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Michael Kurland

Autor(a) de Ten Little Wizards

53+ Works 2,089 Membros 32 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Michael Kurland is the author of nearly forty books, including both nonfiction and fiction, though he is perhaps best known for his novels and stories featuring Professor James Moriarty. Born and raised in New York City, he lives in Petaluma, California
Image credit: Photo by Burser

Séries

Obras de Michael Kurland

Ten Little Wizards (1988) 206 cópias
A Study in Sorcery (1989) 165 cópias
Ten Years to Doomsday (1964) 124 cópias
The unicorn girl (1969) 112 cópias
Sherlock Holmes: The Hidden Years (2004) — Editor — 105 cópias
The Infernal Device (1979) 105 cópias
The Great Game (1600) 91 cópias
Death by Gaslight (1600) 72 cópias
The Empress of India (2006) 72 cópias
Who Thinks Evil (2014) 60 cópias
The Whenabouts of Burr (1975) 56 cópias
Sherlock Holmes: The American Years (2010) — Editor — 56 cópias
Transmission Error (1970) 52 cópias
Pluribus (1867) 51 cópias
Tomorrow Knight (1976) 50 cópias
Psi Hunt (1980) 43 cópias
Too Soon Dead (1996) 33 cópias
The Princes of Earth (1978) 30 cópias
The Spymaster's Handbook (1988) 26 cópias
The Last President (1980) 19 cópias
Star Griffin (1987) 17 cópias
Button Bright (1990) 16 cópias
The Bells of Hell (2019) 12 cópias
The Trials of Quintilian (2011) 10 cópias
A Plague of Spies (1969) 8 cópias
Mission: Third Force (1967) 5 cópias
Mission: Tank War (1968) 4 cópias
Small World: A Small Story (2019) 3 cópias
Whatever the Cost (2021) 2 cópias
Morituri (1977) 2 cópias
The Stolen Saint Simon 1 exemplar(es)
Perchance: A Tale of the Paraverse (2012) 1 exemplar(es)
Morgendämmerung [Kurzgeschichte] (1966) 1 exemplar(es)
Four Hundred Slaves 1 exemplar(es)
He Couldn't Fly 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

100 Malicious Little Mysteries (1981) — Contribuinte — 407 cópias
First Cycle (1982) — Editor — 171 cópias
Sisters of the Night (1995) — Contribuinte — 170 cópias
The Mammoth Book of Sorcerers' Tales (2004) — Contribuinte — 164 cópias
Great Tales of Science Fiction (1985) — Contribuinte — 162 cópias
The Mammoth Book of More Historical Whodunnits (2001) — Contribuinte — 148 cópias
The Mammoth Book of Roman Whodunnits (2003) — Contribuinte — 127 cópias
The Mammoth Book of Roaring Twenties Whodunnits (2004) — Contribuinte — 117 cópias
Unidentified Funny Objects (1880) — Contribuinte — 90 cópias
Alpha 8 (1977) — Contribuinte — 50 cópias
The Arbor House Treasury of Science Fiction Masterpieces (1983) — Contribuinte — 43 cópias
Two views of wonder (1979) — Contribuinte — 29 cópias
Shared tomorrows: Science fiction in collaboration (1979) — Contribuinte — 19 cópias
Galaxy Science Fiction 1973 November, Vol. 34, No. 2 (1973) — Contribuinte, algumas edições10 cópias
Galaxy Science Fiction 1965 August, Vol. 23, No. 6 (1965) — Contribuinte — 8 cópias

Etiquetado

19th century (16) alternate history (42) anthology (247) collection (18) crime (50) crime fiction (15) detective (33) ebook (45) England (20) fantasy (192) fiction (315) forensics (17) hardcover (17) historical (20) historical fiction (47) historical mystery (31) horror (34) humor (18) Lord Darcy (49) magic (18) murder (14) mystery (378) non-fiction (25) novel (18) own (30) paperback (21) pastiche (24) PB (24) read (39) reference (19) science fiction (323) sf (131) sff (28) Sherlock Holmes (120) short stories (206) to-read (111) unread (35) vampires (24) Victorian (19) writing (20)

Conhecimento Comum

Nome de batismo
Kurland, Michael Joseph
Outros nomes
Kurland, Michael J.
Data de nascimento
1938-03-01
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
USA
Local de nascimento
New York, New York, USA
Locais de residência
Petaluma, California, USA
San Luis Obispo, California, USA
Ocupação
author
Relacionamentos
Anderson, Chester (friend)

Membros

Resenhas

While sitting in a cafe, Mike meets the girl of his dreams who is searching for her unicorn. This leads to an inter dimensional search that involves UFOs, Victorians, a circus, fortune tellers and assorted other side characters before Mike and his companions can resolve the merging timelines.
The is a sequel to the book The Butterfly Kid by Chester Anderson but is a stand-alone story.

re-read 9/2/2023
½
 
Marcado
catseyegreen | 1 outra resenha | Sep 2, 2023 |
Interesting, but not particularly outstanding short stories concerning a Roman lawyer who actually lived. These fictional cases are told by his faithful [also fictional] scribe: proving the innocence of a young blind man of murder, what Caesar's ghost turns out to be, and proving the innocence of a slave of a murder. There are really no personalities to the characters but there are small touches of humor in the scribe's asides.
 
Marcado
janerawoof | 1 outra resenha | Sep 12, 2022 |
Trying hard to be fair here. I don't want to ding this book just because I don't happen to care for the idea of Moriarty as a misunderstood Robin Hood ... though I will willingly take on anyone who says this version of Moriarty is somehow more interesting, because (I would argue) the world is already full of Robin Hoods but has only ever had – will only ever have - one Master Consulting Criminal. Moreover, there are many things about this book to like, including the authentic period detail and competent writing.

But I think there needs to be a rule among authors who take up the character of Sherlock Holmes that, do with him what you may, you may not actually make him stupid. And this Sherlock Holmes is resoundingly stupid, failing over and over again to make the obvious series of deductions that would reveal the link connecting the locked-room murders of a series of English gentlemen. Into the gap steps Moriarty, but not really, because when Moriarty investigates the crime we get no cool forensic investigation or dazzling conclusions - merely a pedestrian sort of inquiry heavy on pre-existing knowledge and lucky guesses, and what fun is that?

Some other beefs I had with this tale:

* I get that this is a genre novel with certain accepted tropes (ex: plot trumps personalities), but if your "hook" is that you're offering more interesting and complex main characters, then shouldn't your main characters be more interesting and complex?. Kurland *tells* us all the reasons why his Moriarty & Barnett should fascinate, but then depicts them acting in ways so inauthentic, glib, and passionless that it becomes increasingly difficult to believe in (or care about) either of them. If you want your characters to seem three-dimensional, then you need to deliver more than one dimension.

* This thing is so much longer than it needs to be! I love period detail as much as anyone, and time spent on character development is never wasted, but that's not what slogs this down - it's too much unnecessary dialog, too many long scenes that could have just as effectively been communicated in a sentence or two, and way too many narrative diversions depicting Moriarty indulging in scientific pursuits or tricking Sherlock Holmes into looking like a fool. Someone should have edited this a lot more critically.

* Finally, I'm grateful that Kurland seems to possess an intimate familiarity with the Doyle canon, but it's one thing to use the info to add depth to the story, another to shower readers with so many references taken out of context that the novelty wears off long before the novel ends.

Don't get me wrong: in a world full of Holmes pastiches, this probably falls in the upper quartile of offerings. Kurland's descriptions of 1800s London are evocative, his bit characters have an O. Henry-esque charm, and there's enough plot to keep you reading on. But am not sure I’m willing to forgive the absence of so many qualities – an intriguing crime, puzzling clues, clever deductions, a satisfyingly dramatic reveal – that make me seek out Holmes pastiches in the first place. Moreover, I simply don't see the sense in adding layers of moral ambiguity to Moriarty, for all intents and purposes creating a character that merely duplicates Sherlock Holmes rather than adding new layers of complexity or depth to either character.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Dorritt | Jul 6, 2022 |
Three short stories narrated by the somewhat annoying C. Plautus Maximilianus Aureus about murders solved by the historical Marcus Fabius Quintilianus. Sort of Sherlock Holmes light in a toga. Somewhat amusing and engaging.
½
 
Marcado
quondame | 1 outra resenha | Aug 4, 2021 |

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Gary Lovisi Contributor
Linda Robertson Contributor
Michael Mallory Contributor
Richard Lupoff Contributor
Rhys Bowen Contributor
Carole Bugge Contributor
Peter Tremayne Contributor
Bill Pronzini Contributor
Michael Collins Contributor
Peter Beagle Contributor
Carolyn Wheat Contributor
Norman Schreiber Contributor
Gerard Dole Contributor
CD Ewing Contributor
Mel Gilden Contributor
Cara Black Contributor
Richard A. Lupoff Contributor
Steve Hockensmith Contributor
Darryl Brock Contributor
Marta Randall Contributor
James Warhola Cover artist
S. George Lee Narrator
John Mawson Narrator
Ed Emshwiller Cover artist
Boris Vallejo Cover artist
Gary Friedman Cover artist
Susan Fox Cover photo

Estatísticas

Obras
53
Also by
18
Membros
2,089
Popularidade
#12,313
Avaliação
½ 3.5
Resenhas
32
ISBNs
123
Idiomas
3
Favorito
1

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