Saturday, September 22, 2007

Fright -- Cornell Woolrich


I’ve been a Cornell Woolrich fan ever since I encountered reprints of some of his pulp stories in EQMM and THE SAINT MYSTERY MAGAZINE during the Sixties. I’ve read many of his short stories and novelettes and enjoyed them all, but only a couple of his novels, the justly-famous THE BRIDE WORE BLACK and DEADLINE AT DAWN, which I also enjoyed. Until now. I’ve just read the recent Hard Case Crime reprint of Woolrich’s novel FRIGHT, originally published in 1950 under the pseudonym George Hopley.

FRIGHT is one of Woolrich’s historical suspense novels, set in 1915 and 1916, and he does a fine job of recreating that era without going overboard on the historical details. The very strait-laced attitudes of the time period play a part in the plot, too, helping to drive the protagonist to do the things he does. It’s difficult to go into detail about that plot without giving away too much, but let’s just say there’s blackmail, murder, paranoia, more murder, doomed love, more murder, and tragedy galore. Pretty much the essence of noir, in other words, and all told in smooth, if slightly old-fashioned prose that keeps the reader turning the pages. Yes, the coincidences and lapses in logic that Woolrich is notorious for can be found in FRIGHT, but as usual the writing and the raw emotional torment he inflicts on his characters more than make up for any flaws. There are passages in this book that I found genuinely disturbing, and I’m usually not easily disturbed by fiction. FRIGHT is one of the bleakest books I’ve read in a long time.

It’s also one of the best, and I have a feeling that it just might start me on a Woolrich binge. I don’t know if my heart can take it, though.

4 comments:

pattinase (abbott) said...

Highly recommend I Married a Dead Man if you haven't read that. It was terrific. I'm reading Phantom Lady now.

Charles Gramlich said...

That's a helluva cover. Makes me want to get it right there.

N said...

My knowledge of Woolrich is the exact opposite of yours: I've read few of his short stories but most of his noir novels.

_I Married a Dead Man_ is excellent. I especially like _Deadline at Dawn_ and _Waltz into Darkness_. But I haven't found one yet that I didn't enjoy.

Viagra Online said...

It is very difficult to recreate a work set in a past time without making obvious references to historical details. If this author achieved that, it means that it is worth to read it. Buy Viagra Viagra