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Grobius Shortling's List of the 50 Best Mystery Novels

(originally compiled in the 1980s and not consistently updated since then; started adding Links Sept 1996 -- go to the bottom of this page for my comments about this web site)
(Click here for a simple version of this list)

There are some thumbnail reviews of many of the books on this list--click:

Desert Island Mysteries

Additional Web Pages: Fredric Brown | John Dickson Carr | Edmund Crispin | Colin Dexter | Arthur Conan Doyle | Ian Fleming | Michael Gilbert | Cyril Hare | Reginald Hill | P.M. Hubbard | Michael Innes | John D. Macdonald | Ellery Queen | S S Van Dine | Series Detectives

The envelope, please...

  1. Eric Ambler
    • A COFFIN FOR DIMITRIOS
  2. Robert Barnard
    • DEATH OF A MYSTERY WRITER
    • DEATH OF A LITERARY WIDOW
    • DEATH OF A PERFECT MOTHER
    • DEATH OF AN OLD GOAT
    • OUT OF THE BLACKOUT
  3. Francis Beeding
    • DEATH WALKS IN EASTREPPS
  4. Anthony Berkeley
    • TRIAL AND ERROR
    • THE POISONED CHOCOLATES CASE (the classic 'multi-solution')
  5. Lawrence Block
    • WHEN THE SACRED GIN MILL CLOSES
  6. Ray Bradbury
    • DEATH IS A LONELY BUSINESS
  7. Simon Brett
    • A COMEDIAN DIES
    • SITUATION TRAGEDY
    • NOT DEAD, ONLY RESTING
  8. Fredric Brown
    • NIGHT OF THE JABBERWOCK
  9. John Dickson Carr
    • THE THREE COFFINS (The Hollow Man)
    • HE WHO WHISPERS
    • THE CASE OF THE CONSTANT SUICIDES
    • THE MAD HATTER MYSTERY
    • THE BURNING COURT
    • THE DEVIL IN VELVET
    • FIRE, BURN!
  10. Raymond Chandler
    • THE LADY IN THE LAKE
  11. Agatha Christie
    • THE PALE HORSE
    • AT BERTRAM'S HOTEL
    • THE BODY IN THE LIBRARY
    • WHAT MRS MCGILLICUDDY SAW
    • AND THEN THERE WERE NONE (Ten Little Indians)
    • (another link and a bibliography)
  12. Wilkie Collins
  13. Edmund Crispin
    • FREQUENT HEARSES
    • THE LONG DIVORCE
    • THE CASE OF THE GILDED FLY
  14. Colin Dexter
    • LAST BUS TO WOODSTOCK
    • THE RIDDLE OF THE THIRD MILE
    • SERVICE OF ALL THE DEAD
  15. Charles Dickens
    • BLEAK HOUSE
    • THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD
  16. Peter Dickinson
    • THE GLASS-SIDED ANTS' NEST
    • SLEEP AND HIS BROTHER
    • THE POISON ORACLE
  17. Carter Dickson
    • MY LATE WIVES
    • THE JUDAS WINDOW
    • THE CURSE OF THE BRONZE LAMP
    • AND SO TO MURDER
    • SHE DIED A LADY
  18. Arthur Conan Doyle
    • THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES
  19. Kenneth Fearing
    • THE BIG CLOCK
  20. Ian Fleming
    • ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE
    • YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE
    • FROM RUSSIA, WITH LOVE
    • LIVE AND LET DIE
      Take your pick!
  21. R. Austin Freeman
    • MR POTTERMACK'S OVERSIGHT
    • THE PENROSE MYSTERY
    • THE D'ARBLAY MYSTERY
  22. Randall Garrett
    • TOO MANY MAGICIANS
  23. Jonathan Gash
    • THE JUDAS PAIR
    • GOLD BY GEMINI
  24. Michael Gilbert
    • SMALLBONE DECEASED
    • DEATH HAS DEEP ROOTS
    • THE QUEEN AGAINST KARL MULLEN
    • THE KILLING OF KATIE STEELSTOCK
  25. B. M. Gill
    • THE TWELFTH JUROR
  26. Dashiell Hammett
    • THE MALTESE FALCON
  27. Cyril Hare
    • TRAGEDY AT LAW
    • UNTIMELY DEATH
  28. Reginald Hill
    • A KILLING KINDNESS
    • UNDERWORLD
    • AN APRIL SHROUD
    • RULING PASSION
  29. Tony Hillerman
    • SKINWALKERS
  30. Chester Himes
    • HOT DAY, HOT NIGHT
  31. P.M. Hubbard
    • THE HOLM OAKS
    • A HIVE OF GLASS
  32. Richard Hull
    • THE MURDER OF MY AUNT
  33. Francis Iles
    • MALICE AFORETHOUGHT (humorous and ironic)
    • BEFORE THE FACT (more serious)
  34. Hammond Innes
    • THE WRECK OF THE MARY DEARE
    • ATLANTIC FURY
  35. Michael Innes
    • LAMENT FOR A MAKER
    • HAMLET, REVENGE!
    • THE CASE OF THE JOURNEYING BOY
  36. John LeCarre
    • THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD (seminal, but read the trilogy for more complexity)
    • TINKER, TAILOR, SOLDIER, SPY / THE HONOURABLE SCHOOLBOY / SMILEY'S PEOPLE
      (a long trilogy, read as one)
      Note: no photos available; these books have been packed away
  37. John D. MacDonald
    • THE LAST ONE LEFT
      Note: see web page for Travis McGee
  38. Sharyn McCrumb
    • THE ROSEWOOD CASKET
    • THE BALLAD OF FRANKIE SILVER
    • SHE WALKS THESE HILLS
    • THE HANGMAN'S BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTER
    • IF EVER I RETURN, PRETTY PEGGY-O
      --[in other words, the whole "Appalachian" Series]
  39. Mark McShane
    • THE CRIMSON MADNESS OF LITTLE DOOM
    • SEANCE (Seance on a Wet Afternoon) (was a wonderful movie with Kim Stanley and Richard Attenborough)
  40. William Murray
    • THE KING OF THE NIGHTCAP
  41. Anthony Price
    • TOMORROW'S GHOST
    • COLONEL BUTLER'S WOLF
    • GUNNER KELLY
  42. Ellery Queen
    • THE GREEK COFFIN MYSTERY
    • THE EGYPTIAN CROSS MYSTERY
    • CAT OF MANY TAILS
    • (another link)
  43. Peter Robinson
    • INNOCENT GRAVES
  44. Rex Stout
    • TOO MANY COOKS
    • A FAMILY AFFAIR
    • SOME BURIED CAESAR
    • THE FINAL DEDUCTION
      Tough call; take your pick
  45. Ross Thomas
    • CHINAMAN'S CHANCE
    • TWILIGHT AT MAC'S PLACE (replaces THE EIGHTH DWARF)
  46. Jim Thompson
    • THE KILLER INSIDE ME
    • POP. 1280
      Read both; they are short books
  47. Arthur W. Upfield
    • DEATH OF A LAKE (classic Australian Outback)
    • THE NEW SHOE (atypical for this author)
  48. S.S. Van Dine
    • THE BISHOP MURDER CASE
    • THE BENSON MURDER CASE (seminal first, but not the best)
  49. Barbara Vine
    • A DARK-ADAPTED EYE
      Note: this should now be replaced either with ANNA'S BOOK , or THE BRIMSTONE WEDDING
  50. Colin Watson
    • HOPJOY WAS HERE
    • LONELYHEART 4122
      The whole Flaxborough series is worth counting

(Highlighted names have a Web Page; click to see. It's hard to keep this up to date since web sites come and go. Several links were removed just because they vanished [last checked Feb 2001]. If you click you can view a scan of the book in my library.)


Some of these are technically not 'mysteries', but Hell, it's MY list. Where there are multiple choices for an author, I couldn't make up my mind which was the best. (And, yes, I know John Dickson Carr is also Carter Dickson.)

Note: David Guterson's SNOW FALLING ON CEDARS is not a mystery novel, but it is wonderful and deserves a mention on this page.

(There are no more slots open; some 'new' authors since about 1990 should qualify -- such as Derek Raymond, Michael Dibden, etc. Others, like SS van Dine, should probably be dropped. But E-mail on the whole content of this list is welcome, since it is idiosyncratic. I am open to any suggestions, although I'm not convinced, like some people, that nobody has written a decent mystery since the 'Golden Age'.)


Somebody pointed out that there are more than 50 books here and that this is really a list of AUTHORS. Well, I will stick with my titles (subject to revision over the years, since some authors mentioned here have written better books since this list was compiled). However, there should also be a secondary list of great detective story writers that deserve mention even though Grobius can't come up with book titles that qualify as 'best'.

I have constructed a list of mini-reviews from the Top 50 list; the premise is based on the BBC radio show 'Desert Island Discs', where celebrities are briefly interviewed and then asked what records they would select if they were to be stranded on a desert island (with a record player of course)--then some of their selections are played, simple but really neat show and beats Oprah hands down. Click on Desert Island Mysteries.


January 1997. This page became too large; the next section, about sub-genres and 'one-of-a-kind' mysteries is now on its own web page. Click on the skull to view it.

**One of a Kind Mysteries**


Here are some honorable-mention authors:

  • Ed McBain. How could I skip the whole excellent 87th precinct series?
  • ... him again. The Matthew Hope series
  • Erle Stanley Gardner. Perry Mason, of course (these are really quite good, the hell with the TV series)
  • John D. MacDonald. Travis McGee, gee whiz
  • John Mortimer. Rumpole of the Bailey...best series of stories since Sherlock Holmes (Leo McKern defined the role definitively, just as Rathbone did SH until Jeremy Brett came along)
  • Dorothy L. Sayers. This is probably the only 'best' list that doesn't have The Nine Tailors on it, but I can't stand Wimsey. But it is a superb book. (another link)
  • Ross MacDonald. The heir to Raymond Chandler, but just didn't make it for some reason
  • Ruth Rendell. The Inspector Wexford series is excellent, but no single book stands out above all the others
  • P.D. James. Writes some good books, but she reminds me of Margaret Thatcher (from her PBS interviews), so naah!
  • La Femmes (Muller, Paretsky, Grafton, Barnes, et al). These are very good writers about women PI's (but sometimes lapse into sentimentality, and who gives a damn about McCone's love life?). See new web page.
    [I've gotten flak for this, but it is a generalization that still holds for me. However, see other places on this web site for some revisionism.]
  • Sharon McCrumb. She Walks These Hills and some others really belong on the main list, but she also perpetrated Bimbos of the Death Sun -- I've got to think about this. Great writer, sometimes [March 1997, she has now been promoted into the top 50, because of her Tennessee Mountain Series]
  • Caroline Graham. Very witty, watch out for her books!
  • Sarah Caudwell. Fantastic! (and VERY infrequent)
  • Nicholas Freeling. He killed off his main detective, which was unforgiveable; besides, his books are depressing
  • Sjöwall and Wahlöö. Wonderful Swedish detective series, the best being The Laughing Policeman.
  • Allingham, Tey, and Marsh. Couldn't really get into them, but of course there were some really good ones.
  • James Ellroy (Killer on the Road), as representative of the psycho casual killer genre; I don't like this sort of book, even when it is as well done as this one, but it DID make Joe Lofgreen's favorites list so I gave it a try.
  • Misc. Good Mystery Story Writers (who will not be offended being left off my Top 50 list because they are dead): Freeman Wills Crofts, Julian Symons, Robert Van Gulik, G.K. Chesterton, Lillian de la Torre, Nicholas Blake (C. Day Lewis), Anthony Boucher, Sax Rohmer (yes, Fu Manchu), Edgar Wallace, Christianna Brand, Patricia Highsmith, Israel Zangwill (and there are many others, but they don't occur to me right now)
  • Mortal Consequences (aka Bloody Murder) by Julian Symons is one of the most interesting histories of the Mystery story (in my opinion); there is also Howard Haycraft's Murder for Pleasure -- great Golden Age compendium. Read Bill Pronzini's wonderful Gun in Cheek books for a discussion of the Pulps. A Catalogue of Crime by Barzun and Taylor is a comprehensive but outdated and eccentric list of old mysteries (emphasis on books written before 1950).
  • Patrick O'Brian. Oops, wrong page. I haven't even begun to search the Internet on this subject (Aubrey, Hornblower et al -- Napoleonic Era sea stories)


And here is a list of very overrated authors:

  • Martha Grimes [collects odd pub names on her vacations to Britain then tries to make a story out of it; would be OK without her ridiculous Melrose Plant character -- the un-lord Peter Wimsey -- who is appalling]
  • Elizabeth George [correspondents have disagreed with me on her, and I disagree with myself sometimes, because these are 'good reads' -- but there's something fake about them that is hard to pin down, maybe because she is a Californian and her early books were soap operas with her idealized British aristocrats -- Inspector Tommy Lynley (8th Earl of Asherton), Lady Helen Clyde, Simon St. James -- give me a break! Later books have improved, but I guess she's stuck with her cast of regulars, as Sayers was with Wimsey]
  • P.D. James [well, not always, but Dalgliesh is a jerk; got to admit the books are well-written in many ways, though not style-wise. PDJ has a mouth like a cat's asshole, judging by her appearances on PBS, but of course it would be misleading to sum up a writer based on physical presence!]
  • A bunch from the early days: Such as Bentley -- why would anyone rate Trent's Last Case as a perfect mystery classic? It is almost unreadable. [Critics loved this book because it had ambiguous conclusions by the detective, who was supposed to be omniscient at that time--well, Hammett and company hadn't arrived yet. A landmark mystery deservedly buried deep in the foundations not to be seen again.]
    • Poe's Auguste Dupin [heresy!] -- granted, he set the stage for everything that was to come, but the stories are pretty much undistinguished; you would be much better off reading early classics like Caleb Williams and Confessions of a Justified Sinner
    • S.S van Dine [even though I put a couple of his master works up top--but only because they are quite fun and quaint and show an idealized New York that nobody alive now remembers, if it ever existed] -- Ogden Nash said "Philo Vance needs a kick in the pance"
    • ANY of the French authors (Simenon, 'Arsène Lupin', etc.) -- Gaboriau is boring, and Leroux had a screw loose [the Gallic soul does not lend itself to mystery novels as we know them -- nor does the German, but I have NEVER read even a halfway decent German detective story and at least the French ones have a modicum of style]. Note: a reader of this web page took me to task over including Simenon (Insp. Maigret) in this list, so I will check some of the books out and update this page if it's justified. Conclusion: They are often good crime novels, but they are not detective stories.
    • Biggers's Charlie Chan [but some of the movies are great fun if you get stoned enough -- the politically incorrect Chineseness doesn't upset me as much as the silliness]
    • Most of the 'Rivals of Sherlock Holmes' [Thinking Machine, Max Carrados, Baroness Orczy's Old Man in the Corner, Martin Hewitt--what a bore he is--, Reggie Fortune, Uncle Abner, etc. etc. etc.] Many of them are very good, but nothing like the Master.
    • Raffles, Bulldog Drummond, and that ilk [even Richard "39 Steps" Hannay, I regret to say, even though they are jolly good ripping yarns]
    • Margery Allingham [yes, let's be honest, these books are BAD, very poorly written stylistically, with hokey plots]
    • ANYBODY declared the heir to Christie or Sayers, even if you could make a case for it (it's just a turnoff, although not the author's fault -- blame the ad-men for overdoing a legitimate hype) -- the true heir to Agatha Christie was whoever inherited her money
    • Oh, this could go on and on ....

General pet peeves: (1) Aristocrats as detectives (amateur or police), (2) sightseeing books (I spent my last vacation in this place and will now write a mystery set there), (3) 1st-person narratives of private detectives who are total thugs (Mickey Spillane, et al -- how could they ever find the time and the literacy to write them?), (4) sinister Chinamen or Arabs or Hispanics who are the epitome of evil in a Moriarty sense (well, Germans too, although some of Hitler's crowd really were that way), (5) jolly young undergraduates from Oxford or some such place involved in some sort of caper, (6) 1920s flappers ditto (e.g., Tommy & Tuppence), and (7) Belgians or whatever with big brain cells who can't speak English properly (and I don't really mean Hercule Poirot particularly -- thinking more of Jules de Grandin and that ilk) . (8) Finally, there are the Had-I-But-Known mysteries, where the hero (usually heroine) behaves like a perfect idiot -- a la Bluebeard, whatever you do don't go in that room, or not to be sexist, tell Philip Marlowe to stay away from the place where he should know damn well he's going to get the shit beat out of him.

This crap list should of course also contain my own detective stories:
Selected Cases of William Blackstone Wildman

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Update (March 1997) : Sharyn McCrumb has been added to the Top 50 List; (October 97) Peter Robinson added (replacing Patrick Ruell)


Added: Sherlock Holmes Page (03/1998) :: James Bond (12/1999) :: Michael Gilbert (01/2000 ) :: Inspector Morse (03/2001) :: Cyril Hare (04/2001) :: Edmund Crispin (04/2001) :: Philo Vance (04/2001) :: Series Detectives (06/2001) :: Michael Innes (01/2002) :: Reginald Hill (06/2002) :: Fredric Brown (09/2003) :: John D. Macdonald (10/2003) :: P.M. Hubbard (10/2003)

APOLOGIA

This page has become relatively popular on the Internet, so I get a lot of mail about 'Why didn't you include...?' Good! I will read anything you highly recommend; if you recommend something I've read but didn't like, well I will tell you so and why; if you can sell me on something, that's great -- any new mystery writer is grist to this mill and the finest flour will be acknowledged (very labored metaphor and a poor pun on flour/ flower). This, however, is a Best Of List, and it takes several rereadings of a book to get it on here. My main Mystery page is more open and under constant modification, so you are very likely to find mention of one of your favorite authors there, because I really have read something like a thousand mystery novels over 35 years (who knows? at the rate of 2 or 3 a week, but some of them rereadings, it all adds up, but I'm not mathematician enough to calculate that with accuracy). Unfortunately, the books on the list are there permanently as far as the list goes, and will not be replaced by other books (maybe just titles within individual authors' works). So there's a problem: What about additions? It's really a list of 50 detective story writers, not 50 books, and it is now up to the limit. There were a couple of slots open -- McCrumb just took one (4/97) and now it looks like Peter Robinson is going to take the last one (#50 -- ETC.) unless #50 is to become the pointer to ANOTHER Top 50 list. Well, maybe I'll do that, or better yet just make this a "Best Mystery Page" without numbers. If I do, though, the original list will be set up as a separate entity, with all of the additions (like everything else here such as this footnote, stripped away leaving just the list itself with no commentary).--- E-Mail

A note for the curious (and my European friends who read this web page): These are all English language books and for the most part take place in an Anglo-Saxon type society. Why is that? Here is a quotation from S.S. Van Dine (Willard Huntington Wright) in one of his more percipient moments:

A detective novel is nearly always more popular in the country in which it is laid than in a foreign country where the conditions, both human and topographic, are unfamiliar. The variations between English and American customs and police methods, and mental and temperamental attributes, are, of course, not nearly so marked as between those of America and France ... Many of the best French novels of this type have had indifferent sales in the United States. Gaston Leroux's "The Mystery of the Yellow Room" [etc.] have never had their deserved popularity in this country because of their foreign locales; but "The Phantom of the Opera," by the same author, which is a sheer story, has been a great success here, due largely to that very unfamiliarity of setting that has worked against the success of his detective novels.

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Web Page and Contents Copyright © 1996, by Grobius Shortling
Last Updated:

Just a minor comment: British and US titles of mystery stories (and other novels) are often changed for no apparent reason, apparently because American publishers think readers are too dumb to appreciate titles taken from literary quotations. This causes problems for book collectors and is needlessly confusing. Re-issues, in my opinion, should be given back their original titles. For example, Carr's The Hollow Man is in my opinion a more evocative title than The Three Coffins.

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