Martínez was born in Bahía Blanca, Argentina. He gained a PhD in mathematical logic at the...
Preview:
Citation preview
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Martnez was born in Baha Blanca, Argentina. He gained a PhD in
mathematical logic at the University of Buenos Aires.Baha Blanca
mathematical logicUniversity of Buenos Aires
- Slide 3
- The Oxford Murders (Crmenes imperceptibles, 2003) novel The
Oxford Murders The Immortality Formula (La frmula de la
inmortalidad, 2005) essays The Book of Murder (La Muerte Lenta de
Luciana B, 2007) novel Gdel (para todos), 2009 essay
- Slide 4
- Regarding Roderer (Acerca de Roderer, 1993) novel Vast Hell
(Infierno grande, 1989) short stories The Woman of the Master (La
mujer del maestro, 1998) novel Borges and Mathematics (Borges y las
matemticas, 2003) essays
- Slide 5
- His most successful novel has been The Oxford Murders, written
in 2003. In the same year, he was awarded the Planeta Prize for
this novel, which has been translated into a number of
languages.The Oxford Murders
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Title: The Oxford Murders Author: Guillermo Martnez Genre:
Novel Written: 2003 (Eng. 2005) Length: 197 pages Original in:
Spanish Availability: The Oxford Murders - US Crmenes
imperceptibles - US The Oxford Murders - UK The Oxford Murders -
Canada Mathmatique du crime - France Die Pythagoras-Morde -
DeutschlandThe Oxford MurdersCrmenes imperceptiblesThe Oxford
Murders Mathmatique du crimeDie Pythagoras-Morde
- Slide 8
- The Oxford Murders (Spanish: Crmenes imperceptibles;
Imperceptible Crimes) is a novel by the Argentine author Guillermo
Martnez, first published in 2003. There is a 2005 translation by
Sonia Soto.SpanishArgentine Guillermo Martnez2003Sonia Soto The
story tells about a professor of logic, who, along with a graduate
student, investigates a series of bizarre, mathematically-based
murders in Oxford, England.logicgraduate student OxfordEngland
- Slide 9
- In this thriller, mathematical symbols are the key to a
mysterious sequence of murders. Each new death that occurs is
accompanied by a different mathematical shape, starting with a
circle.mathematical symbols murders circle
- Slide 10
- "The Oxford Murders is comfortably short enough to be read in a
single evening, and the plot rattles along at an efficient pace
(.....) The prose is straightforward but has some nice touches" -
Thomas Jones, London Review of Books
- Slide 11
- This pure mathematical form heralds the death of Mrs Eagleton,
the landlady of a young Argentine mathematician who narrates the
story. It appears that the serial killer can be stopped only if
somebody can decode the next symbol in the
sequence.Argentinemathematician serial killer
- Slide 12
- The mathematics graduate is joined by the leading Oxford
logician Arthur Seldom on the quest to solve the cryptic clues. The
book explains how hard it can be to solve math in a cryptic
form.Oxford
- Slide 13
- The Oxford Murders is narrated by an Argentinian maths student,
describing events that took place when he went to Oxford on a
scholarship in 1993. He only tells the story years after the
fact,
- Slide 14
- After hearing of the death of one of the people he knew there;
clearly the truth -- or at least the whole story -- about the
'Oxford Series' of murders that happened that summer did not come
to light at the time.
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Back then the narrator has arranged to room at the house of
Mrs. Eagleton while at Oxford, a woman confined to a wheelchair
living with her orphaned granddaughter, Beth.
- Slide 17
- A few weeks after his arrival, Mrs. Eagleton is murdered. The
narrator, along with Arthur Seldom, a "legend among mathematicians"
-- indeed, "one of the four leading minds in the field of logic" --
finds the body.
- Slide 18
- When they find the body, Seldom reveals that he came to the
house because of a note he had received, announcing: "The first of
the series", along with Mrs. Eagleton's name and address, a time,
and a symbol drawn on it -- "a neatly drawn circle".
- Slide 19
- It does turn out to be the first in a series: first there's
another suspicious death -- in conjunction with another note --,
followed, eventually, by two more occurrences that are obviously
continuations of the series.
- Slide 20
- Several of the key figures in the novel are mathematicians, and
the main lead -- the pieces of paper with different symbols on them
-- suggest a mathematically based progression.
- Slide 21
- Among the clever ideas utilised by Martnez is Wttgenstein's
finite rule paradox: that for any series you can always find a rule
justifying any continuation of the series ("The series 2,4,8, can
be continued with the number 16, but also the number 10, or 2007").
And Gdel is, of course, also invoked.
- Slide 22
- As long as they have only the first murder, message, and symbol
they have no idea what comes next. Once there's a second symbol,
they can make an educated guess -- and once there's a third they
can feel fairly certain about what to expect next.
- Slide 23
- But Wittgenstein's rule means there's no certainty. The way
that Martinez applies these ideas is particularly inspired, making
for the very neat idea that underlies the whole plot -- but it
still makes for a somewhat awkward murder mystery.
- Slide 24
- Part of the problem is in the focus on the characters: there's
a curious lack of interest in many of the characters, and an
evenness of tone as if Martinez did not want to favour one over
another (especially among those who are to be seen as
suspects).
- Slide 25
- The failures of presenting the characters fully are most
noticeable in the case of the inspector and Beth, but there are
several others who are also too briefly and simply presented --
suggestively pushed centre-stage as potential suspects, and then
shoved into the background again.
- Slide 26
- On the other hand, what Martnez does very nicely is to insert
smaller stories in the narrative, allowing characters to reveal
themselves --
- Slide 27
- Seldom, in particular, is allowed to open up several times, and
these are among the best parts of the book. The narrator's Oxford
life is also fairly well presented, including the love affair he
embarks on.
- Slide 28
- The maths is well integrated into the book, and doesn't
overwhelm it. This is also the summer of Andrew Wiles solving
Fermat's theorem, and Martnez manages to use that fairly well as
well.
- Slide 29
- There's a leisurely pace to the book, but events still unfold
too quickly -- the rich material deserves considerably fuller
treatment.
- Slide 30
- THE END