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At the Southwestern Writers Collection
September 2, 2003 through February 29, 2004
Join us for a panel discussion on
January 29 with Susan Wittig Albert, Joe Lansdale, Rick Riordan,
and Mary Willis Walker.
Exhibit material also includes a comprehensive
bibliography of Texas-based crime fiction.
More exhibits at the Southwestern
Writers Collection
Scene of the Crime: Mystery/Detective Fiction
from Texas
"Whodunit" in the Lone Star State? Find out as the
Southwestern Writers Collection at Texas State investigates "Scene
of the Crime: Mystery/Detective Fiction from Texas."
Dozens of authors are spotlighted in this sleuth-centered
exhibit, and their tales run the gamut from Jim Thompson's vintage
TEXAS BY THE TAIL to recent murder and mayhem by Kinky Friedman,
Rick Riordan, Mary Willis Walker, and former Texas State professor
Susan Wittig Albert.
Also on view are manuscripts and memorabilia from mystery/detective
writers whose archives are held in the Southwestern Writers Collection,
among them Neal Barrett, Jr., James Crumley, Joe Lansdale, and
Jesse Sublett.
On the 7th Floor of the Alkek Library, the Southwestern Writers
Collection is usually open daily during semester sessions (closed
holidays)--visitors are asked to call ahead for hours: 512-245-2313.
Admission to this exhibit is FREE.
"Scene of the Crime: Mystery/Detective Fiction from Texas,"
curated, designed and mounted by Steve Davis, Assistant Curator
of the Southwestern Writers Collection, will be on display through
February 29, 2004.
"Murder, They Wrote" describes much of the work
being done by Texas novelists today. The state provides a never-ending
selection of distinctive settings for suspense fiction, and writers
are quick to take advantage, placing their crime-solvers in Houston,
Dallas, Austin, San Antonio, Galveston, El Paso, the Lower Rio
Grande Valley, and dozens of rural hamlets.
"Scene of the Crime" shows how Texas-based mysteries
often make good use of a local setting, bringing a realistic
"sense of place" alive in this genre fiction. The Southwestern
Writers Collection exhibit "tours" the five regions
of Texas, pinning authors and their protagonists in South Texas
(San Antonio and the Lower Rio Grande Valley), Central Texas
(Austin and the hill country), North Texas (Dallas-Fort Worth),
East Texas (Houston and the Piney Woods), and West Texas (El
Paso, Big Bend, and the Panhandle).
The variety of mystery/detective fiction in Texas is just
as astonishing. No longer is crime fiction the province of jaded
private eyes. Sleuths are just as likely to be funeral directors,
feminist attorneys, Christian businessmen, chefs, ex-football
players, English professors, graduate students, journalists,
musicians, boatmen, librarians, housewives, bankers, birdwatchers,
and romance novelists. There's even a stand-up comic and an herb-store
owner among the sleuthhounds.
The "Scene of the Crime" line-up of covers testifies
to the range of plots in which these characters find themselves
embroiled, with titles like BAD CHILI, DEATH BY DRESSAGE, ROCK
CRITIC MURDERS, AN UNTHYMELY DEATH AND OTHER GARDEN MYSTERIES,
THE PRAIRIE CHICKEN KILL, MUCHO MOJO, GONE FISHIN,' and BY HOOK
OR BY BOOK.
Of course the Lone Star State also features prominently, in
the likes of AUSTIN CITY BLUE, HOUSTON IN THE REARVIEW MIRROR,
DEATH ON THE RIVERWALK, DELIVER ME FROM DALLAS, THE SHERIFF AND
THE PANHANDLE MURDERS, and FOUND DEAD IN TEXAS.
An annotated bibliography compiled
specifically to accompany the exhibit points mystery fans to
hundreds of must-read yarns set in Texas. The list, like the
exhibit, is structured by region, and goes on to suggest interesting
readings about the genre itself in a "further study"
section. Prepared by Assistant Curator Steve Davis and Dr. Rollo
K. Newsom, Professor Emeritus at Texas State..
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The Southwestern Writers Collection, in the Albert B. Alkek
Library at Texas State University-San Marcos, was founded in
1986 and has since become a distinguished and steadily growing
archive charged with preserving, exhibiting, and providing access
to the papers and artifacts of principal writers, filmmakers,
songwriters and musicians of the Southwest. Its resources attest
to the tremendous diversity of creative expression among southwestern
artists and contribute to a rich research environment within
which students and others may discover how the unique conditions
and character of the region have shaped its people and their
cultural arts. Curator, Connie Todd. Assistant Curator, Steve
Davis. http://www.swwc.txstate.edu
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