Reviews

The Big Book of Rogues and Villains by Otto Penzler

vsbedford's review

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3.0

The first of these collections that didn't thoroughly grab me - this, for me, is a work to be appreciated as both an object and as a labor of love by the authors and editor alike, rather than read for enjoyment. First, it's very size makes both the digital and print editions hard to manage and second, you lose the forest for the trees a bit because of how many historical/geographical distinctions are made and included. I appreciate showing the scope of the genre but by the beginning of The Pulp Era I had lost a grasp on where we'd all started. Anyhoo, small quibbles on what should be included in most crime-lovers' libraries.

I received an ecopy from the publishers and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

chewdigestbooks's review

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4.0

This was so much of a chunkster and I enjoyed every moment until I got to the more current stories, called The Moderns, in the book.

The rest was pure perfect classic devilry, whether Rogue or Villan. At times it was stomach turning, I'm referring to the "Yellow Peril" era of such damn bigotry that I wanted to slap them. Yet they were all products of their times and this book was interesting in how it showed the transgression over the decades on who were considered the bad guys and who were just the raconteurs. I was shocked at times by the small bios before the shorts. There were authors that I knew nothing about and then others that I knew well, but had no idea of either their major successes or their less famous other characters that I was about to meet. Like Earle Stanley Gardner, creator of Perry Mason? He had tons of other interesting shorts and series before Mason. And mea culpa, I'd never known the original creator/novelist of The Fugitive or Bullit. Thank you, Robert L. Fish, and thanks for setting up your estate to keep giving back via the Robert L. Fish Memorial Award.

It was not a page-turner, wasn't meant to be. I read one story, flipped to something else for a chapter for two, went back to the next Rogue or Villan, etc.

My issue with "The Moderns" is that well, I've heard of most of them before and wasn't transported to another time, even when the stories were set in past eras. We've lost something as a people and definitely as writers/readers. I'm not sure what to call it, maybe naivety? There is a period or style that mystery lovers know well called hardboiled and film lovers call noir. We've moved to a much darker place than that other was and personally, I prefer the older styles of both mysteries and films. Life may have seemed dark to them, but to us? It was like blooming Disneyland compared to now. That leaves me saddened, so you get four stars for making me mourn our innocence, sorry.



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