As a sometimes resident and frequent visitor to Ireland, and a big fan of several mystery novelists associated with Ireland by birth, residency, or fictional geography, this book was instantly appealing. Most importantly, it promised to introduce me to a group of new to me authors of mystery/detective stories with the hope that at least one of them would appeal enough to pursue their other works.
Editor Peter Haining has done great work in gathering together stories from more than two dozen authors whose work reflects both the birth years of modern crime fiction in the 19th Century right up to the 1990s when the anthology was published. He has gathered them together under four headings: Foul Play: Stories of Murder and Death; Law Breaking: Cases of Theft and Robbery; Crime Passionel: Tales of Jealousy and Revenge; and, The Detectives: Police and Private Investigators. This gives the reader a pretty complete array of mystery/crime genres from police procedurals to the almost supernatural (which even the great Conan Doyle dabbled with in several stories). The writers whose works are presented here include James Joyce, Nicholas Blake, Flann O’Brien, Brendan Behan, Sean O’Faolain, Liam O’Flaherty, Peter Tremayne, and Cathal O Sandair.
I did follow up on at least one author included here with only mixed success in that the Victorian period novel did not in my opinion hold up well in the 21st Century – as interesting as it was to sample that era’s state of the art! Still looking to explore a few of the others further but I certainly have no complaints about the opportunities presented to again visit Ireland and its numerous interesting locales and historical periods reflected in these pages.