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The Metatemporal Detective by Michael Moorcock — book cover

The Metatemporal Detective

by Michael Moorcock
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Overview

Seaton Begg and his constant companion, pathologist Dr "Taffy" Sinclair, both head the secret British Home Office section of the Metatemporal Investigation Department — an organization whose function is understood only by the most high-ranking government people around the world — and a number of powerful criminals.

Begg's cases cover a multitude of crimes in dozens of alternate worlds, generally where transport is run by electricity, where the internal combustion engine is unknown, and where giant airships are the chief form of international carrier. He investigates the murder of English Prime Minister "Lady Ratchet," the kidnaping of the king of a country taken over by a totalitarian regime, and the death of Geli Raubel, Adolf Hitler's mistress. Other adventures take him to a wild west where "the Masked Buckaroo" is tracking down a mysterious red-eyed Apache known as the White Wolf; to 1960s' Chicago where a girl has been killed in a sordid disco; and to an independent state of Texas controlled by neocon Christians with oily (and bloody) hands. He visits Paris, where he links up with his French colleagues of the Sûreté du Temps Perdu. In several cases the fanatical Adolf Hitler is his opponent, but his arch-enemy is the mysterious black sword wielding aristocrat known as Zenith the Albino, a drug-dependent, charismatic exile from a distant realm he once ruled.

In each story the Metatemporal Detectives' cases take them to worlds at once like and unlike our own, sometimes at odds with and sometimes in league with the beautiful adventuresses Mrs. Una Persson or Lady Rosie von Bek. At last Begg and Sinclair come face to face with their nemesis on the moonbeam roads which cross between the universes, where the great Eternal Balance itself is threatened with destruction and from which only the luckiest and most daring of metatemporal adventurers will return.

These fast-paced mysteries pay homage to Moorcock's many literary enthusiasms for authors as diverse as Clarence E. Mulford, Dashiell Hammett, Georges Simenon, and his boyhood hero, Sexton Blake.

Synopsis

Seaton Begg and his constant companion, pathologist Dr "Taffy" Sinclair, both head the secret British Home Office section of the Metatemporal Investigation Department--an organization whose function is understood only by the most high-ranking government people around the world--and a number of powerful criminals.

Begg's cases cover a multitude of crimes in dozens of alternate worlds, generally where transport is run by electricity, where the internal combustion engine is unknown, and where giant airships are the chief form of international carrier. He investigates the murder of English Prime Minister "Lady Ratchet," the kidnaping of the king of a country taken over by a totalitarian regime, and the death of Geli Raubel, Adolf Hitler's mistress. Other adventures take him to a wild west where "the Masked Buckaroo" is tracking down a mysterious red-eyed Apache known as the White Wolf; to 1960s' Chicago where a girl has been killed in a sordid disco; and to an independent state of Texas controlled by neocon Christians with oily (and bloody) hands. He visits Paris, where he links up with his French colleagues. In several cases the fanatical Adolf Hitler is his opponent, but his arch-enemy is the mysterious black sword wielding aristocrat known as Zenith the Albino, a drug-dependent, charismatic exile from a distant realm he once ruled.

In each story the Metatemporal Detectives' cases take them to worlds at once like and unlike our own, sometimes at odds with and sometimes in league with the beautiful adventuresses Mrs. Una Persson or Lady Rosie von Bek. At last Begg and Sinclair come face to face with their nemesis on the moonbeam roads which cross between the universes,where the great Eternal Balance itself is threatened with destruction and from which only the luckiest and most daring of metatemporal adventurers will return.

These fast-paced mysteries pay homage to Moorcock's many literary enthusiasms for authors as diverse as Clarence E. Mulford, Dashiell Hammett, Georges Simenon, and his boyhood hero, Sexton Blake.

Publishers Weekly

Hugo-winner Moorcock falls short in his attempt to modernize "penny dreadful" detective hero Sexton Blake, a character few present-day readers are likely to remember or recognize. Blake, now called Sir Seaton Begg, and his Watsonian sidekick, Dr. Taffy Sinclair, take on a wide variety of murder cases and other unsolved mysteries around the world, all seeming to lead back to the albino villain, Monsieur Zenith, whose original incarnation was one of the inspirations for Moorcock's dimension-crossing antihero Elric of Melniboné. Begg's adventures soon take him into other eras and alternate universes, where he encounters such exaggerated figures as former British government official "Mad Maggie" Ratchet and two Texas politicians and energy moguls named Dick Shiner and George Putz. The violence, perilous traps and clichés are not intended to be taken seriously, but these parodies may be too broad for even die-hard Elric fans. (Oct.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

About the Author, Michael Moorcock

Michael Moorcock is a highly respected author who has won many awards over his prolific career. The author of many literary novels and stories in practically every genre, he has won and been short-listed for the Nebula, World Fantasy, Hugo, August Derleth, Booker, Whitbread, Guardian Fiction Prize, and others. His novella Behold the Man won the Nebula Award. Currently he resides in Texas with his wife, Linda.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Hugo-winner Moorcock falls short in his attempt to modernize "penny dreadful" detective hero Sexton Blake, a character few present-day readers are likely to remember or recognize. Blake, now called Sir Seaton Begg, and his Watsonian sidekick, Dr. Taffy Sinclair, take on a wide variety of murder cases and other unsolved mysteries around the world, all seeming to lead back to the albino villain, Monsieur Zenith, whose original incarnation was one of the inspirations for Moorcock's dimension-crossing antihero Elric of Melniboné. Begg's adventures soon take him into other eras and alternate universes, where he encounters such exaggerated figures as former British government official "Mad Maggie" Ratchet and two Texas politicians and energy moguls named Dick Shiner and George Putz. The violence, perilous traps and clichés are not intended to be taken seriously, but these parodies may be too broad for even die-hard Elric fans. (Oct.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

Children's Literature - Elizabeth D. Schafer

Sir Seaton Begg pursues villains, particularly ruby-eyed albino, Monsieur Zenith, in this noir collection devoted to Begg's investigations which consists of ten previously published tales plus the new adventure, "The Flaneur des Arcades de l'Opera." That story and "The Affair of Le Bassin des Hivers" provide details explaining the multiverse in which Begg and his colleague Dr. "Taffy" Sinclair encounter foes and allies who often switch allegiances. Begg and Zenith share familial ties to aristocratic von Bek ancestors, commenting how relatives chose law or chaos, the underlying themes of these stories. Begg often interacts with historical figures, identified by factual names such as Adolf Hitler, Eva Braun, and Otto von Bismarck or clever puns alerting readers to persons and settings appropriated for fictional purposes. Many of Begg's investigations, such as "The Pleasure Garden of Felipe Sagittarius," involve Nazis in Europe, particularly in the 1930s, with crimes altering history prior to World War II. "The Ghost Warriors" thrusts Begg into a surreal U.S. West. "London Flesh" demonstrates how mysterious disappearances and occurrences shape urban legends. Begg frequently refers to the Holy Grail, which he seeks to protect from evil. These stories have hard-boiled elements, portraying mature situations. Pair with Herve Jubert's Dance of the Assassins (2004). Students writing papers analyzing Moorcock's non-linear multiverse might find Gavriel D. Rosenfeld's The World Hitler Never Made: Alternate History and the Memory of Nazism (2005) useful. Reviewer: Elizabeth D. Schafer

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2007
Publisher
Prometheus Books
Pages
370
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781591025962

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