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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
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English
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BLACK ALIBI

Cornell Woolrich

Black Alibi, expanded from an earlier short story entitled " The Street of Jungle Death," pits a rising singer against the dangers of an escaped jungle cat in the South American city of Ciudad Real, a beast who may or may not be responsible for the brutal deaths that keep occurring around the city.
The Black Series contains six individual books: Black Alibi, The Black Angel, The Bride Wore Black, The Black Curtain,The Black Path of Fear and Rendezvous in Black. The first three books contain distinct female protagonists that brave the dark worlds of Black Alibi, The Black Angel and The Bride Wore Black.

The fiction of Cornell Woolrich is rife with the kind of psychological tension audiences have always craved. He has been called the foremost suspense writer of the 20th century, the Edgar Allan Poe of his era. He was a prolific writer in the crime, horror, noir and mystery genres, publishing over two dozen novels and over two hundred short stories and novellas along with those that had been unpublished at the time of his death in 1968. One of the most famous film adaptations aside from Rear Window was directed by François Truffaut, whose French new wave interpretation of The Bride Wore Black, entitled La Mariee Etait en Noir, premiered in 1968, the year Woolrich died. Dozens of his short stories were adapted for popular network radio and television show episodes including Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Suspense and Molle Mystery Theatre.
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Published 2018-12-20 by Renaissance Literary & Talent

Comments

Critical sobriety is out of the question so long as this master of terror-in-the-commonplace exerts his spell.

Along with Raymond Chandler, Cornell Woolrich practically invented the genre of noir.

He was the greatest writer of suspense fiction that ever lived.

Revered by mystery fans, students of film noir, and lovers of hardboiled crime fiction and detective novels, Cornell Woolrich remains almost unknown to the general reading public. His obscurity persists even though his Hollywood pedigree rivals or exceeds that of Cain, Chandler, and Hammett. What Woolrich lacked in literary prestige he made up for in suspense. Nobody was better at it.