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Black Mask 4--The Parrot That Wouldn't Talk

And Other Crime Fiction from the Legendary Magazine

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
From its launch in 1920 until its demise in 1951, the magazine Black Mask published pulp crime fiction. The first hard-boiled detective stories appeared on its pages. Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, Erle Stanley Gardner and John D. MacDonald got their start in Black Mask. The urban crime stories that appeared in Black Mask helped to shape American culture. Modern computer games, films, and television are rooted in the fiction popularized by "the seminal and venerated mystery pulp magazine" (Booklist).Otto Penzler selected and wrote introductions to the best of the best, the darkest of these dark, vintage stories for the collection The Black Lizard Big Book of Black Mask Stories. Now that collection is available for the first time on audio. Includes: "Bracelets" by Katherine Brocklebank; read by Carol Monda"Diamonds Mean Death" by Thomas Walsh; read by Alan Sklar"Murder in the Ring" by Raoul Whitfield; read by Jeff Gurner"The Parrot That Wouldn't Talk" by Walter C. Brown; read by Pete Larkin"Let the Dead Alone" by Merle Constiner; read by Oliver Wyman
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    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2012

      This fourth installment of an eventual ten-volume series is a solid follow-up to the initial releases. Along with Walter C. Brown's title story, this outing includes "Bracelets" by Katherine Brocklebank, the series' only female author, and Thomas Walsh's "Diamonds Mean Death." Raoul Whitfield's "Murder in the Ring" and Merle Constiner's "Let the Dead Alone" are the program's standouts. Tackling professional boxing and the crooked owners and promoters interested only in money, "Murder in the Ring" is as gritty a story as you'll ever hear. Narrator Jeff Gurner reads in a perfect clenched-teeth, take-no-crap voice that's nearly lethal. The story follows trainer Gus Monkly, whose big-and-dumb-as-a-slab-of-meat fighter has a title shot. Gus's old gangster pals try to chisel in on the action, but he won't have it. "Dead Alone" finds Atlanta-based investigator Luther McGavick heading to the sticks to unravel a murder with roots 20-years' deep. Narrator Oliver Wyman's reading is as laid-back as a lazy Southern afternoon. VERDICT These stories are of their politically incorrect times and contain ethnic slurs that may offend. Nonetheless, another two-fisted dream fest for hard-boiled fiction lovers.--Mike Rogers, Library Journal

      Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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