Carolyn Heilbrun

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Mysteries for the Misbegotten

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In the following essay, Jeffrey Burke critiques Amanda Cross's novel Death in a Tenured Position, highlighting its witty prose and satirical examination of academic and feminist extremes, while expressing disappointment with the novel's solution despite appreciating its psychological insights and literary clues.

Amanda Cross's Death in a Tenured Position features her recurring amateur detective and professor of English, Kate Fansler. She is witty, attractive, well-bred, and independent though married. These qualities make for excellent verbal fencing with the lesbians who need her help to remove suspicion from them…. Cross pokes a good deal of pointed fun at a crusty institution, and a little at feminist extremism. When she is not tied down by exposition, her prose is abundantly witty, but several times I found myself wishing that someone would just walk in, order a sandwich, eat it, pay for it, and leave. Still, she writes well, and though I found the solution disappointing, I thought the solving, which depends on psychological insight and sly literary clues, top-notch. (p. 74)

Jeffrey Burke, "Mysteries for the Misbegotten," in Harper's (copyright © 1981 by Harper's Magazine; all rights reserved; reprinted from the July, 1981 issue by special permission), Vol. 263, No. 1574, July, 1981, pp. 72, 74.∗

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