Dead Crazy was
published in 1988. The First Pocket Books Edition was published in 1989.
This blog started out as Michael Doherty's Personal Library, containing reviews of books that normally don't get reviewed: basically adult and cult books. It was all just a bit of fun, you understand. But when I embarked on a three-year Shakespeare study, Shakespeare basically took over, which is a good thing.
Wednesday, August 26, 2020
Shakespeare References in Dead Crazy
Nancy Pickard’s mystery novel Dead Crazy contains a couple of Shakespeare references. This book
is a volume in the author’s Jenny Cain Mystery series. From that same series
came her Say No Murder, and
interestingly the first reference in Dead
Crazy is to the same line from The
First Part Of King Henry The Fourth that Pickard referred to in that
earlier novel. The line is Falstaff’s “The better part of valor is discretion,
in the which better part I have saved my life.” In Dead Crazy, Pickard writes, “It finally fishtailed one too many
times for my nerves, and – while staring at the bumper of the Chrysler with
which I had nearly collided – I decided the better part of valor was to abandon
my car” (p. 59). The second reference is to Hamlet.
Pickard writes: “More to the point, it sounded plausible to Geof and to the
other detectives. But proving it, aye, that was the rub” (p. 266). That, of
course, is a reference to a line from Hamlet’s most famous soliloquy. “To
sleep, perchance to dream — ay, there’s the rub,/For in that sleep of death
what dreams may come/When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,/Must give us
pause.”
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