Murder by Magic: Twenty Tales of Crime and the Supernatural

Murder by Magic: Twenty Tales of Crime and the Supernatural

by Rosemary Edghill
Murder by Magic: Twenty Tales of Crime and the Supernatural

Murder by Magic: Twenty Tales of Crime and the Supernatural

by Rosemary Edghill

eBook

$10.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

This anthology features 20 original stories of murder by acclaimed and award-winning science fiction and fantasy writers.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780446510547
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Publication date: 09/03/2007
Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 591,285
File size: 539 KB

Read an Excerpt

Murder By Magic


By Rosemary Edghill

Warner Aspect

Copyright © 2004 Rosemary Edghill
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0-446-67962-3


Introduction

Rosemary Edghill

It is a truism of publishing that sooner or later every author wants to commit murder, and I have proof: a new take on the mean streets from Laura Resnick, a charmingly chilling story from Carole Nelson Douglas, alternate police procedurals from Josepha Sherman and Keith DeCandido-detectives amateur, private, and decidedly outside the law, in settings ranging from the haunted galleries of Elizabethan England to the worlds of the Eraasian Hegemony. And from Jennifer Roberson, perhaps the strangest detective of all.

I hope you'll enjoy these twenty stories ranging from the past through the future, set both here and ... Elsewhere.

When I set out to assemble Murder by Magic, the contributors had only two rules to follow to write a qualifying story: there had to be a crime (preferably murder), and magic and the supernatural had to be somehow involved, either in the commission or in the solution of the crime.

As you will see, that left plenty of room for variation, from James Macdonald's very traditional psychic investigator to Will Graham's wisecracking supernatural adventurers to Josepha Sherman's deadpan hilarious civil service magicians to Diane Duane's lyrical tale of a policeman's last case. And, yes, in Debra Doyle's Eraasian country-house "murder," a homage to detective fiction of the 1920s and a tragedy in the Classical sense of the word.

When it came time to choose an order for the tales in Murder by Magic, I found that the stories seemed to fall naturally into five categories that turned out to pretty well encompass most of the variations on today's supernatural detective story. Some stories were easy to fit into my five pigeonholes-a historical occult mystery certainly is, after all, and a historical mystery with animated chairs is naturally fantastical. But others I hesitated over until the last minute-was "Overrush" a Murder Most Modern or a Murder Unclassifiable? Which subgroup did "The Case of the Headless Corpse" really belong in? Was "Snake in the Grass" Unclassifiable or Fantastical? At last, with much trepidation, I made my final decisions. You may agree with me, or you may not-the fun of getting to be the editor is that I get the final say about what goes where. And certainly you'll have your own favorite stories out of all those presented here, as I have mine (I'm not telling which ones mine are, but here's a hint: there are twenty of them).

Opinions exist to differ, but one thing I'm sure we'll both agree on is that, based on the evidence, the Occult Detective is alive and well a century and more after his "birth"-though Doctor John Silence might be hard put to recognize some of his literary descendants.

And whether it's a story of clandestine and unexpected magic set in the real world, or a tale set in an alternate universe in which magic openly replaces science, the rules for a good mystery-supernatural or otherwise-are always the same: find the killer and bring him (or her, or even it) to justice.

I hope you'll enjoy your foray into the shadows, where impossible crimes are commonplace. I've gotten you some excellent guides.

Come.

There's nothing to fear.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Murder By Magic by Rosemary Edghill Copyright © 2004 by Rosemary Edghill . Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Introduction1
Part IMurder Most Modern3
Piece of Mind5
Special Suprise Guest Appearance by ...21
Doppelgangster35
Mixed Marriages Can Be Murder51
The Case of the Headless Corpse63
Part IIMurder Unclassifiable81
A Death in the Working83
Cold Case95
Snake in the Grass111
Double Jeopardy125
Witch Sight139
Overrush155
Part IIIMurder Most Genteel171
Captured in Silver173
A Night at the Opera189
A Tremble in the Air205
Murder Entailed225
Part IVMurder Fantastical243
Dropping Hints245
Au Purr259
Getting the Chair277
Part VMurder Most Historical293
The Necromancer's Apprentice295
Grey Eminence311
Afterword341
About the Editor346
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews