Dorothy B. Hughes (1904–1993) was born Dorothy Belle
Flanagan in Kansas City, Missouri. She received a bachelor’s degree
in journalism from the University of Missouri and worked as a
reporter before attending graduate school at the University of New
Mexico and Columbia University. In 1931 her collection of poetry,
Dark Certainty, was selected for inclusion in the Yale Series of
Younger Poets. She was married in 1932 and would not publish her
next book, the hard-boiled novel The So Blue Marble, until 1940.
Between 1940 and 1952 Hughes published twelve more novels,
including The Cross-Eyed Bear and Ride the Pink Horse. For four
decades she was the crime-fiction reviewer for The Albuquerque
Tribune, earning an Edgar Award for Outstanding Mystery Criticism
from the Mystery Writers of America in 1951. The Expendable Man,
published in 1963, was her last novel. “I simply hadn’t the
tranquility required to write” and care for a family, she later
said. In 1978, however, she published The Case of the Real Perry
Mason, a critical biography of Erle Stanley Gardner, and that same
year she was recognized as a Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of
America.
Megan Abbott is the author of eight novels, including The
Fever, You Will Know Me, and the Edgar Award–winning Queenpin. She
is also the author of The Street Was Mine, a study of hard-boiled
fiction and film noir and the editor of A Hell of a Woman, a female
crime fiction anthology. She received a Ph.D. in literature from
New York University.
"It’s something of an axiom that good novels make bad movies.
But one of my favorite exceptions is In a Lonely Place....the novel
is more groundbreaking than the film and that Hughes, who died in
1993, belongs in the crime-writing pantheon with male icons like
Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler….In a Lonely Place is a
gripping story, but Hughes was too talented, ambitious, and
grounded to play it merely for suspense….as Megan Abbott points out
in her splendidly perceptive afterword, Hughes takes the gender
clichés of noir and turns them on their head." —John Powers,
NPR
“In a Lonely Place blasted my mind open to new ways of
reading.” —Sarah Weinman, Los Angeles Review of Books
“To try and re-create the thrill of World War II combat, Dix Steele
takes to wandering the streets of Los Angeles at night—and
committing serial murder. Hughes wastes little time hiding her
killer’s identity, instead building a gripping noir in anticipation
of his inevitable capture.” —Elise Hannum, The Atlantic The Great
American Novels of the Past 100 Years
“Crime was never Hughes’s interest, evil was, and to be evil, for
her, is to be intolerant of others...With her poetic powers of
description, she makes that evil a sickness in the mind and a
landscape to be surveyed.” —Christine Smallwood, The New
Yorker’s Page-Turner Blog
“A tour de force laying open the mind and motives of a killer with
extraordinary empathy. The structure is flawless, and the scenes of
postwar LA have an immediacy that puts Chandler to shame. No wonder
Hughes is the master we keep turning to.”
—Sara Paretsky
“If you wake up in the middle of the night screaming with terror,
don’t say we didn’t warn you.” —The New York Times Book Review
"Bringing ...[Dorothy B. Hughes] back is no act of nostalgia. It is
a gateway through which we might access her particular view of that
road between our glittering versions of American life and the
darker reality that waits at the end of the ride." —Walter
Mosley
“This lady is the queen of noir, and In a Lonely Place is her
crown.”—Laurie R. King, author of the Mary Russell novels
“A superb novel by one of crime fiction’s finest writers of
psychological suspense. What a pleasure it is to see this tale in
print once again!”—Marcia Muller, author of the Sharon McCone
novels
"Lock your doors and windows before you start reading Dorothy B.
Hughes superbly written In a Lonely Place, then prepare to lose
some sleep. This spine-tingling classics rings chillingly true."
—Jan Burke, author of the Irene Kelly series
"Dorothy B. Hughes was such a mistress of dark suspense that I
always had to read the end of her books first to keep from biting
off all my fingernails." —Margaret Maron, author of Three-Day
Town
"In my rookie days Dorothy B. Hughes was the writer I most wanted
to emulate. To me she had the sense of place and the narrative
drive of Eric Ambler-tautened by a woman's edginess. To me she
still imparts that delightful quiver." —Dorothy Salisbury Davis,
author of In the Still of the Night
"Dorothy B. Hughes was in a class of her own. To be a female writer
of hard-boiled fiction back in the 1940s was unusual enough, but to
write a first-person narrative form the viewpoint of a male serial
killer was breaking new ground by anybody's standards." —Max
Déecharné author of Hardboiled Hollywood: The Origins of Great
Crime Films
"In Hughes's novel, however, there is not a drop of romanticism,
not a touch of fantasy. It is a dark, cold gem of a book, a gem
without a flicker of heat or light. One that cuts to the touch."
—Megan Abbott, author of Dare Me and The Fever
"Hughes was a wonderful writer. There is nothing overdone with her
dialog and descriptions. Dix moving through the night, stalking his
victims, is suspenseful and chilling but written quietly and
creating an atmosphere that makes the reader feel the night and fog
about them as they read." —Mack Captures Crime blog
"Dorothy B. Hughes writes literary hardboiled noir taking on and
matching Chandler, Hammett, Cain and Thompson at their game." —Rob
Kitchlin, author of The White Gallows
“A fascinating example of a genre novel where the author is doing
what she needs to do to be a part of the genre while totally
turning genre tropes upside down. . . [In a Lonely Place] is a
refusal to turn [characters] into classic femme fatales. . .
Exhilarating.” —Backlisted Podcast
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