Kenneth Fearing's name is less well known than those of most of the authors featured
in this series of all-time mystery classics, but his stunning thriller is undoubtedly in
the list on merit. Fearing was a notable poet in America's Depression era, but with
this novel, first published in 1946, he struck gold. The remarkable plot has been
copied by other writers and has formed the basis of two films, including the excellent
remake 'No Way Out' starring Kevin Costner.
The writing is clipped and tense, the characterisation economical yet witty, and the
pace frenetic. George Stroud is a charming, yet amoral executive working for a
magazine empire run by Earl Janoth. Stroud embarks on a dangerous affair with
Janoth's mistress and when Janoth kills the woman, Stroud is the only witness who
can pin him to the crime. The catch is that Janoth does not know that the man he saw
in a shadowy street was Stroud - and he gives Stroud the job of tracking down the
witness. Stroud knows that, if he is identified, he will be killed, and he has to use all
his ruthless ingenuity to keep one step ahead of his desperate boss. This short novel is
an unmissable triumph of style and plot. Not surprisingly, Fearing was unable in his
subsequent books to match it.
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