Shedunnit
@ShedunnitShow
The podcast that unravels the mysteries behind classic detective stories. Hosted by @c_crampton. Artwork by @HendinArts.
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The podcast isn't going anywhere, but I won't be updating our social media accounts anymore. Instead, the one place you can connect with the show outside the new episodes every other Wednesday will be the Shedunnit email newsletter, available at shedunnitshow.com/newsletter
New episode! And it's a Green Penguin Book Club edition, with Raffles by E.W. Hornung as the book under scrutiny (Penguin 63). Listen now: shedunnitshow.com/raffles
Which is your favourite murder mystery set in Oxford and/or Cambridge, and did you hear it mentioned on the latest episode?
New episode! Why is there so much crime fiction set in Oxford and Cambridge, and does one city have the edge over the other when it comes to murder? Listen now to find out: shedunnitshow.com/oxfordvscambri…
In March, the Shedunnit Book Club is reading Last Bus to Woodstock by Colin Dexter, the first Inspector Morse book. Here's a preview of the bonus episode that @c_crampton has made for members giving more information and context. Join now at shedunnitbookclub.com/join to hear it all!
What makes for a good crime fiction short story? All is revealed (or at least discussed) on the latest episode... The Mystery Short Story. Available to listen now on all the podcast platforms and shedunnitshow.com/themysteryshor…
New episode! Inspired by Art Taylor's essay "The Short Mystery", @c_crampton investigates the short story form, focusing on why it has worked so well for crime fiction over the last 100+ years. Listen now: shedunnitshow.com/themysteryshor…
For March, the Shedunnit Book Club is exploring the world of the post-golden age police procedural, and we have chosen to read Last Bus to Woodstock by Colin Dexter. Sign up at shedunnitbookclub.com/join now to discuss it with us later in the month.
Last year, @c_crampton read all of Edmund Crispin's detective fiction in order for the podcast. Now, she's made an extra bonus episode for just Shedunnit Book Club members, ranking all of these mysteries from worst to best... Join now at shedunnitbookclub.com/join to hear it now.
What did Agatha Christie like to read? We must start with Sherlock Holmes... New episode available to listen now wherever you get your podcasts!
New episode! What do these four books/writers have in common? They were all favourites of Agatha Christie! On the latest Shedunnit, @c_crampton explores the books Christie liked to read, and looks at what that tells us about her own writing. Listen now: shedunnitshow.com/agathachristie…
In February, the Shedunnit Book Club is reading The Conjure-Man Dies by Rudolph Fisher. Here's a preview of the bonus episode that @c_crampton has made for members giving more information and context about this writer and his work. Join now at shedunnitbookclub.com/join
The Missing Moneylender by W. Stanley Sykes — the latest book to feature on Green Penguin Book Club — was a complete unknown to both @c_crampton and her guest. Had you come across it before? If so, what did you think?
New episode! The book for today's episode is Penguin 62, The Missing Moneylender by W. Stanley Sykes. First published in 1931, it became a Penguin in 1936. This was an entirely new title for both @c_crampton and her guest @clothesinbooks. Listen now: pod.link/1439204048
Shedunnit Book Club members on the higher tier get to hear @c_crampton reading a classic crime short story aloud every month — this time, it's the railway-based tale “Mystery of the Slip Coach” by Sapper from 1932. To hear this in full, join now at shedunnitbookclub.com/join
For February, the Shedunnit Book Club has chosen to read a book by a "lesser known author", and has picked The Conjure-Man Dies by Rudolph Fisher, which was first published in 1932. Join us at shedunnitbookclub.com/join now to join the discussion.
Are you a lover of Dorothy L. Sayers' Gaudy Night, or, like J.R.R. Tolkien, a hater?
New episode! Possibly the most requested one ever? @c_crampton does a deep dive on Gaudy Night by Dorothy L. Sayers from 1935. Listen now: pod.link/1439204048/epi…
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