and Rediscover...
G.K. Chesterton
 

 
 

 
 
 
 
 

The American Chesterton Society 4117 Pebblebrook Circle, Minn, MN 55437

 

The Murderer

“I like detective stories; I read them, I write them; but I do not believe them. The bones and structure of a good detective story are so old and well known that it may seem banal to state them even in outline. A policeman, stupid but sweet-tempered, and always weakly erring on the side of mercy, walks along the street; and in the course of his ordinary business finds a man in Bulgarian uniform killed with an Australian boomerang in a Brompton milk-shop. Having set free all the most suspicious persons in the story, he then appeals to the bull-dog professional detective, who appeals to the hawk-like amateur detective. The latter finds near the corpse a boot-lace, a button-boot, a French newspaper, and a return ticket from the Hebrides; and so, relentlessly, link by link, brings the crime home to the Archbishop of Canterbury.”
            G.K.Chesterton
            Illustrated London News May 6, 1911

A Defence of Detective Stories

Errors about Detective Stories

How to Write a Detective Story

The Blue Cross

The Ideal Detective Story