The Oxford Murders (Spanish: Crímenes imperceptibles; Imperceptible Crimes) is a novel by the Argentine author Guillermo Martínez, first published in 2003. It was translated into English in 2005 by Sonia 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.
Plot introduction
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. 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. The mathematics graduate is joined by the leading Oxford logician Arthur Seldom on the quest to solve the cryptic clues. The book explains how difficult it can be to solve mathematics in a cryptic form.
Selected editions
Abacus (2005). ISBN 0-349-11721-7. Paperback, English.
MacAdam/Cage Publishing (2005). ISBN 1-59692-150-1. Hardback, English.
See also
The Oxford Murders, a 2007 film adaptation directed by Álex de la Iglesia, starring Elijah Wood and John Hurt.
The Mathematical Institute
Merton College, Oxford
Cryptography
External links
Murder by numbers reviewed by Marcus du Sautoy, The Guardian, 5 February 2005
'The Oxford Murders' reviewed by Andrew Stickland
MathFiction information
Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics
Graduate Studies in Mathematics
Hellenica World - Scientific Library
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/"
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License