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Paperback The Man from the Diogenes Club Book

ISBN: 1932265171

ISBN13: 9781932265170

The Man from the Diogenes Club

(Book #1 in the The Diogenes Club Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

In the swinging seventies, Richard Jeperson-secret agent of the Diogenes Club-solves crimes too strange for Britain's police. His fashion sense is gaudy, his enemies deadly, his associates glamorous. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great Companion to SECRET FILES! A must have...

I've said this about THE SECRET FILES OF THE DIOGENES CLUB: Excellent collection of some of Mr. Newman's Diogenes Club tales, replete with a relaxed pace and British wit, and no small amount of fantastic situations in historical settings. Take The Avengers, James Bond, a dash of Hammer Films, some Holmes, a pinch of TV's The Persuaders (Moore & Curtis), a dribble of Night Gallery, maybe a drop of Derek Flint, shake (do not stir), and you MIGHT come close to the flavor of this heady cocktail from the author of ANNO DRACULA and THE QUORUM. Highly recommended to people who love conspiracies and secret societies, wheels within wheels, secret histories, and the conjoining of science and magic. Now to this description add the following: It's England in the Swinging 60s-70s. The brilliant cover art by Picacio deposits you right into that vibe Austin Powers tried so hard to capture (and mostly did). Richard Jeperson is the Diogenes Club's psychic detective, and these are some of his cases. You will come back for more, because they are THAT good. Maybe you need to be of a certain age. Maybe you had to sit near the TV as a kid and project yourself into all those weird and wonderful adventures shows like The Avengers and Ghost Story and Night Gallery dredged up week after week. Maybe you had to want to come face to face with evil so you could defeat it and save the world. Maybe you had to want to belong to a secret agent club so secret no one knows about it. Maybe you had to be just like Kim Newman and take pleasure in all these wild elements, and want to blend them together to form a new magic realism. Maybe you had to be just like me. If you are any of these things, then these tales will thrill you, but you'll maintain that stiff British upper lip... I can't wait for more Diogenes Club collections.

Retro-fueled psychic detective stories with a cool Avengers vibe!

Kim Newman's work always strikes me as having a certain `kid in a candy shop' sort of feel to it, or maybe that's just a reflection of my own enthusiasm for wallowing in a fantasy world so rich in pop culture and literary references that it might make even the most committed Wold Newton enthusiast's head spin! Whatever the case, whether it's Newman or just my own predilection for his work, I find his writing to be infused with an undeniable sense of fun, no mean feat when it also encompasses a range of ghastly ghoulies, murderous madmen and things that generally go bump, squish and splat in the nighttime! Of course it isn't all just a question of revisiting childhood influences as Newman also cleverly weaves in delightful strands of, often biting, social and political satire creating a rich texture that elevates what might otherwise appear as simply wearing his influences, in garish bright colours, on his sleeve. Nowhere is Newman's knack for meta-pastichery more apparent than in the ongoing stories built around his version of the Diogenes Club. In his all-encompassing vampire epic ANNO DRACULA, Newman reinvented the Diogenes Club more or less along the lines of Billy Wilder's The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes, which is to say as a top-secret government organization involved with strange doings (submarine disguised as the Loch Ness monster anyone?). In essence a sort of X-Files/Men in Black outfit keeping England's shores safe from supernatural, psychic and alien oddities, for generations. While Newman has set Diogenes Club stories in differing eras from the 1880s onwards, the present volume concerns itself with stories mostly set in the late 1960s and early 1970s, not coincidentally a period in which a young Kim Newman (b. 1959) would have been at his most impressionable. The influence of Doctor Who, The Avengers/New Avengers, Hammer Films, Department `S', The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes, etc...as well as a wealth of occult mystery related books in vogue at the time, are patently obvious and concentrated in the development of über-flamboyant psychic investigator Richard Jeperson, and his assistants the `model beautiful', but lethal, Vanessa and the ever-reliable policeman Fred Regent. On the most superficial level think blend of Hope Hodgson's Carnacki the Ghost Finder with The Avengers and Jason King and you wouldn't be far off the mark. The eight stories in THE MAN FROM THE DIOGENES CLUB rounds up nearly all of the previously published Jeperson series, but also includes The Man Who Got Off the Ghost Train, which is unique to this collection. In the introductory Fred Regent story The End of the Pier Show our heroes visit a seaside town where old men hankering after a return to the `good old days' of 1941 have magically created an apport to do just that. Vanessa risks brainwashing at Pleasant Green, a psychiatric vetting center for highly placed government employees, only to see the mysterious Mrs. Empty slip away to inflict untold damage on

Give us more!

I belong to that generation which, despte being actually born in the seventies, remember things only from the eighties. The images and life evoked in these stories can not and should not be taken as a socio/anthropo-logical study of the said decade, but should be read for pure-unadulterated fun. Richard Jepperson is a character whom you might meet at some point in your life, but characters like him make certain stories re-readable, which is a rarity among horror stories that are more of "fill it-shut it-forget it" variety. Enjoy them.

A fun, if a back dark, look back at the 70s

This was a fun read. I'm an long time fan of PJF and his Wold-Newton universe and it appears that Mr. Newman is as well. I'm the target audience for this book, since I'm about the same age as Mr. Newman and have a lot of the same memories of the 70s, even though I grew up on the other side of the pond. Richard Jeperson is an interesting hero. Dashing and confident, but with out the raw violence of Mac Bolan or Richard Camellion.

So far....

I've just read the first story in this anthology of shorts by Kim and enjoyed it immensely. If you remember Steed and Mrs. Peel from The Avengers then you'll recognise a lot of similarities. This is The Avengers set 10 years in the future containing all of the gaudy fashion sense of the mid seventies with Jeperson, the protagonist, being the 'far-out' clothes horse that Emma Peel was. The storyline is more occultic than the Avengers which in my opinion is not a bad thing. I love the sense of place that Mr. Newman is able to bring to the story. I look forward to reading the rest of this book.
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