logo
g Text Version
Auto
Beauty & Self
Books & Music
Career
Computers
Education
Family
Food & Wine
Health & Fitness
Hobbies & Crafts
Home & Garden
Money
News & Politics
Relationships
Religion & Spirituality
Society & Culture
Sports
Travel & Leisure
TV & Movies

dailyclick
Bored? Games!
Postcards
Astrology
Take a Quiz
Rate My Photo

new
Journals
Folklore and Mythology
Business Coach
Marriage
Senior Living
Ethnic Beauty
Adolescence


dailyclick
All times in EST

Autism Spectrum Disorders: 4:00 PM

Full Schedule
g
g Mystery Books Site
Edie Dykeman
BellaOnline's Mystery Books Editor

g

Modern Noir

Noir came into the detective fiction genre in the late 1920’s and early 1930’s. Pronounced nwahr, noir was known for its gritty realistic fast-paced stories that contained an unrelenting gloom and fatalistic attitude in tone as well as among the characters. Many of the stories contained an emphasis on sex, often used to advance the plot.

Noir did not become popular with the masses until Hollywood brought the genre to light with a series of movies such as High Sierra (1941), Double Indemnity 1944), and The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946).

The noir genre exploded when Fawcett Publications created Gold Medal Books toward the end of 1949. The new line began publishing original stories that tackled the darker cynical side of the genre; and they were not inhibited as to sexual content. Gold Medal soon began publishing eight original paperbacks a month. Although the line started out slowly, in 1951 Richard Carroll, who had worked as a story editor in Hollywood, became editor, and the line quickly established itself as a leader in the field.

Other popular paperback publishers that followed Gold Medals lead during the 1950’s were Dell, Lion, Ace, and Popular Library, among others. The decade became known for its paperback originals. Gold Medal discovered a number of authors during that time including Charles Williams, Bruno Fischer, and Gil Brewer. Lion Books was instrumental in publishing many of the early works of Jim Thompson.

House of Flesh (1950) by Fischer sold over 18 million copies, Hill Girl by Williams sold almost 13 million, and 13 French Street (1951) by Brewer sold over 12 million. Although millions of paperbacks were sold during the decade, by the end of the 1950’s the advent of television brought a slowing of sales of paperbacks into the 1960’s.

In 1984, Barry Gifford founded Black Lizard Books and was instrumental in a resurgence of the noir genre. He promptly reprinted three Jim Thompson novels, The Getaway, Pop. 1280, and A Hell of a Woman. Black Lizard also reprinted other Thompson novels as well as out-of-print classics by Charles Williams, Lionel White, David Goodis and many more.

Into the 1990’s, the roman noir (black book) genre continued with authors Ray Ring, Ed Gorman, Lawrence Block, Elmore Leonard, James Ellroy, and Patricia Highsmith. Although noir fiction received the most notice during the 1950’s, it is still very much alive today.




Noir Fiction
The Maltese Manuscript
The Big Sleep
RSS
Related Articles
Previous Features
Site Map

Add Modern+Noir to Twitter Add Modern+Noir to Facebook Add Modern+Noir to MySpace Add Modern+Noir to Del.icio.us Digg Modern+Noir Add Modern+Noir to Yahoo My Web Add Modern+Noir to Google Bookmarks Add Modern+Noir to Stumbleupon Add Modern+Noir to Reddit


Content copyright © 2009 by Edie Dykeman. All rights reserved.
This content was written by Edie Dykeman. If you wish to use this content in any manner, you need written permission. Contact Edie Dykeman for details.

g


For FREE email updates, subscribe to the Mystery Books Newsletter


Past Issues


print
Printer Friendly
bookmark
Bookmark
tell friend
Tell a Friend
forum
Forum
email
Email Editor

g features
Alibi Review

Tragic Magic Review

Holiday Grind Review

Archives | Site Map

forum
Forum
email
Contact

Past Issues
memberscenter

jobs
what
job title, keywords
where
city, state or zip
jobs by job search


vote
Growing a Garden
Veggies and Flowers
Veggies Only
Flowers Only
No Garden

g


| About BellaOnline | Privacy Policy | Advertising | Become an Editor |
Website copyright © 2009 Minerva WebWorks LLC. All rights reserved.


BellaOnline Editor