Cem Gedikoglu Gedikoglu itibaren Gornja Konjuša, Sırbistan
This book has a great message about conflict, and the need for people to communicate in order to prevent misunderstandings. I loved the message from one of the main characters that anger leads to unintended consequences.
Getting a limited amount of time to write any story and receiving the rather measily salary of a penny per word don't seem like the perfect writing condictions for any writer who wants to be taken seriously. Still, a great deal of young writers would start off in the pulps during the 1920's through 40's, before becoming bigtime novel published authors. Both critically and publicly highly respected crimewriters like Raymond Chandler, Dashiel Hammett, James M. Cain and Erle Stanley Gardner started off in these magazines and proved that the word "pulp" comes from the low quality paper on which their stories were printed rather then the quality of the stories themselves. The vast collection of short stories and novellas contained in this phoneregister sized book show the very best of pre-WW2 tales of passion, crime and revenge. Subtle might not always apply best to these stories, yet the very basics of great storytelling are found within each of them. Heroes, villians, love, death and redemption are strong recurring themes and it's remarkable how well these stories have stood the test of time. Chandler's 'Red Wind' is as strong as it was when first published in 1938. The very same can be said of Leslie T. White's subtlely titled 'The City of Hell!' or Woolrich's highly enjoyable 'The Dilemma with the Dead Lady'. These were writers with huge literary potential and their bright futures shine through in these tales. This is crimewriting pur sang. Anybody who enjoyed classic tales of crime like 'The Big Sleep', 'The Maltese Falcon' or 'The Postman Always Rings Twice' and wants to return to the very source of it all - or anyone who's new to this classic genre, because this is the perfect place to start off - should get their mitts on the 'Big Book of Pulps'.