Authors: Pierre Boileau
Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac met at an awards dinner. Narcejac was receiving the 1948
Prix
du roman d’aventures
, which is awarded for the best detective novel of the year in France, and which Boileau had already won ten years earlier. They got talking, and several years later, their first collaboration was published.
They wanted to try and develop a new type of crime fiction. They were tired of British who-dunnits and hardboiled American private eyes—they wanted to create a new style of mystery with the victim at its centre, albeit a victim who might not know they are a victim, and might even be a murderer! They went on to form an extraordinarily successful partnership, with Boileau supplying the fiendish, almost fantastical plots, and Narcejac the crucial characterization. As Boileau himself said, Narcejac “humanizes the most extraordinary situations… He turns a witch or a ghost into someone you might meet on the Metro”. And, much like Hitchcock’s bomb that must never explode, Boileau-Narcejac had one golden rule: the protagonist can never wake up from their nightmare.
Their first collaboration,
She Who Was No More
, appeared in 1952 and, so the story goes, Alfred Hitchcock was desperate to acquire the film rights. He was beaten to it by Henri-Georges Clouzot but moved heaven and earth to get the rights to
Vertigo
when it was published in 1954. Little did he know that Boileau-Narcejac had actually written it with him in mind!
If you enjoyed
Vertigo
’s hallucinatory plot and relentless tension, then you should take a look at
She Who Was No More
—Boileau-Narcejac’s first book, and a classic thriller in the same mind-bending vein as
Vertigo
.
If you feel like something a little different, why not get hold of a copy of Soji Shimada’s
The Tokyo Zodiac Murders
, the strangely brilliant, and utterly gruesome, locked-room puzzle that kicked off the Japanese
honkaku
“logic mystery” tradition?
The Murdered Banker
The Mystery of the Three Orchids
The Hotel of the Three Roses
The Disappearance of Signora Giulia
Vertigo
She Who Was No More
I Was Jack Mortimer
Master of the Day of Judgment
Little Apple
St Peter’s Snow
The Tokyo Zodiac Murders
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THE BREAK
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BUTTERFLIES IN NOVEMBER
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Independent
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LAURENT SEKSIK
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BY BLOOD
ELLEN ULLMAN
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Daily Telegraph
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ERWIN MORTIER
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De Morgen
THE BRETHREN
ROBERT MERLE
‘A master of the historical novel’
Guardian
Pushkin Vertigo
71–75 Shelton Street
London, WC2H 9JQ
Original Text © by Éditions Denoël,
1954 (
D’entre les morts
)
Translation by Geoffrey Sainsbury
First published by Pushkin Vertigo in 2015
This ebook edition first pubished in 2015
ISBN 978 1 782271 39 0
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