Darkness at Dawn: Early Suspense Classics

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Southern Illinois University Press, 1985 - Fiction - 327 pages

From 1934until his death in 1968, Cor­nell Woolrich wrote dozens of "tales of love and despair" that chill the heart and display his mastery of the genre he all but created. In a title for a story he never wrote, he captured the essence of his tortured world: "First you dream, then you die."

Introducing these 13 tales, Nevins de­scribes the dark world Woolrich so viv­idly creates. "The dominant reality in his world is the Depression, and Woolrich has no peers when it comes to describing a frightened little guy in a tiny apartment with no money, no job, a hun­gry wife and children, and anxiety eating him like a cancer. If a Woolrich protago­nist is in love, the beloved is likely to vanish in such a way that he not only can't find her but can't convince anyone she ever existed."

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Contents

Dentists Chair
1
Walls That Hear You
19
Preview of Death
44
Copyright

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About the author (1985)

Frances M. Nevins, Jr., a Professor at the St. Louis University School of Law, has received the Mystery Writers of America Edgar Allen Poe Award for criticism. Martin H. Greenberg is on the fac­ulty of the College of Community Ser­vices at the University of Wisconsin, Green Bay. Martin Harry Greenberg (March 1, 1941 - June 25, 2011) was an American academic and speculative fiction anthologist. In all, he compiled 1,298 anthologies. He founded Tekno Books, a packager of more than 2000 published books; he was also a co-founder of the Sci-Fi Channel. Some of his anthologies included: Past Imperfect (2001), Once Upon a Galaxy (2002) and Sirius: The Dog Star (2004).

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