Here's a review I ran a few years ago. I'm re-running because last night I picked the collection up again and read two hundred pages before turning off the light and going to sleep.
Thursday, July 6, 2006
Evan Hunter, Ed McBain and Learning to Kill.
A year or so before he was diagnosed with cancer, Evan Hunter seemed intrigued by my idea of doing a massive collection of some of his earliest tales. Intrigued enough, anyway, to have somebody make copies of sixty-some stories and send them to me.
The stories covered virtually every pulp genre – crime, western, adventure, science fiction, horror – done under seven or eight pen-names.
We had everything ready to go when Evan had second thoughts. There were just too many of these stories he didn’t want to resurrect.
In Learning to Kill (Harcourt, $25) Evan and Otto Penzler have brought together the very best of those early stories in a stunner of a hardback package. This shows you how early Hunter was a master of both form and character.
The stories are divided into categories: Kids, Women in Jeopardy, Private Eyes, Cops and Robbers, Innocent Bystanders, Loose Cannons, Gangs.
He wrote well across the entire spectrum of crime and suspense stories, so well in fact that several of these stories are true classics that will be reprinted for decades to come – “First Offense,” “Runaway,” “The Merry Merry Christmas,” “On The Sidewalk Bleeding” and “The Last Spin” aren’t just for readers. They’re also for writers. These particular stories yield great insights into use of voice, plot, character and milieu. I could teach a full semester of writing using just those stories I mentioned.
Hunter/McBain was one of the two or three best and most influential crime writers of his generation. Otto Penzler has paid tribute to that fact with this hefty and important contribution that belongs in every mystery collection.
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2 comments:
I saw your comment on Bill Crider's blog, and was pleased to see a name I recognized. Love your work, and happy to follow you on blogspot!
I discovered Ed McBain (Evan Hunter) by chance while I was buying a couple of westerns by Bob Randisi last week. Since then I have been reading about McBain on websites and blogs. Your post has inspired me to run down to the bookstore and pick up the three McBains that caught my eye. Fortunately (and sadly), most Indian readers would have never heard of McBain which will ensure that the books are still there. Thanks for re-running the review.
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