Citations:howcatchem
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English citations of howcatchem
Noun: "a mystery novel or drama which begins by showing or describing the commission of the crime..."
[edit]1979 1987 1993 | 2002 | ||||||
ME « | 15th c. | 16th c. | 17th c. | 18th c. | 19th c. | 20th c. | 21st c. |
- 1979 — LeRoy Lad Panek, Watteu's Shepherds: The Detective Novel in Britain, 1914-1940, Bowling Green University Popular Press (1979), →ISBN, page 204:
- For instance Philip MacDonald notes that his novel dealing with mass murder, Murder Gone Mad (1931), is not a "whoduneit" but a "howcatchem."
- 1987 — The Baker Street Dozen (eds. Pj Doyle & E. W. McDiarmid), Congdon & Weed (1987), →ISBN, page 143:
- "The Empty House" is primarily a howcatchem; or rather, it is a howcatchem that takes off from and returns to a whodunit.
- 1993 — Mystery Writer's Market Place and Sourcebook (ed. Donna Collingwood), F & W Publications Inc. (1993), →ISBN, page 171:
- Although he admits to preferring the hard-boiled mystery himself, he says Walker's mainstay today is the same as it was in 1959 — "the vast majority of the mysteries we publish are pure puzzles, procedural P.I.s or amateur sleuths. Every once in a while I'll look for suspense — not a whodunit but a howcatchem."
- 1993 — "Just One More Thing: 'Columbo' Remains Falk's Forte", Daily News of Los Angeles, 29 October 1993:
- This "howcatchem" (as opposed to whodunnit) edition of "Columbo" guest stars Faye Dunaway, whose new CBS comedy "It Had to Be You" was recently shelved after just four weeks.
- 2002 — Marc Robinson, Brought to You in Living Color: 75 Years of Great Moments in Television & Radio from NBC, John Wiley & Sons (2002), →ISBN:
- Columbo was not so much a whodunit as it was a "howcatchem" — the fun was in watching Columbo corner the murderer, and we never tired of the game.