Meet Me at the Morgue
By Ross Macdonald.
Published by Knopf
Doubleday Publishing Group.
First published 1953.
ISBN-10: 0307740773
ISBN-13: 9780307740779
Description:
“My favorite . . .
[Macdonald] is first among those novelists who raised the genre from its roots
in pulp fiction to serious literature.” – P.D. James, from Talking About
Detective Fiction.
“[The] American private
eye, immortalized by Hammett, refined by Chandler, brought to its zenith by Macdonald.”
– New York Times Book Review.
“Macdonald should not be
limited in audience to connoisseurs of mystery fiction. He is one of a handful of writers in the
genre whose worth and quality surpass the limitations of the form.” – Los
Angeles Times.
“Most mystery writers
merely write about crime. Ross Macdonald
writes about sin.” – The Atlantic.
“Without in the least
abating my admiration for Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, I should like
to venture the heretical suggestion that Ross Macdonald is a better novelist
than either of them.” – Anthony Boucher.
“[Macdonald] carried
form and style about as far as they would go, writing classic family tragedies
in the guise of private detective mysteries.” – The Guardian (London).
“[Ross Macdonald] gives
to the detective story that accent of class that the late Raymond Chandler
did.” – Chicago Tribune.
Somebody
in Pacific Point is guilty of a kidnapping, but what probation officer Howard
Cross wants to find most is innocence: in an ex-war hero who has taken a tough
manslaughter rap, in a wealthy woman with a heart full of secrets, and in a
blue-eyed beauty who has lost her way. The trouble is that the abduction has
already turned to murder, and the more Cross pries into the case the further he
slips into a pool of violence and evil. Somewhere in the California desert the
whole scheme may come down on the wrong man. Somewhere Cross is going to find
the last piece of a bloody puzzle – a mystery of blackmail, passion, and hidden
identities that might be better left unsolved.
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