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Renaissance Literary & Talent
The Bride Wore Black
The Bride Wore Black
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This novel is not to be missed by crime fiction, suspense thriller and Woolrich fans. It was the first suspense novel that Woolrich wrote following his career as a pulp fiction author. Upon publication, the Kansas City Star said it was "a delicacy for epicures" while the Hartford Courant stated it was "the most exciting experience in crime fiction this reviewer has had in some considerable time." Cleveland's Plain Dealer called it "fresh and tremendously effective." The Baltimore Sun was even more effusive with "If it doesn't freeeze your blood, then you are immune to literary chills."
The story is about a woman who is obsessed with a deadly personal mission. She selects her victims with care. She dispatches them with cunningness and then she vanishes as quickly as she surfaces - out of nowhere. No one knows her identity or why she appears to undertake such ghastly deeds. We only know she has terrifying beauty and each time she appears a man dies horribly!
In the spring of 1967 French filmmaker Francois Truffaut set out to create a small-scale, modestly budgeted film titled "La Mariée etait en noir", which was conceived as a noir B-movie and based on the 1940 detective novel "The Bride Wore Black" which had been published under Woolrich's pen name, William Irish. To date, almost all Woolrich stories are published in France under William Irish.
Besides serving as an idealized project for the actress he had in mind, "The Bride Wore Black" (released in 1968) was also partly a homage to Hitchcock, which provides another clear reason why he choose a Cornell Woolrich novel to adapt to the screen. Hitchcock, of course, had based his 1954 thriller "Rear Window" on Woolrich's short story "It Had to Be Murder."
Truffaut was a great admirer of the crime novels of Woolrich and he once stated in an article, "I see Irish...as the artist of fear, terror and sleepless nights...The plot usually centers around an ordinary man or woman with whom the reader can easily identify. But Irish's heroes never do things by halves and no unforeseen event can stop their march toward love and death. His world frequently also includes amnesia and mental problems, and his hypervulnerable, hypersensitive fictional characters are at the opposite extreme from the usual American hero. Just as there is a touch of [Raymond] Queneau in David Goodis, there is a touch of [Jean] Cocteau in Irish, and it is this combination of American violence and poetic French prose that I find moving."
This story, published in 1940 is one of the six novels in Woolrich's Black Series which also includes "Rendezvous in Black", "The Black Path of Fear", "The Black Angel", "Black Curtain" and "Black Alibi".
The story is about a woman who is obsessed with a deadly personal mission. She selects her victims with care. She dispatches them with cunningness and then she vanishes as quickly as she surfaces - out of nowhere. No one knows her identity or why she appears to undertake such ghastly deeds. We only know she has terrifying beauty and each time she appears a man dies horribly!
In the spring of 1967 French filmmaker Francois Truffaut set out to create a small-scale, modestly budgeted film titled "La Mariée etait en noir", which was conceived as a noir B-movie and based on the 1940 detective novel "The Bride Wore Black" which had been published under Woolrich's pen name, William Irish. To date, almost all Woolrich stories are published in France under William Irish.
Besides serving as an idealized project for the actress he had in mind, "The Bride Wore Black" (released in 1968) was also partly a homage to Hitchcock, which provides another clear reason why he choose a Cornell Woolrich novel to adapt to the screen. Hitchcock, of course, had based his 1954 thriller "Rear Window" on Woolrich's short story "It Had to Be Murder."
Truffaut was a great admirer of the crime novels of Woolrich and he once stated in an article, "I see Irish...as the artist of fear, terror and sleepless nights...The plot usually centers around an ordinary man or woman with whom the reader can easily identify. But Irish's heroes never do things by halves and no unforeseen event can stop their march toward love and death. His world frequently also includes amnesia and mental problems, and his hypervulnerable, hypersensitive fictional characters are at the opposite extreme from the usual American hero. Just as there is a touch of [Raymond] Queneau in David Goodis, there is a touch of [Jean] Cocteau in Irish, and it is this combination of American violence and poetic French prose that I find moving."
This story, published in 1940 is one of the six novels in Woolrich's Black Series which also includes "Rendezvous in Black", "The Black Path of Fear", "The Black Angel", "Black Curtain" and "Black Alibi".
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