The Cross-Eyed Bear Murders by Dorothy B. Hughes - ISBN: 9781471917271
Paperback
‘An author with a flair for terror’ The New Yorker.

The Cross-Eyed Bear Murders

$39.27

  • Paperback

    240 pages

  • Release Date

    14 April 2015

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Summary

Alone in New York City, Lizanne Steffasson comes face to face with reality when her dream of acting on Broadway collapses.

Now she just needs to pay her rent. So she answers an unusual ad in the paper, for ‘a beautiful girl. One not afraid to look on danger’s bright face’.

Lizanne is neither beautiful nor fearless, yet she is certainly about to look danger in the face. A New York estate lawyer wants her help to track down a young man who has vanished into the wilds o…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781471917271
ISBN-10:1471917274
Author:Dorothy B. Hughes
Publisher:The Murder Room
Imprint:The Murder Room
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:240
Release Date:14 April 2015
Weight:41g
Dimensions:198mm x 129mm
Series:Murder Room
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“The author has succeeded admirably.” –The New York Times “Hughes didn’t just pre-date Jim Thompson, she also pre-dated Patricia Highsmith, Ruth Rendell, and other so-called Masters of Psychological Suspense or Noir. And her writing style stands up to the test of time.” –Bookslut “Nobody but Dorothy Hughes can cast suspense into such an uncanny spell.” –San Francisco Chronicle

About The Author

Dorothy B. Hughes

Dorothy B. Hughes was an acclaimed crime novelist and literary critic, her style falling into the hard-boiled and noir genres of mystery writing. Born in Kansas City, she studied journalism at the University of Missouri, and her initial literary output consisted of collections of poetry. Hughes’ first mystery novel, The So Blue Marble, was published in 1940 and was hailed as the arrival of a great new talent in the field. Her writing proved to be both critically and commercially successful, and three of her novels - The Fallen Sparrow, Ride the Pink Horse and In a Lonely Place - were made into major films. Hughes’ taught, suspenseful detective novels are reminiscent of the work of Elisabeth Sanxay Holding and fellow The Murder Room author Margaret Millar. In 1951, Hughes was awarded an Edgar award for Outstanding Mystery Criticism and, in 1978, she received the Grand Master award from the Mystery Writers of America. She died in Oregon in 1993.

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