User:Mrs emma hudson/sandbox
Appearance
Bibliography
[edit]- Bailey, Frankie Y. Out of the woodpile: black characters in detective fiction. New York, Greenwood Press, 1991.
- Betz, Phyllis M. Lesbian detective fiction: women as author, subject, reader. Jefferson NC: McFarland & Co., @2006
- Cornelius, Michael G and Melanie E Gregg. Nancy Drew and her Sister Sleuths: essays on the fiction of girl detectives. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, @2008.
- Dellacava, Frances A. and Madeline H. Engel. Sleuths in Skirts: an analysis and bibliography of serialized female sleuths. New York: Routledge, 2002. ISBN-0-815-33884-8
- ___ Female detectives in American novels : a bibliography and analysis of serialized female sleuths. New York : Garland Pub., 1993.
- Dilley, Kimberly J. Busybodies, Meddlers and Snoops: the Female Hero in Contemporary Women’s Mysteries (Contributions in Women’s Studies) 1998
- Dresner, Lisa M. The Female Investigator in literature, film and popular culture. Jefferson. NC: McFarland, 2007.
- Herbert, Rosemary (ed). The Oxford Companion to Crime and Mystery Writers. New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.
- Herbert, Rosemary. Whodunit?: A Who's Who in Crime and Mystery Writing. New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
- Howe, Alexander N. and Christine A Jackson (eds).Marcia Muller and the Female Private Eye: essays on the novels that defined a subgenre. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2008. ISBN 0-786-43825-8
- Klein, Kathleen Gregory. The Woman Detective: Gender and Genre. Second edition. Chicago and Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1995. ISBN 0-252-06463-1.
- ___ Women Times Three: Writers, Detectives, Reader. Popular Press, 1995
- Jackson, Christine A.Myth and Ritual in Women’s Detective Fictio. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2002
- Johnsen, Rosemary Erickson Contemporary Feminist Historical Crime Fiction 2006
- Kestner, Joseph A. Sherlock’s Sisters: The British Female Detective 1863-1913. Aldershot, Hants, England ; Burlington, VT : Ashgate, ©2003.
- Kim, Julie H Murdering Miss Marple: Essays on Gender and Sexuality in the New Golden Age of Women's Crime Fiction 2012
- Mackler, Tasha. Murder by Category: A Subject Guide to Mystery Fiction. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1995. Z2014 F4 M34 1991.
- Matthews, Pamela R and Mary Ann O'Farrell. Whose body? : recognizing feminist mystery and detective fiction. [College Station, TX] : South Central Modern Language Association, ©2001.
- Mizejewski, Linda.Hardboiled and High Heeled: the Woman Detective in Popular Cultur. New York: Routledge, 2004. ISBN 0-415-96971-9.
- Munt, Sally R.Murder by the Book?: Feminism and the Crime Novel. London: Routledge, 1994. ISBN 0-415-10918-3
- Nichols, Victoria and Susan Thompson Silk Stalkings: when women write of murder: a survey of series characters created by women authors in crime and mystery fiction. Berkeley: Black Lizard books, 1988.
- Silk Stalkings: more women write of murder. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 1988.
- Nickerson, Catherine Ross.The Web of Iniquity: Early Detective Fiction by American Wome. Duke University Press, 1998
- Reddy, Maureen T. Traces, Codes and Clues: Reading Race in Crime Fiction, 2002
- Rehak, Melanie. Girl sleuth: Nancy Drew and Women Who Created Her. Orlando: Harcourt, @2005.
- Sisters in crime: feminism and the crime novel New York: Continuum, 1988.
- Reynolds, Moira Davison Women Authors of Detective Series: Twenty-One American and British authors, 1900-2000, 2001.
- Rowland, Susan From Agatha Christie To Ruth Rendell: British Women Writers in Detective and Crime Fiction (Crime Files) 2001
- Sims, Michael. (ed)The Penguin Book of Victorian Women in Crim. (Penguin Classics) New York: Penguin, 2011.
- Smith, Marie. Ms Murder: the best mysteries featuring women detectives, by the top women writers. Secaucus, NJ: Citadel Press, 1989.
- Slung, Michele. (ed) Crime on her Mind: fifteen stories of female sleuths from the Victorian era to the forties. Pantheon, 1983. with a descriptive catalogue of over 100 female sleuths 1861-1974 ISBN 0-394-71482-2
- Sussex, Lucy. Women Writers and Detectives in Nineteenth-Century Crime Fiction: The Mothers of the Mystery Genre. Palgrave, MacMillan, 2010.
- Swanson, Jean R and Darryl Dean James.By a Woman’s Hand: a guide to mystery fiction by women Berkly Books, 1994.
- Walton, Priscilla L. and Manina Jones.Detective Agency: Women Rewriting the Hardboiled Tradition. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1999. ISBN 0-520-21507-9., 1860-1880
- Watson, Kate. Women Writing Crime Fiction, 1860-1880: Fourteen American, British and Australian Authors 2012
A
[edit]thumb|Cover of first edition in the series
- Abigail Adams, future first lady, detects in Massachusetts in the 1770s, in a book series commencing 2009 by Barbara Hambly writing as Barbara Hamilton
- Hilda Adams is a nurse who takes jobs to assist detectives with their investigations in books by Mary Roberts Rinehart commencing with ‘’The Buckled Bag’’ (1914). In 1932, Joan Blondell starred as Hilda in a Warner Brothers film, Miss Pinkerton, based on one of the books, and Rinehart subsequently adopted this nickname for her character.[1]
- Samantha Adams is an investigative reporter in Atlanta in a book series debuting 1988 by Sarah Shankman, first two books published under pseudonym 'Alice Storey'.
- Laura Ackroyd is an investigative reporter who solves crimes with her boyfriend DCI Michael Thackery in novels set in West Yorkshire by Patricia Hall (Maureen O’Connor) commenced 1994.
- Irene Adler is an opera singer in the short story "A Scandal in Bohemia" by Arthur Conan Doyle (debuted 1891); later appeared as a Pinkerton detective in a series of books by American crime novelist Carole Nelson Douglas (debuted 1990). Played by Charlotte Rampling in the 1976 film Sherlock Holmes in New York; by Anne Baxter in the 1984 television movie The Masks of Death; by Gayle Hunnicutt in the 1984 pilot episode of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes; by Morgan Fairchild in the 1992 television movie Sherlock Holmes and the Leading Lady; by Rachel McAdams in Sherlock Holmes; and by Lara Pulver in an episode of the TV series Sherlock.
- Sister Agatha is an investigative reporter and journalism professor turned nun, debuted in 2002 in a series set in New Mexico by Aimee & David Thurlo.
- Adelia Aguilar is a medieval forensic specialist in a series of books by British crime writer "Ariana Franklin" (Diana Norman) (debuted 2006).
- Louisa May Alcott, not yet a famous writer, takes to sleuthing in a book series by Anna Maclean, commenced 2004.
- Sally Alder is a history professor at the University of Wyoming at Laramie and former singer under the name Mustang Sally, debuted 2000 in a series by Virginia Swift.
- Claire Aldington is an Episcopal priest and psychologist in New York in five books 1984-1990 by Isabelle Holland (1920-2002).
- Finny Aletter is a stockbroker in two books 1987 and 1990 by Yvonne Montgomery.
- Nikki Alexander is a forensic anthropologist/forensic pathologist in a BBC thriller series Silent Witness by Nigel McCrery (debuted 1996); played by Emilia Fox from 2004-present.
- Jaime Allen is a patrolwoman whose shady past and skill at deception lead to her being recruited to an undercover police team in the 2009-2010 TNT television series Dark Blue.
- Becky Altringer is a private investigator who exposed the Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. in This Film Is Not Yet Rated.
- Angela Amalfi is a food critic in a culinary mystery series by Joanne Pence, debuted 1993.
- Cherry Ames is a nurse and investigator in 27 mystery novels published 1943-1968, some were written by Helen Wells and some by Julie Campbell Tatham. The nurse theme was inspired by the war.
- Anaya is an Asari detective in Nos Astra on the planet Illium in the video game Mass Effect 2.
- Leanne "Pepper" Anderson is a police detective played by Angie Dickinson on the 1974-1978 NBC series Police Woman.
- Angela Anderson is an FBI agent played by Abigail Spencer on the 2006 Lifetime TV series Angela's Eyes.
- Mici Anhalt is an investigator for the NYC Crime Victims Compensation Board in three novels by Lillian O’Donnell commencing with "Aftershock" (1977)
- Callie Anson is an Anglican cleric who debuted in a 2002 short story and since then has appeared in novels starting 2005, by US born and UK based Kate Charles.
- Belle Appleman is a young Jewish widow in two books set in Boston in the 1930s by Dorothy and Sydney Rosen, first was "Death and Blintzes", published 1985.
- Susanna, Lady Appleton is a 16th century gentlewoman and herbalist in a book series debuted 1997 by Kathy Lynn Emerson.
- Katherine Ardleigh is a sleuth in Victorian England in a series by 'Robin Paige' commenced 1994.
- Sarah Armstrong is a criminal profiler and Texas Ranger in a book series began 2008 by Kathryn Casey, previously a successful true-crime writer.
- Jessie Arnold is a champion Alaskan dog sled racer who solves crimes with boyfriend Alex Jensen, a state trooper, in a series by Sue Henry debuted 1991.
- Kristin Ashe is a lesbian private investigator in a series begun 1992 by Jennifer L. Jordan.
- Carol Ashton is a Detective Inspector in a series of books by Australian crime novelist Claire McNab (debuted 1988).
- Lady Emily Ashton (later Lady Emily Hargreaves) is a young woman sleuth in a series by Tasha Alexander set in the 1890s.
- Kate "Ash" Ashurst is a Detective Inspector played by Caroline Catz on the 2004-2005 ITV series Murder in Suburbia.
- Beth Austen Is a professor of English in three 19th century literature themed novels 1989-1998 by Edith Skom.
- Jane Austen the novelist, is a sleuth in a series by Stephanie Barron, commenced 1996.
- 'Cat' Fortunati Austen is a Sicilian-American entertainment reporter, a cop's widow and "baby sister" to six brothers, five cops and one priest in books by Jane Rubino. The series, set at the Jersey shore, debuted in 1995.
- Jaine Austen is a freelance writer (of anything – including correspondence) and amateur sleuth in a book series by Laura Levine, debuted 2002.
thumb|Cover of first edition in the series
thumb|Cover of first edition in the series
- ^ French, Jack. "Lady Crimefighters". Thrilling Detective website. Retrieved 12 July 2012.
- ^ Lenthall, Bruce (2007). Radio's America: The Great Depression and the Rise of Modern Mass Culture. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.