Yes - though it has been awhile!I agree that the Spenser theme is about worked out. And my wife likes Stephanie Plum Crazy.
Anyone else like Pronzoni's "Nameless Detective" series?
Both are worth the effort!!Another nice series of whodunnits is the Cadfael series. The protagonist is a monk in medieval England (during the struggle between Stephen and Mathilda for the throne of England). The books have also been turned into a TV series, starring Derek Jacobi.
A lot of works by the Kellerman family (Jonathan, his wife Faye, or their son Jesse) fall into the "whodunnit" category, and are pretty good reads.
I grew reading Elizabeth Linington, under her pennames Dell Shannon or Lesley Egan, although those are more "police procedural" than true whodunnits. But I think the books she wrote as Lesley Egan are less police procedural and more the other. (But I admit it's been years since I read those.)
Also anything by Ed McBain, as himself, or as Evan Hunter, might satisfy your criteria as well.
But then, I'm harking back a long time ago too... I've kinda taken a long hiatus from the genre.![]()
This culminates in the last novel, where an American Kissinger-like politician is going to visit Sweden and there are strong leads that a terrorist group is planning an assassination attempt.Per Wahlöö described their goals for the series as to "use the crime novel as a scalpel cutting open the belly of the ideologically pauperized and morally debatable so-called welfare state of the bourgeois type."

Which has been done as a graphic novel also!.It's more of a spy series, but plenty of detective/whodunnit elements in there too: Lucifer Box:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Vesuvius_Club
Indeed. The trilogy by the late Stieg Larsson, especially, is simply a must-read. It's called the Millennium trilogy and starts with Men who hate women, which has recently been made into a film (sadly couldn't find a trailer with subtitles) which currently dominates Scandinavian movie theater ticket sales. It's a whodunnit mixing traditional and modern writing styles, and the addition of the incredibly complex character Lisbeth Salander really makes it so much more than a regular crime novel.I am on a Nordic kick- Stieg Larsson, Arnaldur Indridason, Mari Jungstedt, Håkan Nesser, Asa Larsson.
All highly recommended
I am a big fan of Elizabeth George as well. I thought it took quite a lot of courage for her to jump out of the 'formula' and write "What Came Before He Shot Her." I understand that many of her fans returned the book and made a big deal about how Tommy wasn't really in the novel. This is from the amazon.com comments:
How could Elizabeth George even think of letting her fans down like this? I've never before been moved to write a review but this book is a literary crime that cannot go unpunished! (Wish it had gone unpublished though.)
Geez.
I think it was very original and touching and certainly put her outside (maybe above?) the genre.
Two suggestions if you haven't read them:
1. Mistress of the Art of Death, Arianna Franklin.
2. Mystery, Peter Straub
If you give them a shot, let me know what you think.![]()
I read her The Franchise Affair a few years ago and enjoyed it - I can't remember much so perhaps I will reread it.And then there is Josephine Tey's book Daughter of Time, which introduced me to the readings about Richard III, and I thought it was a brilliant book. I haven't read other Tey's mysteries.
... I did the same thing with John D. MacDonald's Travis McGee series. A bit of a throwback to Hammett, but they were still all essentially Whodunnits. ...
I always preferred the more "action"-oriented authors; hard-boiled Mike Hammer, Travis McGee, Matt Helm..
I made the mistake of trying to read a Spillane/Mike Hammer once. When the central character raped a woman in the first few pages, I decided his work wasn't for me.
BTW the Sayers fans might like (if they didn't know already) that there are a couple of 'new' Lord Peter novels. Written by Jill Paton Walsh and based on Sayers notes. I think they are quite good; YMMV.
A Presumption of Death and Thrones, Dominations. But not necessarily in that order!