Sunday, July 16, 2023

Review: Crime Novels Five Classic Thrillers 1961 - 1964 (Library of America #370)

 


By the time the crime novels collected here first appeared in the early 1960s, the popularity of the type of crime fiction pioneered by Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett, and others had already peaked. Now, as Geoffrey O'Brien points out in his introduction to the collection, "the best crime writers reinvented the genre." That was probably the only way the genre had much of a chance, according to O'Brien of competing with powerful competition from a burst in popularity of science fiction novels, fantasy novels, spy novels, and political thrillers.

Represented in this volume of Crime Novels are five very different writers, writers who found varying degrees of success during their lifetimes. Whether or not all of them lived to enjoy the success and respect they deserved, all five are recognized today as some of the best crime fiction writers of their day.

The collection opens with Fredric Brown's The Murderers, a story about a group of sociopaths in Los Angeles who will do just about anything to keep themselves financially comfortable. When two frustrated actors decide to swap murders that will benefit both their careers, innocent people will die but nobody really seems to care. Brown's novel is a scary look inside the mind of a true sociopath.

Next comes The Name of the Game Is Death by Dan J. Marlowe, another psychological novel that follows a bank robbery gone bad after one of the three robbers is shot dead, one escapes with the all the cash, and the narrator goes into hiding until it's safe for him to rejoin the other surviving gang member. But after the man with the money suddenly cuts off all contact with the main character, all bets are off. Much of the character development in this one occurs through flashbacks that illustrate just what a pure sociopath our hero is.

Third in the collection is probably the best known of the group, Dead Calm. Some twenty-six years (1989) after Charles Williams published the novel in 1963, Dead Calm was turned into a successful movie starring Nicole Kidman, Sam Neill, and Billy Zane. The novel tells the story of a young couple alone on their yacht who pick up what appears to be the only survivor of a sinking vessel on which the survivor claims everyone on board has died of food poisoning but him. It's easy to imagine the tension that will build over time as the stranger's story begins to unravel.

Then we have The Expendable Man by Dorothy B. Hughes, the only novel in the collection written by a woman. Hughes is largely ignored today, but Geoffrey O'Brien's introduction calls her "one of the most important crime writers of her era." Hughes dared to tackle racism in the heat of the racially turbulent 1960s by making her message a major factor governing the behavior of her main character, a young black doctor who happens to have picked up a young female hitchhiker who is later found dead.

The last novel in the collection is Richard Stark's (Richard Stark is a pen name used by Donald Westlake at times) The Score. This one is actually the fifth book in Stark's twenty-three book "Parker" series. The most unusual thing about the series is that Parker is not a cop or a detective; he is a successful criminal. The Score serves as a reminder that even the best mind can become a little overconfident and overambitious. The caper-gone-wrong here is one in which Parker and his gang decide to simultaneously rob multiple locations in one small town.

This volume of Crime Novels  is the first of two volumes soon to be published by Library of America. The second collection will feature similar fiction written in the second half of the decade.

8 comments:

  1. I enjoyed reading your review of The Murderers; that's not one I was familiar with before. Dorothy Hughes is an author I've been wanting to try for awhile. I'm glad they decided to include her in this collection. And I saw the movie they made of Dead Calm but have never read the book. I like that they're republishing so many of these early mysteries and crime novels.

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    1. Library of America is my absolute favorite publisher because they are basically a non-profit publisher that depends on "sponsorships" and the likes to do what they do. Their mission is to produce highest quality books that will preserve the country's literary history, be that history, nonfiction, literary fiction, or genre fiction. I can't praise the company enough.

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  2. Hi Sam, Boy is it hot here where I am! The Library of America editions are so attractive and I like that for the crime novels they chose authors who are not as well known. My guess the greats Chandler, Hammett and Cain all have their own separate Library of America books as they should but in the Crime Novels edition other talented writers get a chance to shine. I am hoping Cornell Woolrich makes it into the second edition. His novels are strange but he is very talented.

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    1. LOA is just the best at doing this kind of thing, no doubt about it. The second volume contains only four novels, and they are by Margaret Miller, Ed McBain, Chester Hines, and Patricia Highsmith. I'm very familiar with McBain and Highsmith, and if it were up to me would not have included them in this particular collection even though they fit so well. I'm not so familiar with Hines or Miller, though.

      Cornell Woolrich has recently been honored by having a tribute collection of stories similar to his own published. It's called Black Is the Night and it is edited by Maxim Jakubowski with an introduction by Neil Gaiman. It was published by Titan Books last October. It's one of the ones in my library haul stack right now, in fact. You might want to look at that one, too.

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  3. Thanks Sam, I will look for Black Is the Night and pleased to say that I checked today and Cornell Woolrich has been included in the LOA Crime Novels from the 1930's 1940's edition

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    1. That's good to know about Woolrich. He certainly deserves it. I'll have to see about adding that one to my LOA books. Thanks.

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  4. Even though I already have a copy of the book by Hughes, and would not read Dead Calm, I might be interested in this book for the other three books. I have read the first two books in the Stark's Parker series, and enjoyed them. They are relatively short if I remember correctly, but probably all of the books here are on the short side.

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    1. You're right about the length of most of these. 220-250 pages seems to be the average - probably because so many of them were paperback originals of the pulp era of noir fiction.

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