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Split personality. Liking the arts, especially opera, and hockey and Los Toros. I know, I know THAT one is non pc currently. But I can't help it saw some in Spain and got hooked, but good. But on the other hand right now opera and hockey are in the forefront!

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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

And more by Frank Tallis

The author of "A Death in Vienna", about which I posted some time ago.
And the titles are:
Each one reaffirms this reader's fascination with the subject(s) and the literary prowess of the author.

Cafe Museum

He places all his novels (read thus far) in Fin de Siecle Vienna depicting her music, culture and atmosphere in great depth.  Such as the Cafe society in Old Vienna!




He mixes police procedural, suitable to the times when crime lab procedure was in its infancy, if existing at all, with the then current chaotic politics of early 20th-century Austria.
Then tosses in a quite a bit of psychoanalysis based on the then new discoveries by
 Siegmund Freud , Krafft-Ebbing and others, bringing the readers rather deep insights into the workings of the mind.
And finally, adds soupcons about literature, such as Arthur Schnitzler and poetry.
About 'house'music when people got together to sing Schubert Lieder and play  chamber music. 
Schubert Grave

Here  Schubert's "Der Doppelgaenger"
Interestingly one of the subjects in Tallis' Books


About women's lib's first toddling steps in the Vienna of late 1800's which actually antedate the rise of sufragettes in the UK.
Klimt and his mistress Flogge (wearing her REFORM Dress)
Viennese women started to protest against the restrictive fashions of tightly laced corsets and began to wear "reform or Freedom" Dresses as designed by Klimt and his mistress Flogge.

He does not shy away from controversial subjects such as antisemitism, religious fanaticism, venereal disease, prostitution, and, being crime fiction, murder and mayhem.

In Vienna, affairs of the heart (every man is entitled to his mistress)   are  openly (more or less) carried on. 
The Viennese' preoccupation with "A schaine Laich" -'pretty death'('pomp and circumstances' as applied to burials) are both subjects he deals with frankly, incorporating them into his fiction in one form or another.
As far as I am concerned, these novels are interesting and never boring to read. Equally interesting to crime fiction buffs as to history buffs. And by history I refer to actual political events in Vienna in those times, as well as medical history.


Gustav Klimt-Hygeia-part of a mural at Med. Faculty Vienna
an perfect example of the marriage between art/culture/medicine in 'Old Vienna' at right......................
University of Vienna and
Allgemeines Krakenhaus (Hosp. originally est.1693 as Soldier's Hospital by Emperor Leopold 1.
After all, those were the days when progressive and innovative developments at the University of Vienna (established 1365) formed the basis for much of modern medicine...
Narrenturm- formerly Psych. Ward in the OLD Hospital
Blood groups discovered, for instance and, of course, the basis of psychology and psychoanalysis.

 Here is list for anyone interested (not complete, I think) 
of Tallis' output - in both the mystery and non-fiction genre:

The Liebermann Papers:
A Death in Vienna (2006) (Originally published as Mortal Mischief in Uk 2005)
Vienna Blood (2006; 2008 in US)
Fatal Lies (2009)
Vienna Secrets (February 2010) (Originally released as Darkness Rising in UK Dec 2009)
Vienna Twilight (January 2011 in US)
Other novels:
Killing Time (1991)
Sensing Others (2000)
Nonfiction
How to Stop Worrying (1990; 2009)
Love Sick (2004)


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