Abstract

This paper reads Howard Engel’s novels Murder on Location (1982) and Dead and Buried (1990) through border theory and as a form of border theory. Engel uses a soft-boiled comic Canadian variant of the hard-boiled American detective novel to explore sites, situations, and symbols of national sovereignty and examine cross-border cultural and ecological flows across the ‘soft border’ between Canada and the United States along the Niagara frontier, where Engel sets his Benny Cooperman series (1980–2018).

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