Sudden Fear by Edna Sherry (1948) A playwright fires an actor as she workshops her play prior to opening night. She becomes embroiled in a tangled plot of murder, a double cross, jealous rivals, a frame job and a counter attack. With her husband, a bourgeois girl she saves from drowning, her secretary and her financial advisor. https://chadschimke.blogspot.com/2019... Sudden Fear
Sometimes novels on which movies are based can be really rewarding (for instance "The Blank Wall" by Elisabeth Sanxay-Harding, "The Talented Mr. Ripley" by Patricia Highsmith, "House of Numbers" by Jack Finney or "The Woman in Red" by Anthony Gilbert), but it's not always the case. For instance I was sorely disappointed with reading the novel on which one of my all-time favorite film noirs with Bogart & Bacall (Dark Passage) is based. What a great film - what a mediocre book!
I love the movie "Sudden Fear" with Joan Crawford as Myra and Jack Palance as Lester, watched it at least a dozen times over the past decades, so I wanted to read the book at some point. But unfortunately it's just average. It takes Edna Sherry close to 130 pages to build up some suspense. Watch the movie instead!
Read it because I watched the movie that was made of it (starring Joan Crawford) and had trouble understanding part of the plot. So when I read the book I got what was going on.
I read this 1948 short crime novel pretty quickly, wanting to know how it turned out. . I wouldn't really call this a mystery. The book was out of print for a really long time and so maybe I read a review of it when it was reissued.
The whole scheme was intriguing with good twists but the language was quite dated and some of the dialogue sounded stilted. Myra and Irma are each evil in their own ways. Lester is just a handsome but lazy guy motivated by his own comfort and then his lust.
The portrayal of the black maid would never pass nowadays, I hope.
Also, there was one big hole: I think Irma should have smelled a rat when she told Myra that she thought she could see a fire in her house from the balcony where they were having dinner and Myra didn't approach the parapet to see, because she thought Irma was going to push her off (in fact she did intend to do that). But who wouldn't run to see if their house was on fire? This is not a spoiler because the description in the book indicates that Lester and Irma are secretly making plans to kill her.
Don't read the blurb or the Introduction, go right to Chapter One. If not, half the plot of the book will be spoiled. (The Intro should be an Afterword, since it gives away most of the action.) It is a real page-turner, fraught with suspense and melodrama. There are several dated racial references, however, and some dialogue from the forties that dates it too, but the characterizations are good and the atmosphere is noir indeed. I look forward to seeing the movie, in which Joan Crawford is perfectly cast as Myra. (Note: The name Irma just doesn't work for a beautiful femme fatale, imho.)
Compared to more "modern" who-done-its, this reads more like a off Broadway play. I thought the writing was stilted and sometimes trite tho the plot was fairly decent. Would be interesting to see how someone could edit this and bring it up to date.
You learn your husband and the young woman whose life you saved are planning to kill you. What do you do? Edna Sherry finds a solution that will finish him off and punish her. But it will work only if each of many activities takes place exactly as planned. Could it backfire? This fast-paced 1948 mystery will guide you on what to avoid if you find yourself in a similar circumstance.
O! M! G! Such a fascinating, exciting novel! Edna Sherry is a writer who should NEVER be forgotten! Read this book immediately, and then watch the movie—you will never regret it or forget the ending
Another noir gem from Stark House. Sudden Fear deftly weaves together the murder plots against Myra Hudson and by Myra Hudson. Edna Sherry breezily relays Myra's involvement in a marriage where she and her younger husband both fool each other and themselves by playing roles of loving spouses, only to have everything unravel when Myra discovers a murder plot against her by her husband and the gorgeous young woman she had saved from drowning. Myra's brilliant plan to turn their own plot against them is thrillingly paced by the author, with twist and turns as to who will get away with what. The ending is a tour de force. I wouldn't say the book is better than the film, for Joan Crawford's Myra makes her character particularly interesting by portraying her as far more sympathetic than the book's main character. Nevertheless, on its own terms, this book hits every note beautifully. A recommended read. You won't be able to put it down!
The basis for the classic film noir, this one also ranks high on all-too short good book/good movie list. It even edges out the movie by having a far better ending: a little less contrived, a lot more ironic, and above all, happy in the noirish way imaginable.