- Mike Nevins at Mystery File on Mickey Spillane and I, the Jury: http://t.co/FEYxCG43eb 2013-03-02
- Luc Sante’s introduction to The Seventh, The Handle, and The Rare Coin Score: http://t.co/7QzYYa5pxP 2013-03-02
- Lawrence Block’s Catch and Release, from Hard Case Crime and Subterranean Press, now available for pre-order: http://t.co/TxidqhBtUJ 2013-03-02
- Amber Keller at Criminal Element–Still Stalking Kolchak: http://t.co/18k4bCBvD0 2013-03-02
- Richard Stark’s Parker limited edition portfolio from IDW Publishing: http://t.co/lvPE9kTzwo 2013-03-02
- New blog post: News for week ending 2013-03-01 (open thread) http://t.co/rXgdqKK2Rw 2013-03-03
- A short history of Gold Medal Books: http://t.co/WHZr2tvNqq 2013-03-04
- Lost Classics of Noir: The Blonde on the Street Corner by David Goodis
http://t.co/Yf9VcegGmM 2013-03-07 - A review of Donald Westlake’s 361 at Pornokitsch: http://t.co/EVGu3P3xnc 2013-03-07
- Brief review of obscure ’39 comedy, Husband, Wife, & Friend. 2nd to last paragraph is twist ending I never saw coming http://bit.ly/Zuvoo3 2013-03-08
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The link to Husband, Wife, & Friend just goes to something about Barack Obama.
What? That’s bizarre, especially as I don’t remember even seeing that, much less copying and pasting the link.
Corrected.
It works now.
It seems strange that a screwball comedy would be based on a James Cain story. Either the studio made a loose adaption or Cain wrote more types of stories than I know of. The later is possible, Poe wrote a lot of humorous pieces that are mostly forgotten for his macabre works. (That was mostly because he was better at writing macabre stories than humorous ones.) You get a copy of the complete works of Edgar Allan Poe you’d see a ton of stories that aren’t immediately recognizable.