Born George Hopley-Woolrich, Cornell Woolrich (1903–1968) is the pen name most often employed by one of America’s best crime and noir writers, whose other pseudonyms included George Hopley and William Irish, the moniker under which Waltz into Darkness was first published. His novels were among the first to employ the atmosphere, outlook, and impending sense of doom that came to be characterized as noir, and inspired some of the most famous films of the period, including Alfred Hitchcock’s Rear Window, Francois Truffaut’s The Bride Wore Black, The Phantom Lady, and celebrated B-movies such as The Leopard Man and Black Angel. Wallace Stroby is an award-winning journalist and the author of eight novels, including Some Die Nameless, published in 2018, and four titles featuring professional thief Crissa Stone. A native of Long Branch, N.J., he's a lifelong resident of the Jersey Shore.
"A richly embroidered tapestry . . . this is classic noir well
worthy of a revival"
*Booklist*
"Unrelentingly grim . . . This haunting downer is an excellent
addition to the American Mystery Classics series"
*Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)*
"Of all the authors whose forte was turning our spines to columns
of ice, the supreme master of the art, the Hitchcock of the written
word, was Cornell Woolrich."
"The writing of Cornell Woolrich goes through you like a shriek in
the night."
*Dorothy Salisbury Davis, MWA Grandmaster*
"One of the great masters."
*Ellery Queen*
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