欧宝娱乐

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睾乇丕賲鬲 賲囟丕毓賮

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亘丕 賲丕卮蹖賳 乇賮鬲賲 诏賱賽賳丿賱 鬲丕 爻賴鈥屫� 乇丕賳賳丿賴鈥屰� 讴丕賲蹖賵賳賽 鬲丕夭賴 亘賴 亘蹖賲賴鈥屬嗀з呝団€屰� 蹖賴 卮乇讴鬲 丌亘噩賵爻丕夭蹖 丕囟丕賮賴 讴賳賲 讴賴 賲賵乇丿 鬲賲丿蹖丿蹖賴鈥屰� 賴丕賱蹖賵賵丿賱賳丿 蹖丕丿賲 丕賵賲丿. 诏賮鬲賲 丕賵賳鈥屫� 賴賲 亘乇賲. 丕蹖賳鈥屫堌臂� 卮丿 讴賴 倬丕 诏匕丕卮鬲賲 鬲賵 丕賵賳 芦禺賵賳賴鈥屰� 賲乇诏禄貙 丿乇亘丕乇賴鈥屫� 鬲賵 乇賵夭賳丕賲賴鈥屬囏� 禺賵賳丿賴鈥屰屬�. 賵賯鬲蹖 賲賳 丿蹖丿賲卮 丕氐賱丕賸 卮亘蹖賴 芦禺賵賳賴鈥屰� 賲乇诏禄 賳亘賵丿. 氐乇賮丕賸 蹖賴 禺賵賳賴鈥� 亘賴 爻亘讴 丕爻倬丕賳蹖丕蹖蹖 亘賵丿貙 卮亘蹖賴 亘丕賯蹖鈥屫促堎� 鬲賵 讴丕賱蹖賮乇賳蹖丕貙 丿蹖賵丕乇賴丕蹖 爻賮蹖丿貙 爻賯賮賽 爻賮丕賱蹖 賯乇賲夭貙 蹖賴鈥屫坟辟佖� 丨蹖丕胤. 讴噩鈥屬堏┵堎勝� 爻丕禺鬲賴 亘賵丿賳卮. 倬丕乇讴蹖賳诏 夭蹖乇 禺賵賳賴 亘賵丿貙 胤亘賯賴鈥屰� 丕賵賱 乇賵卮 亘賵丿貙 亘賯蹖賴鈥屰� 禺賵賳賴 乇賵 賴賲 賴乇 噩丕 鬲賵賳爻鬲賴 亘賵丿賳 倬禺卮鈥屬堎举勜� 讴乇丿賴 亘賵丿賳. 鬲丕 丿乇 賵乇賵丿蹖 亘丕蹖丿 趩賳丿鬲丕蹖蹖 倬賱賴 亘丕賱丕 賲蹖鈥屫辟佖�.

151 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1936

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About the author

James M. Cain

166books861followers
James Mallahan Cain (July 1, 1892鈥揙ctober 27, 1977) was an American journalist and novelist. Although Cain himself vehemently opposed labeling, he is usually associated with the hard-boiled school of American crime fiction and seen as one of the creators of the "roman noir."

He was born into an Irish Catholic family in Annapolis, Maryland, the son of a prominent educator and an opera singer. He inherited his love for music from his mother, but his high hopes of starting a career as a singer himself were thwarted when she told him that his voice was not good enough.

After graduating from Washington College where his father, James W. Cain served as president, in 1910, he began working as a journalist for The Baltimore Sun.

He was drafted into the United States Army and spent the final year of World War I in France writing for an Army magazine. On his return to the United States he continued working as a journalist, writing editorials for the New York World and articles for American Mercury. He also served briefly as the managing editor of The New Yorker, but later turned to screenplays and finally to fiction.

Although Cain spent many years in Hollywood working on screenplays, his name only appears on the credits of three films, Algiers, Stand Up and Fight, and Gypsy Wildcat.

His first novel (he had already published Our Government in 1930), The Postman Always Rings Twice was published in 1934. Two years later the serialized, in Liberty Magazine, Double Indemnity was published.

He made use of his love of music and of the opera in particular in at least three of his novels: Serenade (about an American opera singer who loses his voice and who, after spending part of his life south of the border, re-enters the States illegally with a Mexican prostitute in tow), Mildred Pierce (in which, as part of the subplot, the only daughter of a successful businesswoman trains as an opera singer) and Career in C Major (a short semi-comic novel about the unhappy husband of an aspiring opera singer who unexpectedly discovered that he has a better voice than she does).

He continued writing up to his death at the age of 85. His last three published works, The Baby in the Icebox (1981), Cloud Nine (1984) and The Enchanted Isle (1985) being published posthumously. However, the many novels he published from the late 1940s onward never quite rivaled his earlier successes.

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Profile Image for Ahmad Sharabiani.
9,562 reviews5 followers
March 2, 2022
鈥璂ouble indemnity , James Mallahan Cain

Double Indemnity is a 1943 crime novel, written by American journalist-turned-novelist James M. Cain.

Walter Huff, an insurance agent, falls for the married Phyllis Nirdlinger, who consults him about accident insurance for her unsuspecting husband. In spite of his instinctual decency, and intrigued by the challenge of committing the perfect murder, Walter is seduced into helping the femme fatale kill her husband for the insurance money. After killing him in the Nirdlinger car, they stage an accident from the rear platform of a train. But they cannot enjoy their success.

The crime backfires on them, and soon afterwards, with the insurance company's claim manager Barton Keyes becoming more and more suspicious of them, he decides to kill her, too "for what she knew about me, and because the world isn't big enough for two people once they've got something like that on each other". With her own distrust mounting, Phyllis also decides to kill her accomplice. One night, he tries to ambush her, but she forestalls him and shoots at him, instead. He survives, though, and the end sees both of them on a steamship heading to Mexico: Keyes has given them an ostensible chance to escape formal justice by booking their passages - without them knowing about the other.

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鬲丕乇蹖禺 亘賴賳诏丕賲 乇爻丕賳蹖 17/02/1400賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 10/12/1400賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 丕. 卮乇亘蹖丕賳蹖
Profile Image for Kemper.
1,390 reviews7,492 followers
September 5, 2012
What is it with this James Cain? First, I tried reading to prepare for my civil service exam, but it was all about murder and didn鈥檛 have anything at all about postal regulations. Then I read Double Indemnity to try and become an insurance agent and once again, it鈥檚 nothing but a guy getting busy with another man's wife and then plotting to kill him.

At least this one actually had some stuff about the insurance industry, and I did learn a bit about fraud. Still, it was mostly about murder. This Cain must have had a lot of problems. Or maybe these books shouldn鈥檛 have been shelved with the study guides at the library?
Profile Image for Alejandro.
1,242 reviews3,728 followers
August 15, 2015
Double as good!


BOOK TO FILM

I watched the film adaptation of Double Indemnity and I loved it!

I think that the look of the actress Barbara Stanwyck is the very definition of a femme fatale. I am aware of other great examples like Rita Hayworth in Gilda, Lana Turner in The Postman always rings twice or Lauren Bacall in The Big Sleep to name a few, but when the term of 鈥渇emme fatale鈥� comes to mind, the image of Barbara Stanwyck in Double Indemnity is my first thought.

When I watched for the first time the movie, it was shocking to see Fred MacMurray in this kind of movie, he did it masterfully, but my previous experience with him in acting was pretty much with his work on Disney-related films like The Shaggy Dog and The Absent-Minded Professor, so imagine my shock watching him in such dark role.

I think that it was odd that Raymond Chandler was the selected one to co-work on the script adaptation for this novel written by James M. Cain. The film adaptation was well done, but the story is pretty much the same, with some minor exceptions like changing the last names of the main characters, so I don鈥檛 see why not to hire James M. Cain to adapt his own work.


GREED MEETS LUST

Double Indemnity is a quick reading and quite entertaining.

Walter Huff, an Insurance Agent, really good at his job, meets a married woman, Phyillis Nirdlingler, and they plot to kill her husband for getting the juicy payment of a double indemnity insurance policy. Keyes, an agent in the Insurance Company in charge of checking any foul play in the collection of insurances' payments will be a real hound to be sure that everything sounds okay in the case.

Maybe my only complain about the story is that Huff is too fast convinced to be involved in the murder plot. Yes, Phyllis is described like a sexy lady, but I think that only lust isn鈥檛 enough motivation for a character like Walter Huff to agree so quick.

When the story evolves, you will know that this isn鈥檛 the 鈥渇irst rodeo鈥� of Phyllis, so it鈥檚 quite believable that she would be thinking about a way to break off from her husband but with getting a big amount of money for her own in the process.

However, Walter is described as hard-working, with many years in the insurance business, there isn鈥檛 any evidence that he had been a ladies鈥� man in the past, or even having debts for any reason. Also, Walter isn鈥檛 a fresh young boy, but a mature man, where if he didn鈥檛 do anything illegal before, it鈥檚 quite odd to start to do felonies then. So, okay, I admit that we, men, don鈥檛 think well when a sexy woman is around, but one thing is to do some small foolishness to impress a lady and quite another to commit a crime, not only an insurance fraud but also a murder!

The novel is based on a real life incident, so yes, we, men, are such stupid. I am not saying that we aren鈥檛 able to do such kind of things, only I comment that the character of Walter Huff, in the novel, lacks of a some convincing reason to agree so dang fast to get deep in misdeed.

Another factor that I enjoyed about the book is that while it's clearly a noir story, instead of having a private detective as the main character, the story doesn't have any private detective at all (Sure, Keyes does many investigative work in his position in the Insurance Company, but he's not a private detective) and also, the story is told from the point of view of the culprit ones.

Double Indemnity is a smart story, with an engaging narrative, showing the dark side of human nature and how a couple can coldy design, step-by-step, the perfect way to murder a person in order to get money, and how the chaos of real life is ruthless with everybody, good or bad.







Profile Image for Glenn Russell.
1,485 reviews12.9k followers
March 24, 2023


The novel begins with first person narrator Walter Huff reflecting back on the sequence of events that started when he remembered a renewal over in Hollywoodland. We read: "That was how I came to this House of Death, that you've been reading about in the papers. It didn't look like a House of Death when I saw it. It was just a Spanish house, like all the rest of them in California." This sense of foreboding hangs over each and every sentence. Alert: my review contains what could be considered spoilers.

Turns out Walter Huff is an insurance salesman who wants to beat the insurance Industry at its own game. Walter sees the whole world of insurance as a roulette wheel, and since he can see its inner workings from behind the scene, he wants to play the wheel and cash in. However, Walter needs a partner, that is, an outside plant, a customer willing to join him in playing the game, in placing a bet, in putting the chips down in a gamble to commit a murder that will look like suicide so he and his partner can collect big time, double indemnity, on the life insurance policy.

Walter finds his plant in Phyllis who lives with her husband and stepdaughter in that Spanish house in Hollywoodland, a house looking like all the others . But what a plant! Little does Walter know Phyllis is a flesh and blood embodiment of the goddess of death - the energy of the universe that's fierce, dark and chaotic, the energy of the universe that is your worst nightmare. Phyllis is more than happy to join Walter in killing her husband to collect the money. Of course, for Phyllis, killing her husband is much, much more than just murder and collecting from the insurance company. Phyllis loves the killing.



The writing is tight, compressed and filled to the verbal brim with tension. Here is an example of Walter Huff's reflection: "There's nothing so dark as a railroad track in the middle of the night. The train shot ahead, and I crouched there, waiting for the tingle to leave my feet. I had dropped off the left side of the train, into the footpath between the tracks, so there wouldn't be any chance I could be seen from the highway." Hard-boiled noir, anyone?

With Cain we have clear-cut, penetrating character descriptions. Here is Huff describing one of the men he must deal with at his insurance company: "Keyes is head of the Claims Department, a holdover from the old regime, and the way he tells it young Norton (the company president) never does anything right. He's big and fat and peevish, and on top of that he's a theorist, and it makes your head ache to be around him, but he's the best claims man on the Coast, and he was the one I was afraid of."

The end of the novel has Phyllis covering her face in chalk white with black circles under her eyes and with red on her lips and cheeks, rapped in a hideous red silk scarf, all ready to jump to her death from the ship she's traveling on into the ocean, to jump at night and be torn apart by sharks under a full moon. Walter, who is also on the ship, tells Phyllis he himself will join her in jumping from the ship under a full moon to be torn apart by sharks. Walter finally understands this is what happens when you have evil intentions and ask the goddess of death to be your partner in crime. Double Indemnity is James M. Cain's unforgettable, one-of-a-kind classic.

Profile Image for Jayakrishnan.
527 reviews216 followers
November 17, 2024
I make no conscious effort to be tough, or hard-boiled, or grim, or any of the things I am usually called. I merely try to write as the character would write, and I never forget that the average man, from the fields, the streets, the bars, the offices, and even the gutters of his country, has acquired a vividness of speech that goes beyond anything I could invent, and that if I stick to this heritage, this logos of the American countryside, I shall attain a maximum of effectiveness with very little effort. - James M.Cain

Double Indemnity was one of the first crime thrillers that I read in my life. I reread it after eight years and Cain's prose still stings like a dreadful toothache.

It has a clever plot. A really tight one without too many characters or distracting sub-plots unlike Raymond Chandler or Ross MacDonald or Charles Williams. The sparse prose is very colloquial like some average Joe talking. Cain uses very few similes and metaphors. When he does, they are memorable ones like -

"What I did do was put my arm around her, pull her face up against mine, and kiss her on the mouth, hard. I was trembling like a leaf. She gave it a cold stare, and then she closed her eyes, pulled me to her, and kissed back."

or

"The firelight was reflected in her eyes like she was some kind of leopard."

Cain avoids the flashy stuff and conveys the tormented inner dialog of the main character Huff through simple but hard hitting lines. There are many clever twists. But like I said earlier, Cain does not distract us too much from the main plot. Sometimes when you read a crime fiction novel by the other noted writers of the genre, you wonder why they have to make it all so complicated. None of that "complex plot that is unimportant .... just enjoy the one liners and the twists" crap from Cain. There aren't even any descriptions of the surrounding nature. This is as tight as a crime fiction novel gets with two of the coldest characters ever created in the genre. That grim ending on the ship is enough to fill you with a sense of dread and horror.
Profile Image for Stephen.
1,516 reviews12.1k followers
December 12, 2011
Ooh la la...the femme fatale...


Intelligent, gorgeous, self-assured and drenched in enough sexual allure to stop a heart at 50 paces. These cold, calculating foxes are nature's consummate predators, guaranteed to ensnare any man by his short and curlies faster and tighter than a rusty zipper. In fact, the only adversary more likely to separate a man from his giblets is the femme bot toting high caliber machine-gun jubblies.


Well, Double Indemnity has one of the most memorable of these vile, vexing vixens and central character Walter Huff is played like a string quartet by this virtuoso of diabolicalness. Walter鈥檚 an insurance salesman who finds himself involved in a plot with a rich man鈥檚 wife to ice hubby and collect on the life insurance. The title comes from the 2X payout for accidental death caused by a train.

All aboard...

At the risk of sounding oxymoronical, Walter comes across as a decent bloke provided you discount the positively reprehensible actions in which he finds himself a willing and active participant. Unfortunately, and despite being crafty and very intelligent in his own right, Walter鈥檚 in way over his hairline and is eggs and buttered toast minus the butter and eggs from the opening act. However, his lack of a moral compass and unwillingness to second guess his actions makes him less than sympathetic.

As far as the pacing, taut and gripping doesn鈥檛 begin to describe the breakneck** speed of this masterful tale. At a scant 128 pages, this story is sleek, fast and corners like it's on rails, glueing you to your seat from the get go. Cain鈥檚 sparse, detached prose is quintessential noir and he stays in complete command of his verse as he deftly navigates the plot.
But all of a sudden, she looked at me, and I felt a chill creep straight up my back and into the roots of my hair. "Do you handle accident insurance?"
Speaking of the plot, that is where this story really knocks it out of the park. It is pitch perfect. As detailed, intricate and well-crafted a plot as I have witnessed in my time with crime fiction and I was awed by how on cue every element of the story was.

**A most unintended pun.

My one and only gripe in this otherwise mouth-watering bowl of yummy....not enough emotional wreckage. Call it sick and twisted, but one of the dark, guilty pleasures of a good piece of noiry nastiness is when the dumb-lug-with-a-heart-of-gold-and-brains-of-formica realizes he鈥檚 been washed, pressed and folded by the Kathleen Turner/Sharon Stone/Lauren Becall-esque villainess. Well, because of Walter鈥檚 own ethical deficiencies, the pay off is not as sadistically satisfying as it would have been if Walter had been truly worthy of sympathy. He just had a little too much scum in his bag to truly garner much sympathy.

Don鈥檛 get me wrong, Walter鈥檚 character is superbly drawn and he brings an interesting emotional dynamic to the story, I just wasn鈥檛 as emotionally invested in him as I鈥檝e been with other lead characters that had a better allotment of decency to be twisted by the powers of evil.

Still, this is just about as good as it gets for noir crime fiction and this is oh so rightfully considered one of the pillars of the genre.

5.0 stars. HIGHEST POSSIBLE RECOMMENDATION!!

P.S. Now I'm off to watch the movie which, sad as it sounds, I have never seen.
Profile Image for Julie G.
984 reviews3,715 followers
September 1, 2018
It's obvious that James M. Cain was a man who didn't believe in foreplay.

Foreplay? Nah. The broads don't need any of that aggravation.

Just open the door, introduce yourself, maybe buy the dame a drink, then BAM!

Under those blue pajamas was a shape to set a man nuts.

Set a man nuts, and kill her husband, too.

Sure, why not?

Bada bing, bada boom!

But, wait! Turns out the job was sloppy and the doll's a wench.

That's all it takes, one drop of fear, to curdle love into hate.

Ah, Mr. Cain knows how to cut right to the chase.

Always.

And, even though foreplay can be so appealing in far better developed novels, I find that I don't need it here.

I can't quite explain it, but I can crunch up these hardboiled crime fiction novels like pieces of hard candy.

They remind me that. . . reading can be so damn fun. Like, blowing bubbles with a giant wad of gum in your mouth fun. Like, pink bubble gum fun.

(Three stars when compared to The Postman Always Rings Twice and Mildred Pierce).
Profile Image for Joe.
523 reviews1,084 followers
March 25, 2019
James M. Cain shoots onto my list of favorite authors with Double Indemnity. Appearing in serial format in Liberty magazine in 1936, Cain's tale was published as a novella in 1943 and became the source material for a film classic adapted by Billy Wilder and Raymond Chandler and directed by Wilder the following year. The text is short, poisonously sweet and became the model for much film noir to come, with a devilish dame snaring a useful dope in her web of deceit and murder. Only the eras and instruments change and though set in L.A. against the insurance tables of the '30s, Cain writes as if he spit this out on his Mac.

The story is narrated by Walter Huff, an agent of General Fidelity of California and to hear him tell it, one of the best at what he does. Walter pays an unscheduled call on his client H.S. Nirdlinger, an oil company executive in Hollywoodland whose automobile coverage is expiring. Smooth enough to get past the maid, Walter is greeted by the lady of the house, Phyllis Nirdlinger, donned in blue house pajamas and "a shape to set a man nuts." Libido isn't the only thing Phyllis triggers, inquiring about taking out accident insurance on her husband, accident being the type of policy that only someone who believes their loved one is about to have an accident would request.

Unable to get around Phyllis when it comes to selling her husband insurance products, Walter is summoned three nights later after the maid has gone home and Mr. Nirdlinger is out. She again asks about taking out an accident policy on her husband. Walter's fifteen years in the business tells him exactly what she's asking. One thing leads to another and when Phyllis visits Walter at his place in Los Feliz, he confronts her about her intention to arrange an "accident" for her husband. Feigning shock initially, Phyllis comes around to discussing her ideas with the insurance agent, who thinking with the wrong organ, offers to help.

"All right, how are you going to do it?"

"I was going to take out the policy first--"

"Without him knowing?"

"Yes."

"Holy smoke, they'd have crucified you. It's the first thing they look for. Well--anyway that's out. What else?"

"He's going to build a swimming pool. In the spring. Out in the patio."

"And?"

"I thought it could be made to look as though he hit his head diving or something."

"That's out. That's still worse."

"Why? People do, don't they?"

"It's no good. In the first place, some fool in the insurance business, five or six years ago, put out a newspaper story that most accidents happen in people's own bathtubs, and since then bathtubs, swimming pools, and fishponds are the first thing they think of. When they're trying to pull something, I mean. There's two cases like that out here in California right now. Neither one of them are on the up-and-up, and if there's been an insurance angle those people would wind up on the gallows. Then it's a daytime job, and you never can tell who's peeping at you from the next hill. Then a swimming pool is like a tennis court, you no sooner have one than it's a community affair, and you don't know who might come popping in on you at any minute. And then it's one of those things where you've got to watch for your chance, and you can't plan it in advance, and know where you're going to come out to the last decimal point. Get this, Phyllis. There's three essential elements to a successful murder."

That word was out before I knew it. I looked at her quick. I thought she'd wince under it. She didn't. She leaned forward. The firelight was reflected in her eyes like she was some kind of leopard. "Go on. I'm listening."


After spending a night or two determining that Phyllis hasn't done anything that would land her in trouble if Mr. Nirdlinger were to meet with an accident, Walter makes an appointment with her to discuss accident insurance for her husband, asking her in advance to provide a witness. To his displeasure, Phyllis has her stepdaughter Lola present. The idea of getting the daughter of the man they're planning to murder involved with their plot leaves a bad taste in his mouth, but Walter plunges ahead. The man he's most worried about is Keyes, head of the claims department at General Fidelity, tiresome, but "a wolf on a phony claim."

Walter proposes to Phyllis that her husband meet his end in a railroad accident, explaining that the odds against such a claim are so high that his company would pay off double, $50,000, in what's known as double indemnity. To the surprise of no reader, there are complications. Phyllis explains that her husband dislikes taking the train. Then, Walter receives an office visit from Lola, who inquires about her boyfriend applying for a loan against his car. Walter doesn't let his feelings for the sweet girl deter his plot against her father.

Fate intervenes when Mr. Nirdlinger, scheduled to leave town for a class reunion, breaks his leg. Phyllis talks him into booking passage on the train. The perfect murder ensues. The young owner of General Fidelity suspects suicide and plans to challenge the claim in court. Keyes insists this is the wrong call because in his view, Mr. Nirdlinger was murdered and thinks he might be able to prove it. Keeping his distance from Phyllis, Walter spends personal time with Lola and learns that accidental death seems to follow Phyllis Nirdlinger around. Lola intends to testify to what she knows at the inquest. That leads Walter to a logical conclusion.

I don't know when I decided to kill Phyllis. It seemed to me that ever since that night, somewhere in the back of my head I had known I would have to kill her, for what she knew about me, and because the world isn't big enough for two people once they've got something like that on each other. But I know when I decided when to kill her, and where to kill her and how to kill her. It was right after that night when I was watching the moon come up over the ocean with Lola. Because the idea that Lola would put on an act like that in the courtroom, and that then Phyllis would lash out and tell her the truth, that was too horrible for me to think about. Maybe I haven't explained it right, yet, how I felt about this girl Lola. It wasn't anything like what I had felt for Phyllis. That was some kind of unhealthy excitement that came over me just at the sight of her. This wasn't anything like that. It was just a sweet peace that came over me as soon as I was with her, like when we would drive along for an hour without saying a word, and then she would look up at me and we still didn't have to say anything. I hated what I had done, and it kept sweeping over me that if there was any way I could make sure she would never find out, why then maybe I could marry her, and forget the whole thing, and be happy with her the rest of my life. There was only one way I could be sure, and that was to get rid of anybody that knew. What she told me about Sachetti showed there was only one I had to get rid of, and that was Phyllis. And the rest of what she told me, about what she was going to do, meant I had to move quick, before that suit came to trial.

It鈥檚 so often difficult for me to relate to the fiction published before my birth. Not only has the world changed, but our attitudes and relationships with each other have evolved as a result. James M. Cain is one of those writers who digs deep, excavating lust, greed, the office, fear, love. These never become pass茅. The changes in topography to Los Angeles or to technology (the lengths Walter goes to make sure no one telephoned or rang his doorbell on the night of the murder are precious) add to the charm of the novel as opposed to making it feel old. Much of the novel seems like it could've been written yesterday instead of 1936.

You think I'm nuts? All right, maybe I am. But you spend fifteen years in the business I'm in, you'll go nuts yourself. You think it's a business, don't you, just like your business, and maybe a little better than that, because it's the friend of the widow, the orphan, and the needy in time of trouble? It's not. It's the biggest gambling wheel in the world. It don't look like it, but it is, from the way they figure the percentage on the 00 to the look on their face when they cash your chips. You bet that your house will burn down, they bet it won't, that's all. What fools you is that you didn't want your house to burn down when you made the bet, and so you forget it's a bet. That don't fool them. To them a bet is a bet, and a hedge bet don't look any different than any other bet. But there comes a time, maybe, when you do want your house to burn down, when the money is worth more than the house. And right there is where the trouble starts. They know there's just so many people out there that are out to crook that wheel, and that's when they get tough. They've got their spotters out there, they know every crooked trick there is, and if you want to beat them you had better be good. So long as you're honest, they'll pay you with a smile, and you may even go home thinking it was all in the spirit of good clean fun. But start something, and then you'll find out.

By electing to have Walter narrate the tale, Phyllis's voice does take a backseat. Far from a full-throttled femme fatale propelling the story forward as they have in film, we only see of Phyllis what Walter does, which seems like it's through his white T-shirt as it's coming off. Her misdeeds aren't discovered as much as they鈥檙e dumped on him by Lola. But that same narration by Walter gives the novel remarkable momentum, black wit and panache. These virtues were abundant in the 1944 film, in which Billy Wilder cast likable stars Fred MacMurray and Barbara Stanwyck as the low down dirty killers and movie mobster Edward G. Robinson as the virtuous Keyes.

Length: 38,130 words

Profile Image for Steven Godin.
2,749 reviews3,164 followers
June 15, 2022

I recently watched the multi-Oscar nominated Billy Wilder film classic from 1944, which remains one of my favourite noir films of all time (Wilder scripted with Raymond Chandler), so decided to settle down to once again be captured by Cain's moody masterpiece over one evening while the rain was lashing down outside.

This is simply put, quintessential noir. Dark, menacing, seductive and taut as wire. Insurance investigator Walter Huff falls under the charm of the wildly wicked Phyllis Nirdlinger to help bump off her controlling but dull husband to claim a life insurance policy that contains a double indemnity clause, meaning twice the amount is payed on death from certain circumstances (in this case falling off the back of a train), but she needs Walter to close the deal, which he agrees. Little to Walter's Knowledge Phyllis has a sting in the tail, which leaves him out cold like a rabbit in the headlights. The murder itself is carried through without any glitches (or so it would first seem), before a college of Walter starts to suspect foul play, and of course from here, you can forget about any happy ending.

The novel is carried forward using a brilliant narrative full of sharp sentences, which are direct, and to the point. Cain wastes no words here making for a read that is well worthy of reading in one or two sitting. The plot itself is nothing new and pretty straightforward, but it's all about how Cain executes it. For a writing of 1936 it really is darkly unsettling, and would have appeared rather shocking at the time. This has no doubt a lasting appeal, and will carry on enthralling readers for many years to come.
Profile Image for Carol.
1,370 reviews2,317 followers
May 18, 2019
OMG! I cannot believe the ending!

Plain old downright great entertainment here from beginning to end with Cain's story of how to commit the perfect murder.

While I was totally engrossed in the telling, there were a couple of times I had to stretch my imagination a bit, but I loved it just the same, and oh that ending......raised my rating up a whole star!

Profile Image for Dan Schwent.
3,174 reviews10.8k followers
May 26, 2011
Walter Huff is an insurance salesman who gets mixed up with a man's attractive young wife and together they conspire to murder him. While waiting for the heat to die down, Huff gets involved with the woman's stepdaughter and things spiral out of control...

While I wouldn't go as far as to call this my favorite noir novel, it's definitely as good as, if not better than, The Postman Always Rings Twice. Cain does a phenomenal job building the tension with his minimalist style. It may only be 128 pages but that's about all you could handle. The way Walter and Phyllis murder her husband is both outlandish and extremely plausible. When it comes out that Phyllis is a sociopath, you feel for Walter despite knowing he's a murderer.


Profile Image for Megan Hoffman.
197 reviews317 followers
December 11, 2016
To be honest with you, this book wasn't even on my radar. I was having lunch with someone when we got around to talking about my love for Crime Mystery Fiction and they suggested this as their favorite of those type books. Lo and behold, they have a copy of it and I read it that very day. At only a little over 100 pages, it's easy to read and the fast-pace of it makes it all fly by. Oh, and not to mention that it really is that good!

Double Indemnity is about an insurance salesman who meets a woman interested in taking out accidental insurance on her husband. His attraction to her clouds his usual judgement and next thing he knows he's wrapped up in a murder plot that just might do him in. But it's not as simple as that. (It rarely ever is, right?) As love and loyalty to one's work complicated things even more, this story becomes all that much more exciting. There's affairs, death, family troubles, more death, love, DEATH...yeah, it's good.

I wasn't expecting to read this book, but it's going to be remembered as one of my all time favorites thanks to my friend randomly recalling a book they read back in college. Brains are weird.

What did I think?: I was pleasantly surprised by this story and couldn't put it down until I knew how it all ended. Thankfully I had a rainy Saturday and a broken leg so I could afford to get lost in a story like this.

Who should read it?: If you like crime and/or mysteries, or even more the femme fatale style of writing then I think you'll enjoy this one. Apparently many people read this back in school, have seen the movie or the play version - I had not, sadly - and reading back through it as an adult made it all that much more enjoyable. I highly recommend it, especially if you're looking for an action packed, easy read.



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Profile Image for Fabian  {Councillor}.
251 reviews506 followers
May 18, 2019
Judging by its popularity on 欧宝娱乐, not too many people appear to be familiar with James M. Cain's novel "Double Indemnity". That's quite comprehensible, considering that first of all, it's a rather old book which has successfully been adapted into an equally old black-and-white Hollywood classic, and second of all, the story is rather dated and not quite as relevant or interesting today as it may have been thirty, fifty, eighty years ago. I still love it to death. Let me elaborate a bit on why I think this is such a great book (and, for that matter, such a great movie).



Billy Wilder's "Double Indemnity" from 1944 is one of my favorite movies of all time. I've seen it several times and never get tired of watching Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray, Edward G. Robinson and Jean Heather act the hell out of this script. At first, I wasn't even aware that Wilder's film was not based on an original screenplay like many of his other films (such as "The Apartment", "Some Like It Hot" or "Sunset Boulevard"). As soon as I found out, I didn't hesitate to seek out the source material and started reading it, all the while wondering what it was that fueled my fascination with Wilder's film to such an extent. After all, "Double Indemnity" tells an entertaining, exciting and engaging story, and it consists of numerous twists and turns you wouldn't necessarily expect, but is it completely original? We all have seen, heard and read fragments of this story before: An insurance representative falls in love with a housewife and lets himself be talked into a murder scheme involving insurance fraud. Any more details would reveal too much about the nature of the story, but let it suffice to know that the character of the femme fatale has appeared numerous times before, and so did the unsuspecting husband, the unfortunate protagonist or the investigator.

At its heart, "Double Indemnity" is a classic thriller. Unlike today, when the landscape of novels is dominated by many mystery and thriller books seeking popularity and shock value by involving as many unexpected twists and turns as necessary to keep readers engaged, in the 1930s it wasn't quite as usual to read novels which saw the plot take a different direction every five pages or so without losing its credibility. I wouldn't consider the genre's popularity a problem at all, but the sheer quantity of contents available ensures that not too many plot twists can still come as a surprise to the reader. As a result, what is needed is the strength of the writer to ensure that no matter how a) original and b) absurd these plot twists are, they are credible enough to not cause the reader to lose their interest.

James M. Cain excels at this task, and so does Billy Wilder in his award-nominated screenplay based on Cain's novel. The dialogue is absolutely perfect; there is not a single unnecessary line, and yet it feels like you are following these characters on their odyssey through Hollywood as though they really existed. Atmosphere and setting have always been two important aspects strongly connected to classic Noir films from the Golden Age of Hollywood, and they do likely play a major part in the film's success, but the film couldn't have been as great without Barbara Stanwyck's magnetic performance as the scheming Phyllis, and the novel couldn't have been as great without Cain's electrifying characterization of Phyllis.



Perhaps I only love the film so much because Barbara Stanwyck is one of my favorite actresses and I have been fascinated with her career and her life for a long time, but reading the novel reinforced my opinion that this is one of the best thrillers ever written. It's the stuff classic Hollywood was made of and many future soap operas would take inspiration by, and James M. Cain probably found motivation in a few films released before his book only to take a completely new direction with his novel. It's not his only book which has successfully been adapted by Hollywood (two more of his novels are and ), but I genuinely can't imagine them to be as great as this. It's a rare case that I find the adaptation to be as great as the novel itself, but this is one of those instances.

鈥淚 had killed a man, for money and a woman. I didn't have the money and I didn't have the woman.鈥�

Also, if you are not convinced yet: this book is really short at just about 100 pages, so if you have about three or four hours (plus two more hours to either watch "Double Indemnity" for the first time or to give it a rewatch) to spare, then why are you still hesitating?
Profile Image for Mohammad Hrabal.
400 reviews276 followers
August 16, 2022
賮蹖賱賲 丌賳 乇丕 賯亘賱丕賸 丿蹖丿賴 亘賵丿賲 賵 讴鬲丕亘 乇丕 賴賲 丕賱丕賳 禺賵丕賳丿賲
Profile Image for Richard.
1,049 reviews453 followers
August 21, 2016
One of the most tightly written books I've ever read, by the godfather of the type of noir fiction that I love. Not. A. Word. Wasted. In the book, Walter Huff goes to the Hollywood Hills to sell a car insurance renewal to Mr. Nirdlinger. But he gets caught up and starts falling hard for Mrs. Nirdlinger, who doesn't waste any time asking about accident insurance. We can pretty much guess where that leads! But even though we know where this is going, like a car crash, we can't take our eyes away. Even Walter knows where it's heading but he can't turn away either, because to his horror, he realizes that he's in love.
I knew then what I had done. I had killed a man. I had killed a man to get a woman. I had put myself in her power, so there was one person in the world that could point a a finger at me, and I would have to die. I had done all that for her, and I never want to see her again as long as I lived.

That鈥檚 all it takes, one drop of fear, to curdle love into hate.
This is the perfect introduction to classic noir and it inspired everything that came afterward. It's even better than the classic, The Postman Always Rings Twice , but it has a more disappointing ending. This is one of the closest examples of a perfect book to me but falls a bit short because of that strange resolution. If it had Postman's ending (or the movie adaptation's ending) it would be perfect! But still, it feels like Cain took everything good about Postman and ramped it up a notch here. This book seems like a better draft of that book, making it even tighter, more suspenseful, and even more razor sharp, with an even more relentless pace and even stronger characters (how awesome was Keyes?) and dialogue. And in 1944, Billy Wilder teamed up with Raymond Chandler and churned out a movie that might be even better! But Double Indemnity is everything that I look for in crime writing and in books in general. Cain doesn't waste any precious time with bullshit. It is a lean, efficient, and suspenseful piece of writing, and dark as the grave...
"I loved her like a rabbit loves a rattlesnake. That night I did something I hadn't done in years. I prayed.
Profile Image for Richard Derus.
3,637 reviews2,189 followers
February 28, 2012
BkC12) DOUBLE INDEMNITY by James M. Cain: I liked the book better than the movie.

I don't think I agree with myself on this one. I like both book and movie, and the movie version is a wonderful treat . I'll put the two on a par.

Rating: 4.875* of five

The Book Report: Yet again I feel like a fool offering a summary of a story doubtless extremely well-known: Young wife of older, boring man seeks life insurance for the coot from desperately smitten insurance agent. His lust for her leads him way past the usual level of customer service, leading him to establish an alibi for them both AFTER killing the old bore...errr, boy. Hardly a spoiler since it's the whole point of the movie.

The payoff doesn't go quite as smoothly as the conspirators might wish, and after various cool twists and turns, the story wraps up with a humdinger of an ending that I am gnawing my knuckles to the bone not to reveal. Many, including >moi, saw it coming on p2, but let me assure you that, while almost fanning the last pages of this short novel in your haste to find out what you probably already know is going to happen, you will not be bored.

Or if you are, please, if you value our friendship, don't tell me.

My Review: *gruntled sigh* Noir books and films explain, if one needs an explanation, the concept "it hurts so good." The characters are low, vulgar trollops and cads (my favorite kind of people!), and the good guys...the cops, the mothers, the priests...are all such knobs, such squares, so unspeakably unhip as to be dismissable.

Yeah, that's a life worth livin', that is. And we get to live it vicariously through these louche, blowsy people while maintaining our public solid-citizen-ness. For some folks, it's horror novels; for some, it's technothrillers; for just about everyone in the world, based on sales figures, it's online porn; all of us, each and every one, need to get out of our own humdrum skins and into the world of another, very different character once in a way. (Of course, by that reasoning, I'd read John Cheever and John Updike like a madman, with their dull straight boys lusting after slatternly women, this being the polar opposite of my own needs and desires. There are exceptions to every rule.)

And in Double Indemnity, what could be more deeply satisfying that the idea of dressing in the coolest clothes, wearing the hottest, sexiest shoes, and causing such an insane level of desire in someone that he's willing to murder another human being to be with you? What more powerful feeling in the world can there be than to make a reasonable, adult male go bonkers, throw away every scruple and moral that he's ever had, and do your bidding? And for the boys, what could possibly be hotter than a lust-object that teases and promises and offers oh-so-coyly to fulfill the dark fantasy of total control, of ownership, that comes (pardon) from breaking every rule *at the desired one's behest and behalf*? It's mutual submission and mutual domination in a subtle, minute-by-minute exchange of roles.

OF COURSE one wouldn't do that in Real Life, would one?, so that's why James M. Cain wrote the story. And it is BLAZING HOT, on screen or on page.

Read this bad boy. You get to channel your inner naughty, naughty, naughty self. I don't suggest doing either the reading or the movie-viewing alone. If I need to explain why, you shouldn't be reading this review.
Profile Image for Scott.
2,117 reviews242 followers
May 1, 2021
"I stared into the darkness some more that night. I had killed a man, for money and a woman. [But] I didn't have the money and I didn't have the woman." -- narrator Walter Huff

On the heels of devouring The Postman Always Rings Twice I continued raising Cain (haha!) by moving onto the author's other known So-Cal crime classic, the Chandleresque Double Indemnity. (It was probably no coincidence that Raymond Chandler wrote the screenplay for the 1944 cinematic version of this novel, which became a widely acclaimed slice of film noir via legendary director Billy Wilder.) These two Cain-penned books share quite a few obvious similarities - the common man protagonist falls into love-lust with an unhappily married woman, the duo then plans a seemingly 'perfect' murder of the cuckolded husband to collect guaranteed insurance money, things inevitably go awry and the suspense increases - yet Double Indemnity still carves out its own distinct path.

Here we have insurance salesman Walter becoming very smitten with the bored but pretty housewife Phyllis, married to a mid-level oil executive who is a new policy customer. Since Walter astutely knows the insurance biz (*and author Cain's real-life research really shines through, as he was told when interviewing actual insurance agents that "People think this stuff all comes from the police. That's wrong. All big crime mysteries in this country are locked up in [our] company files, and [we] get wise to that fast"*) he soon concocts a scenario to knock off the hubby so Phyllis can then rake in some major dough. Of course, it doesn't goes quite as he planned, or we wouldn't have a story at all. The book was especially good when the readers realize late in the narrative just how warped and evil one of the characters possibly is, which both ratchets up the tension and sheds new light on the person's murky background. Poor Walter - he should've just remained an honest man!
Profile Image for Jason Koivu.
Author听7 books1,381 followers
October 18, 2016
My god, the utter callousness of it all!

It's not too spoilery to give you a summary of the book, however, if you intend to read Double Indemnity, I'd suggest not reading the next two sentences. SUMMARY: A woman consults an insurance agent about taking out a special kind of insurance on her husband, the kind which sends up red flags for the agent, red flags which he ignores. Seduced by the woman and greed, the insurance agent helps her commit murder.

The flippant way in which human life is treated by the narrator reminded me of Humbert Humbert from Lolita. He's a special kind of psycho you don't often see in the papers. In books perhaps he's more common.

This is James M. Cain, so the writing for the genre is fantastic. It's a freaking classic! Sure it doesn't have the name recognition as his famous , but don't sell this one short. I enjoyed it just as much as Postman. There's a similar tone and cadence in them. The emotions are strained, tense, constrained and then explosive.

This isn't cops-n-robbers crime, this is crime straight out of the newspapers...exactly where former journalist Cain got the salacious story. Well worth your time. Give it a read!
Profile Image for Nancy Oakes.
2,016 reviews868 followers
August 18, 2015

It's a shame that most people are more familiar with the movie based on this novel than with the book itself. Don't think for a moment that if you've seen the movie you've read the book because it's just not so. There are a number of differences between page and screen, and also, watching the movie doesn't allow you to really enter and experience Cain's dark and cynical worldview as much as reading the book does. If nothing else, the ending of this book (as compared to the movie) is just phenomenal, creeps up on you slowly, and is nothing at all like the easy way out offered by the film. Then there's Cain's prose. One of my favorite quotations from this book is the following:

"She's made her face chalk white, with black circles under her eyes and red on her lips and cheeks. She's got that red thing on. It's awful-looking. It's just one big square of red silk that she wraps around her, but it's got no armholes, and her hands look like stumps underneath it when she moves them around. She looks like what came aboard the ship to shoot dice for souls in the Rime of the Ancient Mariner."

If that isn't a picture in words, I don't know what is.

Cain is a true master of his craft, and Double Indemnity is one of the best noir novels in existence. I could go on, but why? The book is beyond perfect, and if you read it slowly, you'll totally understand what I mean.
Profile Image for Trudi.
615 reviews1,676 followers
February 7, 2012

There's a reason this is a classic and has stood the test of time, and you only have to read the first few pages to fully understand why. It all starts with a delicious chill up your spine, your eyeballs riveted to the page, your breath held, the "gotta know what happens next" monster rattling the bars of his cage. Your first thought: Strap on baby, this is gonna be g-ooood

Cain is a MASTER storyteller: his cutthroat instincts for plot and pacing unerring and enviable. His ear for dialogue is enough to make grown men cry and women purr. It's sharp, with staccato beats and primal rhythms. And he makes it all look so easy which anyone who has ever put pen to paper knows, easy it is not ... ever. Whether you believe Cain to be a genius, an idiot savant or the prince of pulp, there's no denying his enduring appeal and lasting legacy to the world of literature. And not just the written word, but film as well, since so many of his stories have been adapted into silver screen classics that resonate with awesomeness to this day.

As a movie, is pure gold, yet the vein from which it is mined is richer still. Barbara Stanwyck as Phyllis is THE femme fatale, yet there is so much nuance and depth missing from her character in the film (in what is already an amazing performance). Cain's Phyllis is so much more than a sultry seductress and the cold-blooded spider hanging in her web. But I will leave the pleasure of that discovery to you.

I waited waaaaay too long to read this.
Profile Image for Dave Schaafsma.
Author听6 books32k followers
August 22, 2017
Double Indemnity (1935) is written by the same author, James Cain, who wrote The Postman Always Rings Twice, which I also just read. I have more than once seen the great 1944 film, which was directed by Billy Wilder and co-written by Wilder and another wonderful noir detective writer, Raymond Chandler. It鈥檚 a tight little architecturally-designed novel about an insurance salesman who meets a woman interested in taking out accident insurance on her husband. For some reason (okay, she鈥檚 attractive and seductive), this mild-mannered insurance agent agrees to get involved with a murder plot and actually helps her (improbably named Mrs. Nirdlinger?) plan it out. The narrator has typical thirties sensitivity about women who says things like this: 鈥淎 woman is a funny animal.鈥� He seems to be the passive victim of a pretty 鈥渟hape,鈥� as he says. The story is told from the perspective of this doomed agent and not a tec tracking the case; as he confesses:

鈥淚 loved her like a rabbit loves a rattlesnake.鈥�

The early story is very persuasive about the ins and outs of insurance law; you can see Cain did his homework on what would fool an insurance company and a police department.

The term "double indemnity" refers to a clause in certain life insurance policies that doubles the payout in rare cases when death is caused accidentally, such as while riding a railway. Guess where someone dies?

So, did they live happily ever after? What do you think, wise guy? As our schleppy anti-hero admits, 鈥淚 had killed a man, for money and a woman. I didn't have the money and I didn't have the woman.鈥� And at one point says, 鈥�. . . and I never want to see her again as long as I lived.鈥�

But then things get (even more) complicated, involving the step-daughter of the woman. The resolution has so much going on it will make your head spin. It鈥檚 short, like Postman, so you can read it or listen to it in a couple-three hours. This is a great and classic noir tale, much lauded, from one of the greats, made into a classic film I鈥檒l again soon see, yay.

PS: And both resaw it, wow, and read the screenplay by Billy Wilder and Raymond Chandler, double wow. Must see, at the very least.
Profile Image for Andy Marr.
Author听4 books1,118 followers
December 16, 2023
Quite possibly even better than the film. And I really enjoyed the film.
Profile Image for Tyler  Bell.
237 reviews35 followers
February 1, 2021
4/5 Stars


I'm gagged! This was a fuckin' roller coaster


This itty-bitty book packs a huge punch. I mean, the amount of twists and turns all within 115 pages is truly remarkable.

These people are truly awful humans, but you can't help but root for them? Like, they're so evil, but that's what makes them great characters.

Like stated above, the plot was super twisty with a pretty good ending. It was like non-stop action.

However, some of my gripes do in fact come from the plot. And maybe this is just a "me" problem, but reading about insurance was a bit confusing for me. I mean, I understood the end goal and why they wanted to do certain things, but getting there was at times a struggle. Especially since this book is so short, it didn't allow for proper explanations of things.

But, y'know, this book is really dedicated to the scandalous nature of the plot, as well as its twists and turns and its devious characters, so I guess the small details don't really matter that much.

If you're looking for a classic crime-noir book, then pick this up! I want to read more of this genre and more by this author because I get the hype behind them now!
Profile Image for Maria Clara.
1,177 reviews685 followers
October 30, 2017
Sin lugar a dudas es una buena historia, con "femme fatale" incluida. Sin embago, lo que me ha llamado la atenci贸n de esta historia es su autor. Parece ser que le gustaban las novelas rom谩nticas, pero despu茅s de escribir El cartero siempre llama dos veces, ya no hubo manera de dar marcha atr谩s y escribir historias rom谩nticas.
Profile Image for Jamie.
401 reviews496 followers
May 26, 2023
Double Indemnity is the second James M. Cain novel that I've read. The first was , which has a plot surprisingly similar to this one: a woman and her lover kill her husband, with the story told from the point of view of the lover. The motives and methods are different, of course, but there's definitely some overlap in the storylines.

I really enjoyed the first part of this book, right up through the murder of Mr. Nirdlinger, and I also thought that the twists and turns that occurred afterward were great. Walter, however, got kind of creepy (in a "lecherous middle-aged man" sort of way) after Mr. Nirdlinger's death, and the ending just wasn't very satisfying to me. If you're looking for an superb introduction to Cain's novels, I'd probably suggest The Postman Always Rings Twice over this one.

Still, I wouldn't hesitate to recommend this book to anyone who enjoys classic noir fiction. It's definitely worth a read and James M. Cain is a master of his genre.
Profile Image for 骋颈貌.
58 reviews58 followers
January 31, 2018
Devo riconoscere che, nonostante la mia scarsa passione per il genere noir/hard boiled, La morte paga doppio 猫 davvero un gioiello. Condivido i commenti positivi al libro e aggiungo solo che la cosa stupefacente 猫 quello che Cain ha saputo fare, in un romanzo tanto breve, rispetto alla costruzione della trama e la definizione dei caratteri. La sua scrittura essenziale e precisissima, la sua abilit脿 nel creare tensione al massimo e colpi di scena perfetti dovrebbero essere un esempio per tutti gli autori di genere che spesso non raggiungono gli stessi risultati ottenuti in quest鈥檕pera, nemmeno quando si concedono di scrivere le loro storie in molte, molte pi霉 delle 128 pagine di questa edizione.
Profile Image for Glenn Sumi.
404 reviews1,840 followers
October 22, 2020


Photograph by Paramount Pictures (no photographer credited)



A few weeks ago, I read and thoroughly enjoyed James M. Cain's Mildred Pierce. So I thought I'd pick up another well-known tale from the master of hard-boiled fiction.

Double Indemnity is a brief novella about an insurance salesman, Walter Huff, who falls for Phyllis Nirdlinger, the wife of a client, and agrees to sell her accident insurance on the guy and then help kill him so she collects on it. Because the murder involves an accident on a railway 鈥� a pretty rare thing 鈥� the "double indemnity" clause kicks in. She'll collect a cool $50,000, which must have seemed like a lot in 1936, when the book was serialized in Liberty magazine.

Cain obviously did his research on the insurance biz, its workers, investigators and potential scammers. Some of the best passages involve the experienced Walter telling us about his industry. He knows so much that he carefully covers his tracks at every turn.

Unfortunately, Cain isn't as careful depicting his torrid love story. I wanted more sparks between Walter and Phyllis. They've barely met before Walter is hooked and putting his career 鈥� and life 鈥� on the line for her. And what about Phyllis's husband? We barely know anything about him 鈥� a missed opportunity, I think, to learn more about Phyllis, hint at some tension in their marriage, and generally raise the stakes for the murder itself.

But there is an entertaining subplot involving Phyllis's step-daughter, Lola, and her mysterious boyfriend. And 1930s Los Angeles comes alive in a few brief, sharp strokes. (Perhaps it's because of the famous Billy Wilder film, but when I pictured the events happening they were in black and white.)

One of Cain's stylistic triumphs is the first-person narration by Huff himself. Who is he telling his tale to? That, the suspenseful plot and the ending (different from the film), helped make this a fun bit of escapism during this difficult year.
Profile Image for K.D. Absolutely.
1,820 reviews
September 30, 2012
"No one has ever stopped reading in the middle of one Jim Cain's book." - Saturday Review of Literature
This is true. This is my second Cain and I read this non-stop. Well, that was possible because it was Sunday today and I was just at home.

I liked this better than his other equally popular book, (3 stars). Well, I have not seen the movie adaptation of this book while when I read "Postman," I had already seen and liked the Jack Nicholson-Jessica Lange movie in the 80's so I already knew what would happen. Here, I kept on leafing through the pages because there was always some revelation and I was always guessing at the end of each page.

The story is about Walter Huff an insurance agent who falls in love with a married woman, Phyllis Nirdlinger. They meet when Huff passes by the house of his client, Phyllis' husband, to remind him of the insurance that is about to expire. Phyllis gives out clues that she no longer loves her husband so she thinks of "liberating" (killing) him. Huff agrees and they plan how they will do it and the next pages are just full of twists and turns that will definitely hook you till the book's last two words: "The moon."

Unbelievably great. The very first crime novel that I really liked. I did not know that I would enjoy a roman noir novel. This will definitely not be my last.
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