Silent as the Grave, publisher Centipede's latest edition of Cornell Woolrich short fiction, is available now. I wrote a substantial introduction for this volume and was able to get a few particular favorite stories in here, including "Dime a Dance" and "Two Fellows in a Furnished Room." Another one I particularly love, "Mystery in Room 913, "aka "The Room with Something Wrong," was not able to be included on account of space limitation, but it will be in the next volume.
This collection opens with Woolrich's autobiographical essay "Even God Felt the Depression" and my intro is title "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime Detective?," so you will get the theme of the collection. I thought it might be nice for a change to place analytical emphasis on something other than the question of the author's sexuality.
I'm hoping the next volume of Woolrich short crime fiction from Centipede will take not so long as this one did (three years). I ain't getting any younger! In the meantime, here are some reflections from me on some of my recent Cornell Woolrich short fiction reads (and rereads).
Two of these tales, the short story "Humming Bird Goes Home" (Pocket Detective, March 1937) and the novelette "If I Should Die Before I Wake" (Detective Fiction Weekly, July 1937), in 1952 were made into films by Argentinian director Carlos Hugo Christensen, the former as a duo with an adaptation (more like an amplification) of Woolrich's short story "Somebody on the Phone" in the film Never Open the Door.
"Phone" is really more of a sketch or anecdote tale with a kicker of an original ending that appeared in at least one Alfred Hitchcock Presents episode, so the film version must have amplified it considerably. However there is enough in "Humming Bird" and certainly "Wake" to make longer films without having to add a lot of new material.
"Feelin' tomorrow like I do today
If I'm Feelin' tomorrow like I do today
I'll pack my trunk and make my getaway."
--"St. Louis Blues"
"Five years was a long time to be alone in the dark."
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| Never Open That Door |
"Humming Bird Comes Home"--in the Bluebeard's Seventh Wife collection the "the" is dropped--is about a vicious city gangster, nicknamed "Humming Bird" because on a job he always hums St. Louis Blues, who returns home to his blind mother in the countryside to hide out after a deadly heist. It is, I think, one of Woolrich's most successful and moving crime tales.
It's only about 4500 words or less and really has only four characters of any significance (two leads and two supporting, as it were) but it manages to generate some considerable excitement in its depiction of the final confrontation between mother and son, and it has a memorable conclusion. Inevitably one uses a word like poignant.
As an aside, I simply must quote another great moment in misguided homophobic Francis Nevins Cornell Woolrich literary criticism here. Nevins, naturally enough, sees this tale, which he terms "haunting," as all about the author's supposed status as a "self-hating homosexual," asking rhetorically:
Are we to see the gangster son as a stand-in for Woolrich himself, giving form to the self-contempt that sprang from his homosexuality and physical weakness and his career in the lowly pulps, verbalizing his fear that his beloved mother was ashamed of him?
To which I say: Oh, please, girl! I don't know that his mother minded at all about Cornell making his mom his best friend, as it were. ("A man's best friend is his mother," to quote Norman Bates.) She seems to have liked having him dependent on her and she wasn't ashamed of him in later years; to the contrary, she adored him. Even if Cornell had been gay and the two of them had ever discussed his sexuality together, which really doesn't seem very likely, why would Woolrich liken being gay unto being a vicious killer? It's only in Nevins-land, where homosexuality is one of the most benighted states of being on this earth, that that these comparison makes sense.
"Here, little girl, you want some candy?"
"Next day Millie finally broke her record. She didn't come to school all day....We never saw Millie again."
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| If I Should Die Before I Wake |
"If I Should Die Before I Wake" is one of of Woolrich's classic crime tales--one of his very best--with a child protagonist. All of his life Woolrich identified with the weak and powerless, and frequently few are more weak and powerless than a young child. Bullied as a "gringo" adolescent in Mexico, where he had been left in his father's negligent company by his feckless, self-centered mother, Woolrich had a keen perception of the vulnerabilities of youth.
"Wake" is narrated by "going on twelve" Tommy Lee--not the future Motley Crue drummer, of course--and what a tale he has to tell us. It starts in flashback, back when Tommy was nine, and a girl classmate of his, Mollie Adams, suddenly disappeared one day.
Woolrich tells this story obliquely, through Tommy's naive perception, so we realize what he doesn't, which is that Mollie was murdered, and quite horrifically, by a strange man who tempted her to a house in the woods with the lure of lollipops--the plump, delicious, luxurious nickel kind, not the cheap, spindly, one-cent dumdum.
Tommy gives a charming, albeit poignant, depiction of how tempting lollipops were to the kinder in those days. The treats had only been invented in 1908, so they would have been brand new when Woolrich, born in 1903, was growing up. "By the 1920s and 1930s," Sparkosweets tells us, "lollipop brands we recognize today were coming to life," including the Tootsie Pop and the fabulous All-Day Sucker.
The strange man who had befriended Mollie seemingly has stashed away for kids--little girls, specifically--a veritable smorgasbord of suckers. First he gives ingenuous little Mollie her a lime lollipop, then an orange, and the next day he temptingly promises her a cinnamon one.
Mollie generously shares the first two pops with Tommy--they lick them in turn, which I admit kind of disgusted me--and Tommy boyishly pronounces each one successively his favorite flavor. One really gets to feel how pieces of sugar candy could be such a big deal to these poor Depression-era kiddos. But Tommy never gets his tantalizing taste of cinnamon because Mollie vanishes.
When I was growing up as a child in Alabama in the Seventies, we were allowed to wander on our bikes all over our extended neighborhood subdivision, full of woods and hills and a lake, our parents never having any idea where we actually were. Pretty much, in my case, from the age of about seven as I recollect. But of course we were always told "Don't talk to strangers" and "Don't take a ride in a strange car." A stranger, however ingratiating and persuasive, might well be worse even than some fairy tale monster, his geniality disguising his desire to do bad things to you for some reason.
My Dad in the late Thirties around the age of nine was allowed to take a bus alone to a neighboring town to see Son of Frankenstein. He missed the bus on the way back and to reach his homeward destination had to walk several miles in the dark, like Tommy Lee in this story, absolutely terrified of what might be lurking in the shadows.
I didn't have much of a thing for lollipops per se, though I was crazy for something called "clear toy pops" from a mall store in Birmingham and then quite liked Tootsie Pops, on account of the famous chewy center. But I never accepted candy from strangers, unless it was on Halloween. Then we were told to look out for razor blades.
Anyway, I think you can get the sort of Ray Bradbury-ish whimsy here, but it's coupled with real horror. It becomes pretty clear that Mollie was not just sexually molested and murdered but also mutilated after death. This is all presented obliquely--and sexual assault is never referred to directly--but it seems pretty bold for a Thirties pulp tale.
Well, Mollie and the mysterious candy man are forgotten and the killer is never caught, but three years after her death Tommy has made another little girl friend, Jeanie Myers, and Tommy learns one day that a strange man has been giving her lollipops--lime and orange, with the promise of cinnamon....*
*(Cinnamon, incidentally, has long had a sexual, aphrodisiacal connotation and I imagine Woolrich was aware of this.)
Then, you guessed it, Jeanie disappears and when childish Tommy finally connects the dots in his head no one--not his grouchy, middle-aged, spinsterish teacher nor his mother nor his stern police detective dad--will listen to the story he tries to tell them. So it's up to him to find the house of lollipops in the wood--like the witch's gingerbread house in Hansel and Gretel--and rescue Jeanie, who he is sure is now in the clutches of the sinister lollipop man....
"A clue is any little thing that don't seem to belong where it's found."
I'm not surprised "Wake" was filmed; it's one of Woolrich's best tales. In America in 1951 the 1931 child murderer film M was remade, with David Wayne, television's future Inspector Queen (aka Ellery's Dad) taking the notorious Peter Lorre role, but apparently it took Argentina bravely to take on Woolrich's child molester and murderer tale.
Two years after "Wake" was originally published in 1937, Woolrich in Black Mask published a variation on it, "Through a Dead Man's Eye." It's a very good story too, but it's almost the same story, shorn of the chivalrous element (no little girls in grave peril). There's a 12-year-old boy, his 35-year-old police detective father, a cute childish bit ("swapping" instead of lollipops) and, yes, peril at a lonely house out in the country.
The boy in this tale, Frankie--a plucky reader of Black Mask, where the story was published (nice meta touch, that)--is actually a much better detective than Tommy, who merely follows, rather implausibly, a chalk trail left by the missing girl.
Honestly, Tommy, while basically goodhearted, isn't exactly aces in the brains department, even considering his age. Frankie, on the other hand, is a bold young chap, at one point shouting at the murderer, whom he is facing down all alone in a night dark house: "You can kill me like you did him, but I'm not afraid of you. My pop and every cop in the city'll get even on you, you dirty murderer, you. You stink!" Quite a show of bravado, if a bit unlikely.
"Eye" is a perfectly valid tale and quite good in its own right, but its imitativeness is too readily apparent. It also lacks the fantastical and genuinely horrific elements in "Wake," which not inappositely quotes this plaintive, rather morbid children's prayer, which sadly so many cruelly mistreated children over the centuries have dearly needed:
Now I lay me down to sleep,
I pray the Lord my soul to keep.
If I should die before I wake,
I pray the Lord my soul to take.

















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