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W. R. Burnett (1899–1982)

Author of The Great Escape [1963 film]

73+ Works 2,054 Members 40 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by W. R. Burnett

The Great Escape [1963 film] (1963) — Screenwriter — 670 copies, 10 reviews
The Asphalt Jungle (1949) 301 copies, 6 reviews
Little Caesar (1929) 213 copies, 5 reviews
High Sierra (1940) 90 copies, 6 reviews
Classic American Crime Fiction of the 1920s (2018) — Author — 72 copies, 1 review
High Sierra [1941 film] (2000) — Writer — 69 copies, 1 review
This Gun for Hire [1942 film] (1942) — Screenwriter — 67 copies
Ice Station Zebra [1968 film] (1968) — Screenwriter — 67 copies, 1 review
Captain Lightfoot (1954) 64 copies
Nobody Lives Forever (1943) 33 copies
Little Men, Big World (1951) 25 copies
Vanity Row (1952) 25 copies
Yellow Sky [1948 film] (1948) — Original book — 23 copies, 3 reviews
The Cool Man (1968) 22 copies
Adobe Walls (1953) 19 copies, 4 reviews
The Racket [1951 film] (1951) — Screenplay — 16 copies
Round the clock at Volari's (1990) 15 copies
Saint Johnson (2015) 13 copies
Goodbye, Chicago (1981) 13 copies
Dark Hazard (2014) 12 copies
Iron Man (1930) 12 copies
Underdog (1985) 10 copies
Romelle (1946) 9 copies, 1 review
Sergeants 3 (1962) 8 copies
Bitter Ground (1987) 7 copies
The Whole Town's Talking [1935 film] (1935) — Story — 7 copies
I Died a Thousand Times [1955 film] — Writer — 6 copies
High Sierra / The Asphalt Jungle (2022) 6 copies, 1 review
Pale Moon (2018) 5 copies
Nobody Lives Forever [1946 film] (2012) — Writer — 5 copies
King Cole (1988) 5 copies
Big Stan (1986) 5 copies
Stretch Dawson 4 copies
Fin de parcours (1989) 4 copies
High Sierra [screenplay of 1941 film] (1941) — Original novel — 4 copies
Tomorrow's Another Day (1959) 4 copies
Du sport à la une (1962) 3 copies
Conant (1961) 3 copies
The Giant Swing (1932) 2 copies
Ingen lever evigt (1990) 2 copies
Le Samson de l'Ouest (1983) 2 copies
Abilene Samson (1963) 1 copy
Round Trip 1 copy
Caffe' Espresso (1962) 1 copy
Rien dans les manches (1998) 1 copy
La giungla di asfalto. (1951) 1 copy
Little Caesar (1929) (1929) 1 copy
Protection 1 copy
King Cole 1 copy

Associated Works

Hard-Boiled: An Anthology of American Crime Stories (1995) — Contributor — 202 copies, 6 reviews
The Asphalt Jungle [1950 film] (1950) — Original novel — 101 copies, 4 reviews
Great American Mystery Stories of the 20th Century (1989) — Contributor — 91 copies
Fifty Best Mysteries (1991) — Contributor — 78 copies, 2 reviews
Pulp Fictions (1996) — Contributor — 74 copies, 3 reviews
Little Caesar [1931 film] (1931) — Adapted from a work by — 56 copies, 1 review
The Bedside Tales: A Gay Collection (1945) — Contributor — 45 copies
The Mammoth Book of Movie Detectives and Screen Crimes (1998) — Contributor — 24 copies, 1 review
Dark Command [1940 film] (1940) — Original novel — 18 copies

Tagged

1940s (10) 1960s (10) 20th century (10) action (20) adventure (22) American literature (18) Blu-ray (12) crime (51) crime fiction (25) drama (35) DVD (111) fiction (88) film (24) film noir (22) hardboiled (10) movie (28) movies (11) mystery (42) noir (53) novel (33) Novela (9) Novel·la negra (18) Roman (12) Steve McQueen (13) thriller (20) to-read (62) USA (11) war (32) western (16) WWII (48)

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Reviews

51 reviews
Una tipica vicenda noir degli anni '50 dello scorso secolo, con una banda di balordi che mette a segno il colpo del secolo, un commissario apparentemente impermeabile a qualsiasi genere di umanità e ben deciso a sradicare la criminalità, nani e ballerine assortiti, e il caso, l'imponderabile, la sfiga per dirla tutta, che ci mettono il naso, e tutto va a rotoli.
Bello e nerissimo.
High Sierra by W.R. Bennett is a classic crime story about a heist that goes wrong. After being released from prison, notorious, aging criminal Roy Earle is hired by his old boss to help a group of inexperienced criminals plan and carry out the robbery of a California resort that is the playground of the rich and famous. Earle is the last surviving member of the Dillinger gang and had been in prison for some time so this story is both a crime story and a character study of a man who has show more outlived his time.

It’s hard to divorce this book from the excellent 1941 film that starred Humphrey Bogart. His portrayal of Roy Earle was vivid and certainly colored my view of this book. The heist story was enhanced by a side plot that has Earle meeting and helping a young crippled girl but when he wants more from this girl than mere friendship he is denied. Instead he takes up with Marie, a floozy that his gang members brought along. He also ends up being adopted by a small white dog, Pard, who has a reputation for bringing bad luck to his owner.

High Sierra paints an excellent portrait of a tormented man, showing both his softer side and the harder outer shell that has the world calling him “Mad Dog Earle”. I found this slightly melodramatic noir crime story to be a very entertaining read.
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This book is massive. 1100 pages, hardbound. This is the kind of book you want to use to wallop burglars. That'd be an especially appropriate use of this anthology, too, since it covers a full range of 1920s crime novels. Overall, it's a fascinating read. You get the first books of several major detective series, like Charlie Chan and Ellery Queen. Even the book with an almost unbearable protagonist, Philo Vance, gave me oodles of useful research notes and an interesting mystery as the show more backbone of the piece. Dashiell Hammet's first book is a veritable blood bath, but a masterfully done one at that. Reading Little Caesar, I can well understand how this established the gangster novel--and movie--genres.

There is a lengthy introduction at the start, giving context for each book. The annotations throughout were very useful (indeed, for the gangster novel Little Caesar, the lingo would've been a challenge to parse otherwise) but I also found myself wanting more annotations.

If you love classic mysteries and want a showcase book, this is worth the hefty price. (I bought my signed edition from Poisoned Pen Bookstore in Scottsdale, Arizona.) But do be aware it is a difficult read because of the sheer size of the book. Not only is this book impossible to tuck away in a purse to read on the go, it's awkward to read wherever you may be. Still, I found the challenge to be more than worthwhile in the end.

My reviews for each included book are found below, and are also posted under the individual book listings on Goodreads and LibraryThing.

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The House Without a Key: Charlie Chan #1 by by Earl Derr Biggers

Charlie Chan is an iconic character, and it was interesting to see him within the context of his first novel, published with its original text. The book surprised me in many ways. First of all, the settings within the book are masterfully portrayed. I've never seen a book so vividly describe Hawaii in the 1920s. The annotations remarked a few times on inaccuracies or fictionalized bits, but many of the details felt spot-on (I say that, having extensively read on early 20th century Hawaii for my own novel). While I expected issues with racism and caricatures because of the era, this was not as bad as I expected it would be (how's that for an endorsement?). Charlie Chan is regarded as something of a mockery now, but as the notes observed, he does not speak pidgin Chinese, but talks as a very highly educated man. The text of the book demonstrated that well. The way white characters reacted to Chan felt realistic (though sad), but I also understood well why the original text had Chan racist against the Japanese. Within the context of the time, that made perfect sense; it's worth noting that these racist snippets were toned down or removed in later editions of the book.

This does not develop as a modern murder mystery does--often with a corpse in chapter one. Instead, the start is slow as the reader gets to know the Winterslip family of both Boston and Honolulu. The dead body doesn't show up until almost a hundred pages in, with Charlie Chan's arrival immediately after. I think my biggest surprise about the book was that Chan was a minor character with a pivotal role. Instead, most of the novel followed the stuffy scion of the Winterslip family. His was not a bad perspective--it was enjoyable to watch him grow across the book--but I expected a Charlie Chan book to, well, be more about Charlie Chan. The murderer was fairly obvious to be from early on, though there were some nice twists and turns leading up to the big reveal at the end.

I feel no urge to read onward in the series, but if I need to do more research on 1920s Hawaii, I just might. The book was not a bad read at all. Intriguing, I'd say.

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The Benson Murder Case (Philo Vance #1)
by S.S. Van Dine

I must say, the first chapter of this book convinced me that it was going to be absolutely dreadful. It probably didn't help that preceding information in the book had pointed out that the Philo Vance series eventually withered and died because the insufferable, rambling nature of the lead character became too aggravating to bear. But once I made it past that initial introductory chapter and to the actual murder, the story was much more engaging.

The positives: It's a good murder mystery. The set-up is complex and intriguing, and it nicely utilizes New York City. Alvin Benson is found dead, shot in the head, and the clues in his house are myriad, from the handbag and gloves left on the mantle to the car parked out front during the night. The district attorney invites his friend Philo Vance to see the crime, and on a whim, the insufferable art collector digs into the mystery, and digs in deep. The way Philo Vance psychologically examines people is fascinating. I liked that I guessed the murderer quite early on.

The negatives: Philo Vance. He's aggravating. He boasts throughout that he's known who the murderer is from the time he first viewed the corpse at the crime scene, but he strings along his DA friend for days, relentlessly teasing him and shredding apart his reliance on circumstantial evidence. While the latter is necessary (the DA was ready to convict several people on tenuous evidence), the whole know-it-all aspect gets old really fast.

The choice of narrator felt utterly useless, too. Another of Vance's friends is the observer of everything, and he contributes nothing to the story. He's no Watson, there to offer occasional advice or act as a foil or do medical examinations. No, this guy is just there, a shadow. I can't even remember his name; it only came up at the very beginning, I think.

The annotations probably helped my reading experience a lot, too, providing translations or context for the French and Latin Vance often employs, explaining Vance's commentary on art, and noting what NYC locations were real and fictional. Interestingly, the author muddled a lot of period details himself. By the calendar within the book, the murder should be set in 1918, but various details on geographical locations or police technology didn't exist until the early 1920s. Writers these days can check those kinds of things through Google...

I wouldn't read onward in this series, I think, because the very idea of Philo Vance becoming even more annoying is a big turn off. That said, this book offered me a tremendous boon in terms of research, with fantastic period details and cultural references.

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The Roman Hat Mystery by Ellery Queen

Thus far in this collection, I've read the first books about Charlie Chan and Philo Vance. Both had issues, from my modern perspective--a painfully slow start and barely any Charlie Chan in the first, and the rambling, annoying presence of Philo Vance in the second. But in this, the first Ellery Queen novel, I finally encountered a 1920s mystery I absolutely loved. The writing is fantastic from page one, the mystery utterly intriguing, and the cast of characters diverse and amusing. I could see myself reading and enjoying more Ellery Queen novels.

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Red Harvest (The Continental Op #1) by Dashiell Hammett

Red Harvest is aptly named, a bloodbath of a 1920s noir novel. When the unnamed private detective rolls into Personville to meet a new client, the client is found murdered. The Op goes about solving that murder, and becomes embroiled in pretty intense gang warfare that gets far nastier after the original murder is solved. This is a fast read, with knife-sharp language and wit. The Op is a character with virtually no background or personality, but he has a brutal edge and a will to survive. It's no wonder this character helped to establish the very trope of the hard-boiled PI, complete with steady applications of scotch.

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Little Caesar by W.R. Burnett

Little Caesar is the first major gangster novel, published in 1929. It was made into a famous 1931 movie--and essentially created the gangster stereotype (one I became most familiar with through Bugs Bunny cartoons). The book itself is an interesting study on the 'voice' of a book, as the author goes deep into gangster lingo. At the end of my edition, the editor included a foreword that the author wrote in the 1950s about the writing and rejection process behind the book. He made a conscious choice to strip away adjectives to make the prose bloody and blunt. It works. The book doesn't try to make you like its characters--it just shows them as they are. I was grateful to have the annotations to help me parse the lingo and explain details about Chicago and guns of the period.

I never would have expected to like the book this much, but it fascinated me. It shows the era with all its ugliness and racism and dames and plates of spaghetti with wine. Now I want to watch the movie to compare.

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I read an annotated version of this book within Classic American Crime Fiction of the 1920s.

Little Caesar is the first major gangster novel, published in 1929. It was made into a famous 1931 movie--and essentially created the gangster stereotype (one I became most familiar with through Bugs Bunny cartoons). The book itself is an interesting study on the 'voice' of a book, as the author goes deep into gangster lingo. At the end of my edition, the editor included a foreword that the author show more wrote in the 1950s about the writing and rejection process behind the book. He made a conscious choice to strip away adjectives to make the prose bloody and blunt. It works. The book doesn't try to make you like its characters--it just shows them as they are. I was grateful to have the annotations to help me parse the lingo and explain details about Chicago and guns of the period.

I never would have expected to like the book this much, but it fascinated me. It shows the era with all its ugliness and racism and dames and plates of spaghetti with wine. Now I want to watch the movie to compare.
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Awards

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Associated Authors

James Clavell Screenwriter
Albert Maltz Screenwriter
Douglas Heyes Screenwriter
Harry Julian Fink Screenwriter
George E. Diskant Director of Photography, Cinematographer
Lamar Trotti Screenwriter
Russell Hoban Illustrator
Daniel L. Fapp Cinematographer
Paul Brickhill Original book
Zero 7 Animal Actor
Otto Penzler Introduction
Theodore S. Silvia Cinematographer
Graham Greene Orginal book
Ron Masak Actor
Jim Brown Actor
Alan Ladd Actor
Alistair MacLean Original book
John Calley Producer
Tony Bill Actor
Howard Hughes Producer
Lester Cowan Producer
Robert Riskin Screenwriter.
Jo Swerling Screenwriter.
Joseph H. August Cinematographer
Hellmuth Karasek Translator
Christa Hotz Translator
Armgard Seeghers Translator
Eric Skillman Cover designer
Jennifer Dionisio Cover artist

Statistics

Works
73
Also by
16
Members
2,054
Popularity
#12,514
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
40
ISBNs
185
Languages
9
Favorited
1

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