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Michael A. Kahn

Don’t Pun Me, Bro

Posted on April 16, 2013April 16, 2013 by Michael Kahn
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch recently published a piece on Fred Firestone, a friend and St. Louis businessman who travels to New York City once a month to co-host with his daughter Jo an event that the newspaper states “is drawing critical acclaim from the New York media and attracting sellout crowds to a club in Brooklyn for their wild and…
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Nine Mysteries for Literary Snobs: A Compendium

Posted on April 9, 2013 by Michael Kahn
A while back, I did a post on the Poisoned Pen Press blog about the challenge of convincing literary snobs that there are indeed great works of literature that meet all criteria of that lowly genre known as Mystery. As I explained, there are 3 basic requirements of the genre: (a)  A mysterious murder or missing person or…
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Sex, Metafiction, and Ecclesiastes

Posted on March 16, 2013February 10, 2014 by Michael Kahn
Yes, I know. A curious title. Bear with me. First, the sex. Many years ago, I read a magazine piece by a literary figure who’d come of age in the Greenwich Village of the 1920s. Among her fond memories of that era, she wrote, was the pride that she and her friends took in their…
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The Final Mystery for Literary Snobs: A Novel That Once Was Just a “Pulp Crime Mystery”

Posted on March 4, 2013September 2, 2021 by Michael Kahn
We’ve buried this classic American detective story in our final slot, but don’t worry, dear snob. It’s been anointed with holy oil of The Library of America. You can now purchase Raymond Chandler’s The Big Sleep in the fancy schmancy Library of America edition , and place it on your bookshelf in the “C’s” between your…
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Mystery #8 for Literary Snobs: The Yiddish Policemen’s Union by Michael Chabon

Posted on March 1, 2013March 30, 2013 by Michael Kahn
As Terry Rafferty notes in “Cops and Rabbis,” his review of The Yiddish Policemen’s Union, Michael Chabon “has in recent years become a zealous proselytizer for a more genre-inflected and plot-friendly sort of literary fiction.” Detective fiction has been one such genre, which he first explored in The Final Solution, a mystery set in the English countryside…
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Mystery #7 for Literary Snobs: The Real Life of Sebastian Knight by Vladimir Nabokov

Posted on February 26, 2013 by Michael Kahn
Conrad Brenner, writing in The New Republic, describes this book as “the most perverse novel you are ever likely to encounter.” And John Updike wrote, “Nabokov writes prose the only way it should be written, that is, ecstatically” If that doesn’t whet your appetite, then go back to your annotated Finnegans Wake and leave us…
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Mystery #6 for Literary Snobs: The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco

Posted on February 24, 2013 by Michael Kahn
Umberto Eco is a literary snob’s dream date. A towering intellectual, he is the author of numerous scholarly articles and books in the fields of literary criticism, semiotics, anthropology, and mass culture. Indeed, his list of international literary and scholarly awards is matched only by the number of honorary degrees he has received from universities around the world….
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Mystery #5 for Literary Snobs: A Murder of Quality by John leCarre

Posted on February 22, 2013 by Michael Kahn
John leCarre toiled for years in the vineyards of another low-status genre, the spy thriller, before critics “discovered” that his potboilers happened to be, well, exceptional novels. But way back in 1962 — the year before The Spy Who Came In From The Cold — LeCarre published a short mystery masterpiece, A Murder of Quality….
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Mystery #4 for Literary Snobs: Absalom, Absalom by William Faulkner

Posted on February 20, 2013 by Michael Kahn
Faulkner flirted with the mystery genre throughout his career — Knight’s Gambit and Intruder in the Dust, for example, along with the screenplay for The Big Sleep,which he wrote. But his finest mystery also happens to be his finest novel.  Absalom  Absalom is, quite simply, a superior detective story and a great work of literature. The novel…
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Mystery #3 for Literary Snobs: Labyrinths by Jorge Luis Borges

Posted on February 19, 2013 by Michael Kahn
Any excuse to read this South American grandmaster is a good one. Luckily for us, mysteries were his favorite fiction. As fellow South American author Alberto Manguel reminisced about Jorge Luis Borges in his piece in the 2006 Criminal Content issue of Words Without Borders: “He loved detective novels. He found in their formulae the ideal narrative structures that…
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Michael A. Kahn

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  • Mike's Lawyer Bio
  • Mike's Amazon Author Page
  • Mike's Most Recent Rachel Gold Mystery: BAD TRUST — "Entertaining 11th mystery featuring… a bit of Perry Mason showmanship" ― Publishers Weekly
  • Mike's Newest Novel: THE GOURMET CLUB–"A thoroughly enjoyable and inviting story with well-drawn characters." (Kirkus Reviews)
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