Dorothy B. Hughes ranks with Raymond Chandler and Patricia Highsmith as a master of mid-century noir. In books like In a Lonely Place and Ride the Pink Horse she exposed a seething discontent underneath the veneer of twentieth-century prosperity. With The Expendable Man, first published in 1963, Hughes upends the conventions of the wrong-man narrative to deliver a story that engages readers even as it implicates them in the greatest of all American crimes.
Walter Mosley is the author of more than thirty-four books, including the best-selling mystery series featuring Easy Rawlins. Among the many honors he has received are an O. Henry Award, a Grammy, and PEN America's Lifetime Achievement Award.
"Hughes didn't just pre-date Jim Thompson, she also pre-dated Patricia Highsmith, Ruth Rendell, and other so-called Masters of Psychological Suspense or Noir. And her writing style stands up to the test of time." --Sarah Weinman, Bookslut
"Puts Chandler to shame . . . Hughes is the master we keep turning to."--Sara Paretsky, author of the V. I. Warshawski novels
"You are rocked back by Ms. Hughes some fifty pages into her story, and I can certify that the effect is truly rocking. You even read past the vital word, just one word in a sentence of swift
dialogue, before you realize what it has said, and what a new and different light it casts on everything you have read up to that moment." --H. R. F Keating
"A mystery writer who. . . in America was regarded as one of the great names of detective fiction. . . . Her real talent lay in an ability to create atmospheres of growing apprehension and
fear, a very modern approach at a time when Agatha Christie was producing her comparatively predictable puzzles. . . . Her last, and some consider her best, work of fiction was The
Expendable Man." --The Times (London)
"Let me say that it is Mrs. Hughes' finest work . . . of unusual stature both as a suspense story and as a straight novel and nowise to be missed." --Anthony Boucher, The New York Times
"The suspense twist makes this tale a stand-out." --Saturday Review
"To read The Expendable Man today is to experience a mature work by a mistress of her craft." --Dominic Power
"A surprise-twist gasper about a young doc who picks up a sick chick and gets framed by a hack dick for her kill" --Time
"One of crime fiction's finest writers of psychological suspense." --Marcia Miller, author of the Sharon McCone novels
"This lady is the queen of noir. . ." --Laurie R. King, author of the Mary Russell novels
"Nobody but Dorothy Hughes can cast suspense into such an uncanny spell . . ." --San Francisco Chronicle
"A gun molling wordslinger who took it to the tough guys . . . I simply call Hughes one damn good story teller." --John Hood, Bully Magazine