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236 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1944
One of the draws that puzzle mysteries in particular have is the importance of daily minutiae. Clues are in the tiny details, and if you're not to telegraph which ones are important, you have to include lots of tiny details, so there's a lot more of the texture of specific times and places in mystery than any other genre - including "realism." Screw universality; mystery is all about the particular! You really can't do better, trying to catch an atmosphere, than to read mysteries set in the time and place of your setting. You can learn all about bomb shelters and air raids in the history books, but mystery writers tell you about people carrying their own saccharin tablets when they go to tea, and the ghastly choices of yarn colors available when you have ration cards to get it, and how many times people reused their tea leaves. Miss Silver gives her choice of yarn every bit as much careful attention as she does witness testimony, because outfitting Ethel Burkett's growing family in wartime is every bit as important as catching spies and murderers.