Into the night

Cornell Woolrich, 1903-1968

Book - 2024

"An innocent woman lies dead in the street, felled by a stray bullet. Now it’s up to the woman who killed her to pick up the threads of her victim’s life, carrying out a mission of vengeance on her behalf against the man she loved and lost—and the nightclub-singing femme fatale who drove them apart."--

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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Noir fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Published
London : Titan Books 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Cornell Woolrich, 1903-1968 (author)
Other Authors
Lawrence Block (author)
Edition
First Hard Case Crime edition. Special revised edition
Item Description
"Begun in the last years of his life by noir master Cornell Woolrich, the haunted genius responsible for such classics as Rear Window and The Bride Wore Black, and completed decades later by MWA Grand Master Lawrence Block, Into the night—available for the first time in more than 35 years, and for the first time ever in this special revised edition, featuring an all-new ending—is a posthumous collaboration that extends beyond the grave, echoing the book’s own story of the living taking on and completing the unfinished work of the dead."--Publisher.
Physical Description
238 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781803366999
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Hard Case resurrects a dark tale that noir master Woolrich (1903--1968) left unfinished at his death, was completed 20 years afterward by Block, but has been unavailable for more than 35 years. Driven to the edge of suicide, Madeline Chalmers miraculously finds herself still alive when her late father's gun, which she's raised to her head, clicks on an empty chamber--then, jubilant, places it emphatically on a table and hears it fire, killing Starr Bartlett, a neighbor she's never met who happens to be passing on the city street outside. Consumed with guilt and determined to "live for Starr," Madeline worms her way into the confidence of Starr's mother, Charlotte, and learns everything she can about the young woman she killed. She decides to take revenge on singer Adelaide Nelson, who'd told Starr a terrible secret about her husband, Vick Herrick, that had abruptly ended Starr's marriage after less than two years--and, even more improbably, to track down Vick in order to kill him. The rest of the story, taking its cue from earlier Woolrich novels from The Bride Wore Black to Rendezvous in Black, follows Madeline as she works assiduously to visit doom on Adelaide, the other woman, and Vick himself. Although there's no editorial apparatus helping readers determine what Block added to what Woolrich had written, their two voices blend seamlessly in a claustrophobic pulp nightmare until the final sequence, which manages to be both more shocking and more softhearted than the endings of any of Woolrich's other novels. Readers will have no trouble figuring out why the author had trouble completing this one. Warts and all, this is required reading for fans of vintage noir. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.