrence and Woolf. . ."" The primary biocritical question: To what extent was Gabrielle an influence on Foxx's masterpiece of female stream-of-consciousness, Ariadne? Kate begins her research by reading an unpublished, 50-page memoir by Anne Gringold, a chum of the Foxxes' granddaughter Nellie; Anne recalls their 1940's adolescence together (in the home of Nellie's wealthy, New Jersey-Jewish relatives) and her 1950's visit to frail widow Gabrielle--who entrusted Anne with her cache of secret letters. (They've been in a London vault ever since.) Then Kate does separate interviews with Anne, Nellie, and Nellie's cousin Dorinda--and eventually, after unearthing a few family skeletons, wins their trust. So finally Kate gets access to those letters--which turn out to be a sensational literary find. Mystery-lovers will be disappointed, of course. But those who read Cross almost solely for the literary atmosphere will find this faintly bookish, faintly gothic tale a pleasant--if thematically obvious--diversion. (The Gringold memoir is the graceful, tart highlight.) And, with blessedly little of Kate's cutesy chatter with hubby Reed, it's certainly preferable to the recent, tepid Fansler whodunits. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review


Review by Kirkus Book Review