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Learning to Kill : Stories
by McBain, EdISBN13:
9780151012220
ISBN10:
0151012229
Format:
Hardcover
Pub. Date:
7/3/2006
Publisher(s):
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
List Price: $25.00
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Summary
Ed McBain made his debut in 1956. In 2004, more than a hundred books later, he personally collected twenty-five of his stories written before he was Ed McBain. All but five of them were first published in the detective magazine Manhunt and none of them appeared under the Ed McBain byline. They were written by Evan Hunter (McBain's legal name as of 1952), Richard Marsten (a pseudonym derived from the names of his three sons), or Hunt Collins (in honor of his alma mater, Hunter College). Here are kids in trouble and women in jeopardy. Here are private eyes and gangs. Here are loose cannons and innocent bystanders. Here, too, are cops and robbers. These are the stories that prepared Evan Hunter to become Ed McBain, and that prepared Ed McBain to write the beloved 87th Precinct novels. In individual introductions, McBain tells how and why he wrote these stories that were the start of his legendary career.
Author Biography
ED McBAIN (1926-2005) was the author of more than a hundred books. He held the Mystery Writers of America's prestigious Grand Master Award and was the first American to receive the Diamond Dagger, the British Crime Writers' Association's highest award.
Table of Contents
| Introduction | ix | ||||
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5 | (26) | |||
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31 | (14) | |||
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45 | (26) | |||
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71 | (6) | |||
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77 | (16) | |||
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93 | (16) | |||
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109 | (26) | |||
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135 | (60) | |||
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195 | (12) | |||
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207 | (17) | |||
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224 | (18) | |||
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242 | (20) | |||
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262 | (23) | |||
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285 | (30) | |||
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315 | (34) | |||
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349 | (42) | |||
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391 | (8) | |||
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399 | (10) | |||
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409 | (12) | |||
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421 | (5) | |||
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426 | (6) | |||
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432 | (6) | |||
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438 | (15) | |||
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453 | (11) | |||
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464 | (11) | |||
| Afterword | 475 | (2) | |||
| Bibliography | 477 |
Excerpts
This story first appeared in Manhunt. The editor of the magazine was someone named John McCloud. No one knew who John McCloud was. The poem parody we recited was I wandered lonely as McCloud. Well, John McCloud was Scott Meredith. It was very good to be working for the man who was editing the hottest detective magazine of the day; in 1953 alone, fourteen of my stories appeared in Manhunt under the Marsten, Hunter, or Collins bylines. This one was published in 1955, under the Evan Hunter byline, which by that time had been my legal name for almost three years.First OffenseHE SAT IN THE POLICE VAN WITH THE COLLAR OF HIS leather jacket turned up, the bright silver studs sharp against the otherwise unrelieved black. He was seventeen years old, and he wore his hair in a high black crown. He carried his head high and erect because he knew he had a good profile, and he carried his mouth like a switch knife, ready to spring open at the slightest provocation. His hands were thrust deep into his jacket pockets, and his gray eyes reflected the walls of the van. There was excitement in his eyes, too, an almost holiday excitement. He tried to tell himself he was in trouble, but he couldnt quite believe it. His gradual descent to disbelief had been a spiral that had spun dizzily through the range of his emotions. Terror when the cops flash had picked him out; blind panic when hed started to run; rebellion when the cops firm hand had closed around the leather sleeve of his jacket; sullen resignation when the cop had thrown him into the RMP car; and then cocky stubbornness when theyd booked him at the local precinct.The desk sergeant had looked him over curiously, with a strange aloofness in his Irish eyes.Whats the matter, Fatty? hed asked.The sergeant stared at him implacably. Put him away for the night, the sergeant said.Hed slept overnight in the precinct cell block, and hed awakened with this strange excitement pulsing through his narrow body, and it was the excitement that had caused his disbelief. Trouble, hell! Hed been in trouble before, but it had never felt like this. This was different. This was a ball, man. This was like being initiated into a secret society someplace. His contempt for the police had grown when they refused him the opportunity to shave after breakfast. He was only seventeen, but he had a fairly decent beard, and a man should be allowed to shave in the morning, what the hell! But even the beard had somehow lent to the unreality of the situation, made him appearin his own eyessomehow more desperate, more sinister-looking. He knew he was in trouble, but the trouble was glamorous, and he surrounded it with the gossamer lie of make-believe. He was living the storybook legend. He was big time now. Theyd caught him and booked him, and he should have been scared but he was excited instead.There was one other person in the van with him, a guy whod spent the night in the cell block, too. The guy was an obvious bum, and his bre
Excerpted from Learning to Kill: Stories by Ed McBain
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
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