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Jon L. Breen

Author of The Fine Art of Murder

42+ Works 380 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Jon. Breen, Jon L. Breen, L. Jon Breen

Series

Works by Jon L. Breen

The Fine Art of Murder (1993) — Editor — 143 copies
The Gathering Place (1984) 31 copies
Touch of the Past (1988) 25 copies, 1 review
Murder in Los Angeles (1987) 15 copies
Mystery : The Best of 2001 (2002) — Editor — 13 copies
Novel Verdicts (1984) 11 copies, 1 review
Triple Crown (1985) 10 copies
A Shot Rang Out (2008) 8 copies
Murder California Style (1987) 8 copies
Mystery: The Best of 2002 (2003) — Editor — 7 copies, 1 review
Eye of God: A Mystery (2006) 6 copies, 1 review
Probable Claus (2009) 6 copies

Associated Works

Murder in Baker Street: New Tales of Sherlock Holmes (2001) — Contributor — 321 copies, 7 reviews
Murder Most Irish (1996) — Contributor — 244 copies, 1 review
100 Dastardly Little Detective Stories (1993) — Contributor — 230 copies, 1 review
Sherlock Holmes in America (2009) — Contributor — 221 copies, 3 reviews
Holmes for the Holidays (1996) — Contributor — 215 copies, 6 reviews
Manhattan Mayhem: New Crime Stories from Mystery Writers of America (2015) — Contributor — 210 copies, 30 reviews
Cat Crimes (1991) — Contributor — 174 copies, 2 reviews
More Holmes for the Holidays (1999) — Contributor — 171 copies, 1 review
The Blue Religion: New Stories about Cops, Criminals and the Chase (2008) — Contributor — 170 copies, 7 reviews
Crafty Cat Crimes: 100 Tiny Cat Tale Mysteries (2000) — Contributor — 165 copies, 2 reviews
Once Upon a Crime (1998) — Contributor — 137 copies, 3 reviews
The Mammoth Book of Roaring Twenties Whodunnits (2004) — Contributor — 130 copies, 3 reviews
Murder, My Dear Watson (2002) — Contributor — 124 copies, 3 reviews
Malice Domestic 06: An Anthology of Original Mystery Stories (1997) — Contributor — 99 copies, 3 reviews
100 Menacing Little Murder Stories (1998) — Contributor — 89 copies
Great Tales of Mystery & Suspense (1981) — Contributor — 67 copies, 1 review
A Modern Treasury of Great Detective and Murder Mysteries (1994) — Introduction — 63 copies, 1 review
Cat Crimes for the Holidays (1997) — Contributor — 63 copies, 1 review
Laughing Space: An Anthology of Science Fiction Humour (1982) — Contributor — 62 copies, 3 reviews
A Century of British Mystery and Suspense (2000) — Foreword — 61 copies
Diagnosis Dead (1999) — Contributor — 59 copies
The Arbor House Treasury of Mystery and Suspense (1981) — Contributor — 57 copies
Ghosts in Baker Street (2006) — Contributor — 53 copies
Time Twisters (2007) — Contributor — 51 copies, 1 review
Murder on the Aisle (1987) — Contributor — 47 copies
Danger in DC: Cat Crimes in the Nation's Capital (1993) — Contributor — 43 copies
Murder Most Celtic: Tall Tales of Irish Mayhem (2001) — Contributor — 42 copies, 2 reviews
Death by Horoscope (2001) — Contributor — 40 copies, 2 reviews
Cat Crimes Through Time (1999) — Contributor — 39 copies, 1 review
Murder Most Feline: Cunning Tales of Cats and Crime (2001) — Contributor — 34 copies
Feline and Famous (1994) — Contributor — 33 copies, 1 review
Santa Clues (1993) — Contributor — 29 copies
A Treasury of Cat Mysteries (1998) — Contributor — 28 copies
Murder for Mother (1994) — Contributor — 23 copies
Ellery Queen's Mystery Parade (1969) — Contributor — 21 copies
The Interrogator and Other Criminally Good Fiction (2012) — Introduction — 21 copies, 2 reviews
Isaac Asimov's Aliens & Outworlders (1983) — Contributor — 21 copies
The Misadventures of Ellery Queen (2018) — Contributor — 17 copies
On Dangerous Ground: Stories of Western Noir (2011) — Author — 17 copies, 2 reviews
Ellery Queen's Murder Menu (1969) — Contributor — 16 copies
Specter! A Chrestomathy of Spookery (1982) — Contributor — 16 copies
Show Business Is Murder (1983) — Contributor — 14 copies
The Year's 25 Finest Crime and Mystery Stories: Fourth Annual Edition (1995) — Introduction — 14 copies, 1 review
Murder on Trial (1994) — Contributor — 14 copies
Winter's Crimes 17 (1985) — Contributor — 8 copies
The Year's 25 Finest Crime and Mystery Stories: Sixth Annual Edition (1997) — Introduction — 5 copies, 1 review
Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine - 2004/03-04 (2004) — Contributor — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Breen, Jon L.
Birthdate
1943-11-08
Gender
male
Education
University of Southern California
Occupations
librarian
academic
Organizations
Rio Hondo College
Short biography
Born in Montgomery, Alabama, I have lived all my life since the start of school in California. My parents were both educators, my father a librarian and my mother an English teacher at Santa Monica College. My own academic career followed them both, acting first as a librarian and in the last five years before retirement as Professor of English at a Southern California community college, in my case Rio Hondo College in Whittier. After graduating from USC with a library degree and putting in less than a year in the California State University, Long Beach, library, I was drafted. I was first published in 1966 with a quiz in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, followed the following year by my first short story, a parody of Ed McBain's 87th Precinct. Around a hundred short stories have followed, plus seven novels (with an eighth on the horizon), three story collections, several edited anthologies, three reference books on mystery fiction (two of them Edgar winners), and more book reviews and articles than I can count. In 1977, I became the proprietor of EQMM'S "Jury Box" column, which I have contributed ever since, save for a few years in the mid-'80s. I also contribute the "What About Murder?" column to Mystery Scene and have been an occasional strictly non-political contributor to The Weekly Standard. Retired since the dawn of 2000, I live happily with Rita in Fountain Valley, California.
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Montgomery, Alabama, USA
Places of residence
Fountain Valley, California, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

10 reviews
Any collection of stories is bound to be a mixture of hits and misses for the reader. Even given that caveat, I am hard pressed to understand the logic behind this collection of the best "mysteries" of 2002. While the batting average of about 50% isn't bad I suppose for a rather finicky reader, some of the clunkers were truly clunkers--could not even drive them off the lot let alone around town. TWILIGHT'S LAST GLEAMING by Michael Collins puts unbelievable people in unbelievable situations, show more BLESS ME FATHER FOR I HAVE SINNED by Ed Gorman was predictable from word one and irritating, THE PAINTED LADY by Deloris Stanton Forbes took a ridiculous square peg plot and forced it into a round whole genre and MOM LIGHTS A CANDLE by James Yaffe is a mystery but that cutesy kind where a detective's mother solves his crimes for him--blech. A few others I will excuse as mediocre and spare myself remembering them enough to write about. TO LIVE AND DIE IN MIDLAND TEXAS by Clark Howard (which starts out the collection with a bang) and MOODY'S BLUES by Hal Charles are both more pulp crime stories than mystery though they both do tease the title genre somewhat. Both have sharply drawn characters in convincingly desperate straits and you are drawn to their endings like a bad child being pulled across the yard to that tree with the best switches. I also enjoyed THE DEAD THEIR EYES IMPLORE US by George Pelecanos, though it felt more like a writing exercise at times than a mystery. Ultimately a well done jazz riff on a down and outer amidst a well hewed urban crime setting. The prize for me amidst this collection was IF ALL IS DARK by Mat Coward. You only realize at the end of the story that you have indeed been reading a mystery and have been sifting the clues almost unconsciously so that by the end you are surprised but not shocked. Told with ease and snarky wit, the story lives and breathes around three characters who should not really be together but who's coexistence feels natural and somehow unavoidable. The one story that immediately drove me to the web to find out more about the author. I will be reading more from him. Writing this has revealed that the batting average was closer to 66% than fifty so I guess there was more mystery about it than I gave it credit for. On the whole, worthwhile. Especially if you skip the first four stories I mentioned. show less
Breen is best known as the long-time reviewer for Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine. A respected reviewer. Most writers reluctantly agree with his negative points and he openly qualifies up front when a personal bias or preference affects his reaction to a work--positive or negative.

Here I have to do the same. I was expecting too much. There was too much advance praise. There are good things here. Set in the late 90’s a private detective, Al Hasp, is blindsided when his partner can no long show more reconcile his profession with his growing relationship with God. At the same time a famous televangelist is being betrayed by someone in his inner circle. Hasp hopes that sending his partner in undercover will open his eyes because obviously all televangelist are con men. It doesn’t work out that way. There are a couple of murders, some interesting characters, and the solution is fair. My problem, mainly, was Hasp seemed only interested in the preservation of his agency and he was not particularly likable in going about it. I found it a grating contrast to the tone of the rest of the novel. But, as stated, it may be my issue. show less
A great source for finding courtroom fiction, with lengthy, helpful annotations.
A fairly low bibliofactor-- murder victim is a 1930s mystery writer who gave up writing and was killed 50 years later. Amateur sleuth is a bookshop owner who meets victim because he wants to sell some books. Apparently this is a book in a series, and I'm not familiar with it, and there were a few allusions to previous things that didn't quite make sense-- or rather characters were sensitive to issues that I didn't know the background on.

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Statistics

Works
42
Also by
60
Members
380
Popularity
#63,550
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
4
ISBNs
46
Languages
1

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