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The Raven and the Nightingale
 
 

The Raven and the Nightingale (Mass Market Paperback)

de Joanne Dobson (Author)
3.8étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (8 évaluations de client)
Prix éditeur: CDN$ 10.99
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Descriptions du produit

From Publishers Weekly

In Dobson's new Karen Pelletier mystery (after Quieter Than Sleep and The Northbury Papers), the young English professor again applies the rules of scholarly research to help hunky Lieutenant Piotrowski solve a murder. This time the deceased is ambitious Edgar Allan Poe scholar Elliot Corbin, who has hogged the limelight and perks available in the English department at Enfield, the elite New England college where Karen teaches. Corbin and a crew of others are on hand when Pelletier receives as a gift a huge box of papers and journals belonging to Emmeline Foster, a (fictitious) 19th-century poet who is believed to have committed suicide out of doomed love for the notoriously destructiveAand self-destructiveAPoe. When one of Emmeline's journals vanishes from Karen's office, the professor suspects that the disappearance has something to do with professional competition. Karen is clear-eyed about her colleagues and about how tough it is to build a career and a reputation in academia; after all, she landed in Enfield after an abusive, poverty-scarred childhood and early marriage. When Corbin turns up dead, however, she learns that the histories and motives of Enfield's English department are darker than she dreamed. Indeed, life mirrors art as Karen links the crime to a mystery in Poe's own life. Unfortunately, it takes more than a good idea to write a riveting murder yarn. Although Dobson gets the details of academia just right, the mystery clues she plants are so obvious that the story feels as hokey as a paint-by-numbers portraitAa failing that will prompt more than one reader to sigh, "Nevermore." (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.


From Booklist

Karen Pelletier, the intrepid English professor and literary sleuth who has appeared in two previous Dobson novels, is back with another tale of murder on the seemingly placid campus of Enfield College. In this outing, Pelletier's colleague, the obnoxious Edgar Allan Poe scholar Elliot Corbin, is killed in his study shortly after the discovery of papers indicating that Poe may have plagiarized "The Raven." As usual, Dobson delightfully skewers the pretensions and politics of academic life while respecting the importance of education and a life of the mind. She weaves themes and images from Poe's oeuvre throughout the story, and she creates two equally engrossing plots, one focusing on the present-day murder, the other exploring an unresolved mystery from the 1840s: Did Emmeline Foster kill herself because Poe wouldn't recognize her poem as his source material? Or was she murdered, by Poe or perhaps by her rapacious stepfather? The supporting cast will be familiar to anyone who attended college, but the novel will appeal to everyone who enjoys a good story. George Needham --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

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8 évaluations
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3.8étoiles sur 5 (8 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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4.0étoiles sur 5 You could have fooled me, Mai 28 2004
Par Kevin Killian (San Francisco, CA United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Congratulations to Joanne Dobson for inventing a 19th century poet so convincingly, she almost had me convinced that Emmeline Foster actually lived. The details of her poor adumbrated life ring true, and her involvement with the desperate, paranoid Edgar Allan Poe had the authentic tragic ring to it. Finding out that she is only a fictional character made me feel diminished a bit, as though history had gotten suddenly a bit smaller.

Karen Pelletier's struggles in academia parallel Foster's journey towards artistic creation, and Karen's relationship with her daughter and her family are well observed and wry. I didn't think the Lieutenant whose lips strike her more and more favorably over the course of the novel was all that exciting. But, at least he was there in the clinch. I'll look forward to Dobson's continuing treatment of this relationship, even if not very eagerly. Good work all around, and plenty of fun and suspense.

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4.0étoiles sur 5 A Mystery That Raises Fundamental Literary Questions, Janv. 12 2004
The Raven and the Nightingale is the third volume in Professor Joanne Dobson's series about Professor Karen Pelletier. In Quieter than Sleep, readers first met the professor. Doctor Pelletier found herself pregnant as a teen in high school, and dropped out of her plans to go to Smith to marry her truck driver lover. After a difficult pregnancy and marital abuse, she put her life together to raise her daughter as a single Mom while pursuing her academic career. Finally finding love with a cop in New York, she abandoned him to follow her desire for a career to settle at tony, elite Enfield College in New England. Arriving at Enfield, she became the new kid on the English department block sharing responsibilities for 19th century American literature with an aggressive, pompous womanizer who wanted to discuss more than literature with her. She found herself attracted to all the wrong men, and attracted attention from men she would rather avoid. Ah well, back to those term papers! In The Northbury Papers, the professor has an unusual stroke of luck that makes her career prospects much brighter.

Those who liked Quieter than Sleep or The Northbury Papers will probably enjoy The Raven and the Nightingale as well.

I recommend reading Quieter than Sleep before this book because the characters won't make as much sense without having read that book first. Otherwise, you may find this book to be an average literary mystery.

Due to publicity about her forthcoming center for the study of women writers, the professor receives a huge box of papers authored by Emmeline Foster sent by an alum who had recently found them. Ms. Foster is connected to Edgar Allan Poe through a personal relationship and her suicide shortly following the publication of "The Raven." The mystery quickly develops as the manuscripts begin disappearing from the professor's office. Why?
Before long, the mystery is compounded by the death of a prominent Poe scholar, known for his book, The Transvestite Poe. Once again, stoic police lieutenant Charlie Piotrowski is asked to investigate, and the professor is up to her neck in mysteries to solve. Ultimately, she will have to unravel the relationship between Ms. Foster and Mr. Poe in order to understand the present murder.

Before considering reading this book, please be aware that Professor Dobson does not use the same approach to literary mysteries that Ms. Jane Langton does. Facts and references to Poe are few and far between. You are assumed to know about Poe rather than to become more familiar with him. In addition, the fascinating Emmeline Foster is a fictional character. Had she been a real character about whom these speculations could have been developed, the book would have been a much stronger one in terms of appeal to me.

The heart of the book (and why I rated it above three stars) concerns the current academic debate about originality in authorship. While everyone knows that literal copying without credit is plagiarism, when must literary "borrowing" of source concepts be acknowledged? And how? Professor Dobson does a nice job of providing examples of what should and should not be done.

Along the way, she provides a larger than previous dose of humor in her use of stilted academic language.

As I finished the book, I found myself more aware than ever to give credit to those who have improved my thinking.

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Quoth the Reader, "Nevermore", Nov. 18 2003
Par Patrick Burnett "penngos" (San Francisco, CA USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Joanne Dobson's mystery of academia is a passable book. It certainly wasn't unpleasant to read, but I don't feel I gained much from reading it. Most of the facts in the life of Edgar Allan Poe were known to me prior to reading this novel, but since the Poe connection was what drew me to the book, I can't help but feeling a little cheated. That's my issue, though, not yours.

Main character Karen Pelletier is innocuous enough, and the book is at it's most interesting in the classroom scenes, where Dobson is able to inject some life into Pelletier's dialog. Other than that, she's just a ham-fisted academic trying to act sly when asked to question her fellow professors after the murder of a colleague.

I didn't get a read on any of the other characters at Enfield College. Most were academic archetypes rather than true characters. I was neither intrigued nor interested in the petty squabbling and ca't get behind any murder motivated by achieving tenure.

The love interest/cop is an okay guy, smart in a Matlock kind of way, which is to say that he seems dumb on first meeting. Unfortunately, it will be my only reading because this book just didn't grab me and make me want to read the rest of the series.

On a semi-related note, it's kind of sad that some people have built certain literary figures up to the point that they are unable to see his flaws. Poe was a deeply flawed man, very whiny and of dubious character. He really did many of the things of which Dobson accuses him. That makes him no less a genius, no less fascinating.

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Commentaires client les plus récents

3.0étoiles sur 5 A Good Read, Not For Poe Fans
Dobson has written a great book here. Her style is very readable and very likeable. Troublesome aspects for me seem to be exactly what others are praising; it seems that the only... Read more
Publié le Mars 19 2003

4.0étoiles sur 5 Good Academic Mystery
Karen is an assistant professor of English in a small but prestigious New England college. Her colleague is a pompous blowhard with more of a reputation than he deserves, an... Read more
Publié le Sep 25 2001 par Moe811

4.0étoiles sur 5 Great fun
This was the first book in Joanne Dobson's series that I had read and it did not disappoint at all. I did not feel as though I were thrown in the middle of a series nor did I... Read more
Publié le Nov. 15 2000 par Karen Bierman Hirsh

4.0étoiles sur 5 raven and the nightingale review
Dobson's heroine is an English professor at a small liberal arts college, and this mystery does a very good job of conveying teaching life--the classroom discussions, the way... Read more
Publié le Oct. 18 2000 par sam

4.0étoiles sur 5 Looking forward to next book, too
I am really enjoying this series that began with Quieter than Sleep. Much much better female protagonist than the bestselling Janet Evanovich One for the Money series!
Publié le Janv. 2 2000

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