• (ReacTor) Five Fictional Investigators With Special Abilities

    From James Nicoll@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 21 14:09:20 2025
    Five Fictional Investigators With Special Abilities

    These sleuths bring a little something extra to the table...

    https://reactormag.com/five-fictional-investigators-with-special-abilities/
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  • From Default User@21:1/5 to James Nicoll on Mon Mar 24 04:31:16 2025
    James Nicoll wrote:

    Five Fictional Investigators With Special Abilities

    These sleuths bring a little something extra to the table...

    The sub-genre of "cozy mysteries" has been seeing a substantial
    increase in series with various paranormal aspects. An example would be
    the Haunted Bookshop Mysteries by "Cleo Coyle" (a married couple IRL).

    Post-WWII hard-boild PI Jack Shepard was investigating in a small Rhode
    Island town, where he was killed by person unknown. He now haunts the
    bookstore where it took place. Recent widow Penny moves to town to help
    her run the store. Penny is able to communicate with JAck, which turns
    out to be handy when mysterious murders begin occurring around her.


    Brian

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  • From Dimensional Traveler@21:1/5 to Tony Nance on Fri Mar 28 17:49:40 2025
    On 3/28/2025 4:42 PM, Tony Nance wrote:
    On 3/21/25 10:09 AM, James Nicoll wrote:
    Five Fictional Investigators With Special Abilities

    These sleuths bring a little something extra to the table...

    https://reactormag.com/five-fictional-investigators-with-special-
    abilities/

    Hm ... let's see

    Working for the authorities, there's:
    Kaylin Neya (Sagara's Elantra series), and
    Peter Grant (Aaronovitch's Rivers of London series)

    Private Investigators would include:
    Harry Dresden - (Butcher's, um, Harry Dresden series)
    Harper Blaine - (Richardson - greywalker was the first one, or something
    like that)

    In Glen Cook's Garrett PI series, I don't think Garrett has any special abilities (unless surviving numerous concussions counts), but his
    partner the Dead Man certainly does.

    I don't remember Garrett having any special abilities, just friends who do.

    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.

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  • From Ted Nolan @21:1/5 to tnusenet17@gmail.com on Sat Mar 29 02:21:19 2025
    In article <vs7c4u$3qcn7$1@dont-email.me>,
    Tony Nance <tnusenet17@gmail.com> wrote:
    On 3/21/25 10:09 AM, James Nicoll wrote:
    Five Fictional Investigators With Special Abilities

    These sleuths bring a little something extra to the table...

    https://reactormag.com/five-fictional-investigators-with-special-abilities/

    Hm ... let's see

    Working for the authorities, there's:
    Kaylin Neya (Sagara's Elantra series), and
    Peter Grant (Aaronovitch's Rivers of London series)

    Private Investigators would include:
    Harry Dresden - (Butcher's, um, Harry Dresden series)
    Harper Blaine - (Richardson - greywalker was the first one, or something
    like that)

    In Glen Cook's Garrett PI series, I don't think Garrett has any special >abilities (unless surviving numerous concussions counts), but his
    partner the Dead Man certainly does.


    There's also:

    Doc Savage, by Lester Dent mostly. Doc is not strictly speaking a
    detective, but people do bring him cases often involving crimes
    (they also tend to drop dead on his doorstep, though being a woman
    lessens those odds). He does hold a police commission, but rarely
    interacts with the cops other than to tell them to do specific
    things. (Later in the series he falls into a more adversarial role
    with the police). The Mcguffins of his cases usually involve some
    sort of super science, though later in the so Science Detective
    years they start to resemble typical PI cases more. Doc is
    independantly wealthy and not for hire. He takes on cases which
    intrigue him and operates for the public good. Doc is in Batman
    peak physical condition, and a medical & scientific genius.

    Doc Sidhe by the unfortunately late Aaron Allston is the outright
    fantasy version of Doc Savage and lives in a 1930s fae world battling world-ending threats. He is less flustered by the ladies than his
    American counterpart and his aides are a bit more useful iirc. The
    first book is highly recommended and the second one wasn't bad.
    Like Savage, not a PI, but people bring him problems which tend
    to escalate.

    The Mick Oberon books by Ari Marmell. Mick is a faery exile in
    our Chicago. As I recall in the first two books which I read,
    we don't get much of his back story but he is some sort of noble
    in bad repute with the big Oberon (he is definitely not "that"
    Oberon). He works as a PI in (human) mob related cases which tend to
    intersect with faery more often than you might expect. And of course
    when he runs across anyone from home they can't believe he is actually
    just doing a job rather than running some shifty fae political scheme.
    I need to get back to these.

    In the Ilona Andrews "Hidden Legacy" setting, the Baylor family
    runs a detectie agency in an alternate Texas where magic exists
    and runs in familiy lines. The series focuses on several of the
    Baylor daughters coming of age, stepping up, finding lost pets, love
    and saving the world.

    In the Skulduggery Pleasant series by Derek Landy, Skulduggery is
    known as "The Skeleton Detective" (because he *is* a skeleton)
    and does solve cases (perhaps most straight-forwardly in his latest
    outing), but as tends to be the case in this list, everything he
    (and his partner who is really the series main charcter) is involved
    with tends to escalate quickly. He is possibly also the least
    exemplary figure on this list, being pretty much an intermittently
    repenatent war criminal. Skulduggery has been at different times
    a PI, a member of the constabulary and currently head of the
    more or less independant Arbitor Corps.

    I hesitate to mention this series, because I really didn't like the
    way the story played out in the outing I read, but I did feel that the detective could have been good in a non-predetermined setting,
    so the Eddie LaCrosse books by Alex Bledsoe. Eddie is a knight
    for hire in a somewhat medieval setting where magic works (to
    some extent). He solves problems which seems to entail solving
    mysteries as a consequence.

    And I would be remiss to leave out Buck Godot "Zap-Gun For Hire"
    ("Why doesn't anyone believe I have professional ethics?") by Phil
    Foglio. In his (too few) graphic novel adventures, Buck brings
    justice (and frozen treats) to the explictly lawless world of
    New Hong Kong dealing with Pistol Packing Packrats, telepathic
    clones, higher-level tech and bored law-machines. Somehow he
    always solves the case and survives, if barely.
    --
    columbiaclosings.com
    What's not in Columbia anymore..

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  • From Don@21:1/5 to Ted Nolan on Sun Mar 30 16:02:20 2025
    Ted Nolan wrote:
    Tony Nance wrote:
    James Nicoll wrote:
    Five Fictional Investigators With Special Abilities

    These sleuths bring a little something extra to the table...

    https://reactormag.com/five-fictional-investigators-with-special-abilities/ >>
    Hm ... let's see

    Working for the authorities, there's:
    Kaylin Neya (Sagara's Elantra series), and
    Peter Grant (Aaronovitch's Rivers of London series)

    Private Investigators would include:
    Harry Dresden - (Butcher's, um, Harry Dresden series)
    Harper Blaine - (Richardson - greywalker was the first one, or something >>like that)

    In Glen Cook's Garrett PI series, I don't think Garrett has any special >>abilities (unless surviving numerous concussions counts), but his
    partner the Dead Man certainly does.


    There's also:

    Doc Savage, by Lester Dent mostly. Doc is not strictly speaking a
    detective, but people do bring him cases often involving crimes
    (they also tend to drop dead on his doorstep, though being a woman
    lessens those odds). He does hold a police commission, but rarely
    interacts with the cops other than to tell them to do specific
    things. (Later in the series he falls into a more adversarial role
    with the police). The Mcguffins of his cases usually involve some
    sort of super science, though later in the so Science Detective
    years they start to resemble typical PI cases more. Doc is
    independantly wealthy and not for hire. He takes on cases which
    intrigue him and operates for the public good. Doc is in Batman
    peak physical condition, and a medical & scientific genius.

    Doc Sidhe by the unfortunately late Aaron Allston is the outright
    fantasy version of Doc Savage and lives in a 1930s fae world battling world-ending threats. He is less flustered by the ladies than his
    American counterpart and his aides are a bit more useful iirc. The
    first book is highly recommended and the second one wasn't bad.
    Like Savage, not a PI, but people bring him problems which tend
    to escalate.

    The Mick Oberon books by Ari Marmell. Mick is a faery exile in
    our Chicago. As I recall in the first two books which I read,
    we don't get much of his back story but he is some sort of noble
    in bad repute with the big Oberon (he is definitely not "that"
    Oberon). He works as a PI in (human) mob related cases which tend to intersect with faery more often than you might expect. And of course
    when he runs across anyone from home they can't believe he is actually
    just doing a job rather than running some shifty fae political scheme.
    I need to get back to these.

    In the Ilona Andrews "Hidden Legacy" setting, the Baylor family
    runs a detectie agency in an alternate Texas where magic exists
    and runs in familiy lines. The series focuses on several of the
    Baylor daughters coming of age, stepping up, finding lost pets, love
    and saving the world.

    In the Skulduggery Pleasant series by Derek Landy, Skulduggery is
    known as "The Skeleton Detective" (because he *is* a skeleton)
    and does solve cases (perhaps most straight-forwardly in his latest
    outing), but as tends to be the case in this list, everything he
    (and his partner who is really the series main charcter) is involved
    with tends to escalate quickly. He is possibly also the least
    exemplary figure on this list, being pretty much an intermittently
    repenatent war criminal. Skulduggery has been at different times
    a PI, a member of the constabulary and currently head of the
    more or less independant Arbitor Corps.

    I hesitate to mention this series, because I really didn't like the
    way the story played out in the outing I read, but I did feel that the detective could have been good in a non-predetermined setting,
    so the Eddie LaCrosse books by Alex Bledsoe. Eddie is a knight
    for hire in a somewhat medieval setting where magic works (to
    some extent). He solves problems which seems to entail solving
    mysteries as a consequence.

    And I would be remiss to leave out Buck Godot "Zap-Gun For Hire"
    ("Why doesn't anyone believe I have professional ethics?") by Phil
    Foglio. In his (too few) graphic novel adventures, Buck brings
    justice (and frozen treats) to the explictly lawless world of
    New Hong Kong dealing with Pistol Packing Packrats, telepathic
    clones, higher-level tech and bored law-machines. Somehow he
    always solves the case and survives, if barely.

    Your list is comprehensive compared to my meager mishmash.

    Dan Chambeaux AKA Shamble (get it?) is a zombie P.I. Plausibly his
    particular peculiarity of being a zombie qualifies him for inclusion.

    In my best Ackermanesque teaser: Four episodes from now Lynn will
    encounter Richard Kennof in PR87 THE SLEEPERS. There's a throw away line
    about how "Indestructible Dick is back." Although "indestructible" is
    intended as merely figurative, no doubt.

    Danke,

    --
    Don.......My cat's )\._.,--....,'``. https://crcomp.net/reviews.php telltale tall tail /, _.. \ _\ (`._ ,. Walk humbly with thy God.
    tells tall tales.. `._.-(,_..'--(,_..'`-.;.' Make 1984 fiction again.

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