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151 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1936
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.
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!
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�
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.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...
That鈥檚 all it takes, one drop of fear, to curdle love into hate.
"I loved her like a rabbit loves a rattlesnake. That night I did something I hadn't done in years. I prayed.
Photograph by Paramount Pictures (no photographer credited)
"No one has ever stopped reading in the middle of one Jim Cain's book." - Saturday Review of LiteratureThis 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.