- Published: 2 August 2010
- ISBN: 9780099533856
- Imprint: Windmill Books
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 288
- RRP: $39.99
The Manual of Detection

















- Published: 2 August 2010
- ISBN: 9780099533856
- Imprint: Windmill Books
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 288
- RRP: $39.99
I was impressed, besotted, and transported by The Manual of Detection. Such a great book!
Karen Joy Fowler, author of The Jane Austen Book Club and Sister Noon
Inventive, atmospheric, and fiendishly delightful. If you've ever fallen under the spell of Borges, Ray Bradbury, or Angela Carter, I urge you to acquire your own copy of the Manual of Detection. Jedediah Berry's debut novel is a rare, strange thing
Kelly Link, author of Magic for Beginners
Richly imagined, genre-defying work...The Manual of Detection establishes Berry as a wholly original, brilliant new voice in fiction
Sabina Murray, author of The Caprices and A Carnivore’s Enquiry
Imaginative, fantastical, sometimes inexplicable, labyrinthine and ingenious...Great fun and very clever. My comparison? Flann O'Brien's The Third Policeman - which is about as good as it gets
Observer
A clever, startlingly original blend of fantasy and crime
Waterstone’s Books Quarterly
Clever, witty, and a joy to read... I loved "The Manual of Detection's" mix of mystery and fantasy, and was impressed by its surrealism and strange cast of characters
http://fantasybookcritic.blogspot.com
Like Sin City, this is a noir fairytale, with the grey-scale, drizzly streets and shabby cafes contrasted by fluorescent, primary colour characters...Berry's work is reminiscent of the coolest young American novelists - Michael Chabon, Jonathan Lethem, Glen David Gold - in its sheer delight at how genre writing can be re-invigorated and re-imagined. The Manual of Detection makes the weird, fantastical world of the unconsciousness seem comically logical - like its subject, it is a dream
Scotland on Sunday
A wryly cerebral take on noir fiction...Separated conjoined twin gangsters, a duplicitous femme fatale and a nightmarish carnival owner inhabit the nocturnal, rain-soaked city where this clever, postmodern detective story is set
Financial Times
It is an elegant and stunningly imaginative fusion of detective and speculative fiction
Guardian
The Manual of Detection is a dark and surreal tale with huge nods to Jasper Fforde, Raymond Chandler, and Douglas Adams, amongst others...It is written with style, wit and panache. An accomplished and intriguing read, it works very well
Bookseller
somewhere between thriller and surreal fantasy
Easy Living
The plot's bursting with as many twists and surprises as you could hope for...It steams along the smooth rails of Berry's neatly constructed sentences, barrelling round each well-cambered turn with barely a judder
London Review of Books