A recent article in McLeans Magazine (kind of Time or Newsweek for Canada) was called,
Dead: happily-ever-after endings and included:
“Romance is not seen as high literature right now,” says Russell Brown, professor emeritus of English at the University of Toronto. The Jane Austen ending, in which the couple wanders off into the figurative or literal sunset after much hardship, has apparently become passé in the age of cynicism and conceit. “Modernists didn’t trust closure, and contemporary authors have opted for an even looser definition of an ending. It’s not as much happily-ever-after as it is nothing-ever-after,” Brown says.
The whole article can be read
here.
Now, I guess happy endings for couples in crime fiction are quite rare, but there is usually some kind of closure in that the crime gets solved.
So, is there too much closure in crime fiction?