I'm happy to say that the publisher Stark House has published Nothing Darker Than The Night a collection of essays from the last fifteen years by me (many of them revised and expanded) on hard-boiled and noir crime fiction. 48 (!) articles and essays, ranging from around 1300 words to nearly 18,000 words. (Most follow in the middle of those two lengths.) It's a big book, 424 pages. Definitely a book to dip into at one's leisure and pleasure. Also available as an ebook.
I hope some of my fellow bloggers will get around to reviewing the whole thing someday but in the meantime a Goodreads reviewer, "AC," gave the book five stars and commented: "A wonderful collection of essays by a rather cranky reviewer and critic that covers a great deal of interesting biographical information about Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler and Ross Macdonald, as well as a host of lesser known books of crime fiction and noir, including many of the short stories of Cornell Woolrich. Lots of interesting material to browse and to read in."
I was pleased with this take and will even cop to "cranky"--though I might just say opinionated! You definitely will get opinions in this book.
It's also reviewed here in Steve Steinbock's The Jury Box column in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine.
Night starts off with with a nine-page introduction on how I came to get interested in hard-boiled and noir crime fiction in the first place. (Readers of this blog may recall how I started reading Agatha Christie at age eight and remained an exclusively Anglophile classic mystery reader for decades.) The two sections, roughly equal in length, are devoted respectively to hard-boiled and noir crime fiction.
'Hard-Boiled" has multiple essays on Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler and Ross Macdonald, as well as pieces on Hammett's Thirties and Forties shadows (lesser known writers who followed him) and on Gore Vidal (his Edgar Box mysteries) and two women crime writers, Margaret Millar, Ross's amazing wife, and Mignon Eberhart (!). Yes I look at hard-boiled influence in unexpected places, like work by Eberhart and traditionalist crime fiction guru S. S. Van Dine.
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| Crime may or may not pay but it certainly inspires some fascinating fiction |
On Hammett there is original research on the mystery woman in his life, Elise De Viane (the girlfriend he likely drunkenly sexually assaulted), a new look as his short Continental Op stories which challenges received wisdom on them, and analyses of four of his novels. With Chandler I analyze his attitude toward classic British crime fiction (something widely misunderstood), his bitter and rather stupid feud with Ross Macdonald, and his ironic epistolary relationship with crime writer James M. Fox. With Macdonald I look largely at his attitude to crime writing and the evolution in his own work. I greatly admire the "hard-boiled triumvirate" but I don't pull occasional punches when it comes to criticism either.
I also look at some obscure right-wing and left-wing hard-boiled crime writers, as well as the depictions of Asians in American pulp fiction. That latter piece was inspired by a letter written in the early Thirties by a Chinese immigrant in rural Arkansas to a pulp magazine, in which he politely complained about the way Asians were portrayed therein.
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| down the boulevard of broken dreams |
"Noir" starts off with a very long piece--if it were fiction it would almost be a novella--in which I revise the "tragic homosexual" legend which has grown up around Cornell Woolrich. A great deal of new biographical information here. I also look at his seminal noir novel The Bride Wore Black, and, as the goodreads reviewer stated, a good deal of his short fiction, including pieces which have been very little studied.
Probably the second most significant piece in the collection is on the colorful, quizzical life of Fredric Brown, a great vintage crime writer similar to Woolrich in some ways. Huge amount of new biographical details here. There's also a look at Brown's novel The Screaming Mimi. There are two articles apiece respectively on Jim Thompson, Patricia Highsmith and Elisabeth Sanxay Holding.
The last sub-section collects nine introductions I have written to Stark House reprints of noir novels that were adapted to film, including James Gunn's rather amazing Deadlier Than The Male (filmed as Born to Kill), Theodore Strauss' rural noir Moonrise and Edna Sherry's spectacular Sudden Fear, adapted as an Oscar-nominated film starring Joan Crawford.
I'm pleased with this book and hope my readers will take a look. If it does well enough, a collection of my vintage true crime essays (a score of those) will follow. And then lastly, I hope, essays on classic crime fiction, which is where I started.
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| Sudden Fear |




What a nice surprise...it'll be great to have your essays in book format. You're a sharp yet sensitive critic.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much! Yeah I wanted to get my essays and article preserved in some form. I have written so much on true crime and crime fiction these last fifteen years or so. I have no idea who the goodreads reviewer was but was pleased this person got the merit of the book and the "cranky" thing was funny. I looked back over some of the pieces and thought, lol, fair cop. I can get pretty impassioned sometimes.
DeleteCongratulations! A pleasure to see another book from you. I'll admit that I've read most of these while binging through your blog and CrimeReads essays. ;) But I'll keep this collection in mind. Steven Steinbock reviewed it for the latest issue of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine too.
ReplyDeleteOh that's nice about EQMM. (I hope.) A lot of those pieces have been expanded and revised and there are others that never appeared at Crimereads or the blog.
DeleteAh here it is online, Steven's piece, thanks.
DeleteCurtis Evans, Nothing Darker Than the Night: Essays on Hard-Boiled & Noir Crime Fiction, Stark House, $21.95. Historian, blogger, and mystery aficionado Curtis Evans (Masters of the “Humdrum” Mystery and Murder in the Closet) has assembled forty-eight essays from his The Passing Tramp blog and elsewhere—all dealing with classic noir and hardboiled authors and their works. I associate Evans mainly with traditional British crime fiction, but his insights on darker, predominantly American crime fiction are erudite and provide unique insights into the writers and their works. The book opens with six essays dealing with Dashiell Hammett and his work, then moves on to articles about Raymond Chandler, Ross Macdonald, Cornell Woolrich, Fredric Brown, Patricia Highsmith, Margaret Millar, and many others.
That's why my intro to the book is nearly ten pages, I felt I needed to explain my evolution into noir and true crime. I think some people still don't realize how significant it has been. This book is about 175,000 words on the subject.
DeleteI see! Then I'll put this book higher on my list. I'm not a huge hardboiled or noir fan, but there's room for that to change; I have a Ross MacDonald on my shelf that I'm going to get to in a few weeks. And of course, I'm happy to read intelligent writing on any topic.
DeleteWhich one is it, the Macdonald? He was a fan of Agatha Christie and puzzle plotting. I'm not a great fan of his really late ones, which I find more meandering. I'm hoping there will be a true crime collection next, then a classic crime fiction one, there will be so much to choose from for that collection. The true crime one will be smaller, about 20 essays, including a essay that says something original about Agatha Christie and true crime.
DeleteThe book is Find a Victim. I didn't recognize the title but it sounds like an early one. And yes, I first heard about MacDonald from Barnard's A Talent to Deceive, and he sounded appealing.
DeleteLooking forward to that new collection, especially the Christie essay. :)
You know that's the about only earlier one I haven't read lol. I really liked The Ivory Grin and The Way Some People Die and The Galton Case and The Zebra-Striped Hearse among the early ones. The Chill is a favorite with a lot of people.
DeleteHah, just my luck! Oh well, perhaps you'll see the review when I post it. I've been interested in The Chill for some time, but the rest sound appealing too. I'll try to keep these in mind for the future, thank you. :)
DeleteI've reviewed Die and Galton on the blog. Ivory Grin was the book that turned my on to him. His later books get a little too much in late Sixties-Seventies therapy culture for me, very much of the times.
DeleteI'll check out you blog, btw, got the link:
ReplyDeletehttps://aperfectlockedroom.blogspot.com/
Thank you so much! I hope you find the reviews informative.
DeleteAnd thanks for pointing out your MacDonald reviews. I'm looking forward to digging into him, but I'm a sucker for the "murder in the past affects the present" trope, so I'm looking forward to seeing him use it again and again...and again.
You will!
DeleteIt's hard work commenting here these days. First I had to swap my browser or try and read the blog through a small letterbox size slit on my phone. So I moved from Google to Brave to be able to read the article, then I had to disable all the protection on Brave to leave a comment. Anyway, just bought the book and look forward to reading it especially around Frederic Brown. I really enjoy your books in a way that I don't enjoy most books about crime fiction.
ReplyDelete