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Crime Novels Five Classic Thrillers 19611964 1st Geoffrey Obrien Editor

  • SKU: BELL-55462534
Crime Novels Five Classic Thrillers 19611964 1st Geoffrey Obrien Editor
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Crime Novels Five Classic Thrillers 19611964 1st Geoffrey Obrien Editor instant download after payment.

Publisher: Library of America
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.73 MB
Pages: 983
Author: Geoffrey O'Brien (editor)
ISBN: 9781598537376, 9781598537413, 1598537377, 1598537415
Language: English
Year: 2023
Edition: 1st

Product desciption

Crime Novels Five Classic Thrillers 19611964 1st Geoffrey Obrien Editor by Geoffrey O'brien (editor) 9781598537376, 9781598537413, 1598537377, 1598537415 instant download after payment.

In the 1960s the masters of crime fiction expanded the genre’s literary and psychological possibilities with audacious new themes, forms, and subject matter—here are five of their finest works
This is the first of two volumes gathering the best American crime fiction of the 1960s, nine novels of astonishing variety and inventiveness that pulse with the energies of that turbulent, transformative decade.
In The Murderers (1961) by Fredric Brown, an out-of-work actor, hanging out with Beat drifters on the fringes of Hollywood, concocts a murder scheme that devolves into nightmare. This late work by a master in many genres is one of his darkest and most ingenious.
Dan J. Marlowe’s The Name of the Game Is Death (1962) channels the inner life of a violent criminal who freely acknowledges the truth of a prison psychiatrist’s diagnosis: “Your values are not civilized values.” Written with unnerving emotional authenticity, the story hurtles toward an annihilating climax.

Charles Williams drew on his experience in the merchant marine for his thriller Dead Calm (1963). A newlywed couple alone on a small yacht find themselves at the mercy of the mysterious survivor they have rescued from a sinking ship, in a suspenseful story that chillingly evokes the perils of the open ocean.

In the beautifully told and sharply observant The Expendable Man (1963), Dorothy B. Hughes’s final masterpiece of suspense, a young man in the American Southwest runs afoul of racial assumptions after he picks up a hitchhiker who soon turns up dead.

In twenty-four brilliantly constructed novels, Richard Stark (a pen name of Donald Westlake) charted the career of Parker, a hard-nosed professional thief, with rigorous clarity. The Score (1964), a stand-out in the series, finds Parker and his criminal associates hatching a plot to rob simultaneously all the jewelry stores, payroll offices, and banks in a remote Western mining town, only to come up against the human limits of even the most...

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