商品簡介
The Library of America and editor Sarah Weinman redefine the classic era of American crime fiction with a landmark collection of eight brilliant novels by the female pioneers of the genre, the women who paved the way for Gillian Flynn, Tana French, and Lisa Scottoline.
Though women crime and suspense writers dominate today's bestseller lists, the extraordinary work of the mid-century pioneers of the genre is largely unknown. Turning in many cases from the mean streets of the hardboiled school to explore the anxieties and terrors lurking in everyday life, these groundbreaking novelists found the roots of fear and violence in a quiet suburban neighborhood, on a college campus, or in a comfortable midtown hotel. Their work, influential in its day and still vibrant and extraordinarily riveting today, is long overdue for rediscovery. This two-volume collector's boxed set gathers eight classic works—masterpieces of psychological brilliance and domestic terror, split personality and conflicted sexual identity—that together reveal the vital and unacknowledged lineage to today's leading crime writers. From the 1940s here are Vera Caspary's famous career girl mysteryLaura, Helen Eustis's intricate academic thriller The Horizontal Man, Dorothy B. Hughes'sIn a Lonely Place, the terrifyingly intimate portrait of a serial killer, and Elizabeth Sanxay Holding'sThe Blank Wall, in which a wife in wartime is forced to take extreme measures when her family is threatened. The 1950s volume includes Charlotte Armstrong'sMischief, the nightmarish drama of a child entrusted to a psychotic babysitter, Patricia Highsmith'sThe Blunderer, brilliantly tracking the perverse parallel lives of two men driven toward murder, Margaret Millar'sBeast in View, a relentless study in madness, and Dolores Hitchens's Fools' Gold, a hard-edged tale of robbery and redemption.
作者簡介
Sarah Weinman is widely recognized as a leading authority on crime fiction. She is the editor ofTroubled Daughters, Twisted Wives: Stories from the Trailblazers of Domestic Suspense (Penguin, 2013), which theLos Angeles Review of Books called “simply one of the most significant anthologies of crime fiction, ever.” She is the news editor forPublishers Marketplace and her work has appeared in the New York Times,Wall Street Journal, the National Post, the Los Angeles Times, and theWashington Post, among other publications. Her long-running (but now on hiatus) blog,Confessions of an Idiosyncratic Mind, was hailed by USA TODAY as “a respected resource for commentary on crime fiction.” Weinman lives in Brooklyn, New York.