Эд Макбейн - Learning to Kill - Stories

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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.

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Afterword

I was lucky to stumble into a job at a literary agency and to find in Scott Meredith a mentor who recognized my fierce ambition and possible talent, and who offered me opportunities to develop the skills I’d never been taught in all of my college writing courses.

“How would you like to write a novel?” he asked me one day.

“A novel? ” I said. “No, no, I could never write a novel.”

I was still learning to write short stories!

But the John C. Winston Company had asked the agency to provide a series of science fiction novels for young adults, and Lester del Rey (he of “Rattlesnake Cave” fame) had written short outlines for each of the novels. Scott offered me the outline for Find the Feathered Serpent, which became the first Evan Hunter novel I ever wrote, and then for Danger, Dinosaurs! and Rocket to Luna, two novels I wrote under the Richard Marsten pseudonym.

It was in Manhunt, though, that Scott offered me the greatest opportunities to develop as a writer. I was amazed earlier this year when my Hollywood agent reported that several studios had hoped for more “twists and turns of plot and less character” in a novel he’d submitted. Back in the fifties, after decades of plot-driven pulp stories, Manhunt was bold enough to explore character — the kids and the women in jeopardy, the loose cannons, the private eyes, the innocent bystanders, the gangs... and yes, the cops and robbers. Manhunt and Scott Meredith (and John McCloud, too) offered me the freedom to learn. I shall forever be grateful for the experience. From first offense to last spin, it was a remarkable journey.

Thank you for sharing it with me all over again.

DECEMBER 2004

Bibliography

1952:

“Eye Witness” — Hunt Collins — Verdict (August)

1953:

“Carrera’s Woman” — Richard Marsten — Manhunt (February)

“Kid Kill” — Evan Hunter — Manhunt (April)

“Small Homicide” — Evan Hunter — Manhunt (June)

“Good and Dead” — Evan Hunter — Manhunt (July)

“Still Life” — Evan Hunter — Manhunt (August)

“The Innocent One” — Richard Marsten — Manhunt (August)

“The Molested” — Hunt Collins — Manhunt (September)

“Accident Report” — Richard Marsten — Manhunt (September)

“Chalk,” originally published as “I Killed Jeannie” — Evan Hunter — Pursuit (November)

1954:

“Runaway” — Richard Marsten — Manhunt (February)

“Association Test” — Hunt Collins — Manhunt (July)

“Chinese Puzzle” — Richard Marsten — Manhunt (July)

“Every Morning” — Richard Marsten — Manhunt (September)

“Bedbug” — Evan Hunter — Manhunt (September)

“Death Flight,” originally published as “Ticket to Death” — Evan Hunter — Argosy (September)

1955:

“Kiss Me, Dudley” — Hunt Collins — Manhunt (January)

“Dummy,” originally published as “The Big Scream” — Evan Hunter — Real (June)

“See Him Die” — Evan Hunter — Manhunt (July)

“The Big Day” — Richard Marsten — Manhunt (September)

“First Offense” — Evan Hunter — Manhunt (December)

1956:

“Downpour,” originally published as “Murder on the Keys” — Richard Marsten — Argosy (February)

“The Last Spin” — Evan Hunter — Manhunt (September)

1957:

“On the Sidewalk, Bleeding” — Evan Hunter — Manhunt (July)

“The Merry Merry Christmas” — Evan Hunter — Manhunt (December)

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