Best American Detective Stories Of The Year: 1950
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Condition remarks:
Book: Fair
Jacket: Chipped and worn with some minor damage
Pages: Tanning and foxing , price clipped
Markings: Previous owner
A landmark anthology of mid-century crime fiction, Best American Detective Stories of the Year: 1950 presents a carefully curated collection of the finest mystery and detective tales published during one of the genre's most vibrant eras. Editor David C. Cooke assembles a roster of both celebrated and lesser-known authors, showcasing the full spectrum of American crime writing — from hard-boiled private eye yarns to tightly plotted whodunits steeped in postwar tension. Each story illustrates the era's masterful command of suspense, atmosphere, and moral ambiguity, capturing a society grappling with shifting social norms and the shadows of a world recently emerged from war. The collection serves as an invaluable time capsule, preserving the pulse-quickening storytelling that defined American detective fiction at the midpoint of the twentieth century and cementing the annual Best American series as an essential institution for genre enthusiasts.
Author: David C. Cooke
Format: Hardback
Published: 1951, T. V. Boardman & Company Limited
Genre: Crime fiction
Condition remarks:
Book: Fair
Jacket: Chipped and worn with some minor damage
Pages: Tanning and foxing , price clipped
Markings: Previous owner
A landmark anthology of mid-century crime fiction, Best American Detective Stories of the Year: 1950 presents a carefully curated collection of the finest mystery and detective tales published during one of the genre's most vibrant eras. Editor David C. Cooke assembles a roster of both celebrated and lesser-known authors, showcasing the full spectrum of American crime writing — from hard-boiled private eye yarns to tightly plotted whodunits steeped in postwar tension. Each story illustrates the era's masterful command of suspense, atmosphere, and moral ambiguity, capturing a society grappling with shifting social norms and the shadows of a world recently emerged from war. The collection serves as an invaluable time capsule, preserving the pulse-quickening storytelling that defined American detective fiction at the midpoint of the twentieth century and cementing the annual Best American series as an essential institution for genre enthusiasts.