Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Notes For April 8th, 2025


This Day In Literary History

On April 8th, 1954, The Bad Seed, the classic final novel by the famous American writer William March, was published. An iconic, disturbing psychological thriller, it was the perfect novel for the author, who died suddenly a month after its release, to go out with.

March, born William Campbell in Mobile, Alabama in 1893, was intellectually gifted, but his family was dirt poor, so he had to leave school at 14 to work. At 24, he enlisted in the Marines to serve his country during the Great War and was a highly decorated soldier.

In fact, March was awarded the Marines' Distinguished Service Cross, the Navy Cross, and the French Croix de Guerre for refusing to leave after being wounded twice in battle, opting instead to keep fighting the Germans and rescue his own wounded men.

He had also endured a mustard gas attack. His war experiences left him psychologically scarred for life, and he would suffer from anxiety, depression, psychosomatic throat and eye issues, and other mental illnesses. He also struggled with his sexual orientation.

March's war experiences would inspire his classic debut novel, Company K (1933), which followed a company of Marines during the Great War. A grim and brutal antiwar novel, it's been compared to Erich Maria Remarque's antiwar classic, All Quiet on the Western Front (1929).

Though William March wrote six quality novels and was an O. Henry Prize winning short story writer, he saw little commercial success during his lifetime. As he died of a heart attack at 60 just a month after it was published, he never got to bask in the glory of his final novel.

Ironically, he had dismissed The Bad Seed as a mediocre novel, never realizing the commercial juggernaut and cultural icon it would become. The novel was the result of March's expertise in psychology - he was very well read on the subject, given his own issues.

To her mother Christine, eight-year-old Rhoda Penmark seems like the perfect child - she's highly intelligent, charming, loving, obedient, polite, well groomed, and diligent in her studies. Yet, Christine can't help suspecting that something might be wrong with the girl, who also seems cold, calculating, manipulative, narcissistic, and self sufficient beyond her years.

At first, Christine blames her suspicions on her worsening anxieties, as her husband Kenneth's job keeps him out on the road and away from his family most of the time. Her landlady, close friend, and mother figure Monica Breedlove assures her there's nothing wrong with Rhoda.

Monica, who considers herself an expert in psychology, claims she was once psychoanalyzed by Sigmund Freud. When she invites Christine to a luncheon at her home, the party is attended by Monica's brother Emory and his friend, true crime writer Reggie Tasker. The psychopathic mind becomes the subject of discussion.

When Tasker begins discussing cases of female serial killers - women who murdered family members and others for monetary gain or to start a new life - the name of a particularly infamous killer, Bessie Denker, triggers Christine's recurring memories of living with a different family and running in terror from a different mother. Then she hears a chilling news report on the radio.

A child has been killed during a school outing - her daughter Rhoda's school outing. The identity of the victim is not released. Fearing that it's Rhoda, Christine runs back to her apartment. Rhoda returns home, very much alive, and is totally unaffected by the tragedy. She tells her mother that a classmate of hers, a boy named Claude Daigle, drowned.

Christine knows that name. Rhoda had been furious when Claude won a penmanship award at school that she believed was rightfully hers. Later, Christine learns from Claudia Fern, who founded the private school with her sisters, that Rhoda has been expelled. On the day of Claude's death, Rhoda had been harassing him.

The other kids hated Rhoda, but more than that, they feared her. It didn't bother Rhoda at all; she had no use for friends. Christine also learns that although Claude Daigle's death was ruled an accidental drowning, he had unexplained crescent-shaped marks on his face and his penmanship medal was never found.

Overcome with dread, Christine fears that Rhoda may have killed Claude, though it seems impossible. But someone else sees through Rhoda's act - Leroy Jessup, the janitor, groundskeeper, and gardener for Monica Breedlove's apartments. He's a depraved sociopath and recognizes Rhoda's sociopathic nature.

Leroy sees a kindred spirit in Rhoda, but he's troubled by her meanness, which is greater than his own. He wants her to be nice to him, so he teases her by claiming that he knows she murdered Claude Daigle. He knows no such thing and doesn't believe for a minute that an eight-year-old girl could kill anyone.

Rhoda loathes Leroy and isn't about to be nice to him. So he constantly follows her around, and like an evil Uncle Remus, tells her stories about forensics and how the state has special little electric chairs for children who kill - a blue one for little boys and a pink one for girls like her. She discovers that he naps on a makeshift mattress in his shed when he's supposed to be working.

Meanwhile Christine, who recalls other strange deaths surrounding Rhoda - the puppy who fell out of a window after Rhoda got bored with it, an elderly babysitter who fell down the stairs to her death after promising to leave Rhoda a fancy trinket in her will - asks Reggie Tasker for his crime case histories.

Especially interested in the Bessie Denker case, she learns that beginning when Bessie was a little girl, all of her family members were mysteriously killed, leaving her the sole owner of the family's farm and bank account. Later, she married and had children, but murdered her husbands and kids, either for money or to start a new life.

When she was finally caught, Bessie had murdered her current husband and all but one of her children with an axe. The surviving child's name? Christine Denker, Bessie's youngest daughter. Arrested, tried, and convicted of multiple murders, Bessie died an agonizing death in the electric chair.

The man Christine thought was her biological father, the famous journalist Richard Bravo, best known as a war correspondent, was working as an investigative reporter when he saved Christine from her murderous mother. Then he and his wife, unable to have children of their own, adopted her.

They never told Christine any of this to spare her the knowledge and stigma of being a serial killer's daughter. Remembering Reggie Tasker's discussion of the psychopathic mind and how psychopathic tendencies can be inherited, she fears that Rhoda may be a psychopath like her biological grandmother.

Then she finds Claude Daigle's penmanship medal in Rhoda's treasure box. A hysterical Rhoda confesses to killing Claude in a fit of rage. Satisfied that her mother isn't going to turn her over to the police, she returns to her calm and charming self. Not knowing whether to love or hate her daughter, Christine blames herself for "carrying the bad seed" and passing it on to Rhoda.

Then Leroy Jessup makes the mistake of teasing Rhoda by telling her that he has incriminating evidence against her - the cleated shoes she'd beaten Claude with and disposed of down the furnace chute. She sneaks in when Leroy's sleeping and sets his mattress on fire. He runs out of the shed engulfed in flames. While she watches him burn to death, Rhoda giggles and says, "You're silly!"

Racked with guilt over Claude Daigle's death, unable to stop Rhoda from killing Leroy, and fearful that the little girl will grow up to follow her grandmother's path to the electric chair, Christine tricks Rhoda into taking an overdose of sleeping pills, then commits suicide with a handgun. Monica Breedlove arrives on the scene just barely in time to get Rhoda to the hospital.

With all the evidence of Rhoda's crimes destroyed by her mother, (to avoid scandalizing her husband and his prominent family) Kenneth Penmark is left griefstricken and confused, but thankful that his daughter survived. The novel ends with Rhoda repeating her famous line, "What will you give me for a basket of kisses?"

A hugely influential novel, its title, The Bad Seed, would enter the American psychological lexicon as a theory used to explain how a person raised in a loving, stable family could be a psychopath with violent tendencies. In the 70+ years since its publication, the bad seed theory has been largely debunked.

While psychopathic tendencies can be inherited, modern technology for scanning the brain has shown that the root cause of the psychopathic personality is a defect in the temporal lobes, which control the personality - a defect that renders a person's natural capacity for empathy retarded to nonexistent. The defect can also result in sociopathic or borderline personality disorders.

Of course, nature and nurture still play a part in the development of a psychopath. A child with risk factors for sociopathic or psychopathic personality disorders may not develop them if raised in a loving and stable environment, and not all psychopaths have violent or sexually deviant tendencies. (Psychopaths make the best CEOs.) And yes, there have been violent child psychopaths.

In 1968, a 10-year-old English girl named Mary Bell was arrested for strangling two small boys. A sadistic psychopath, Mary expressed no remorse and was found guilty but with diminished mental capacity. Her father had been a violent alcoholic and criminal, her mother a prostitute who repeatedly tried to kill her and encouraged her clients to sexually abuse her.

The same year it was published, The Bad Seed was adapted as a hit Broadway play by playwright Maxwell Anderson. It starred Nancy Kelly (who won a Tony Award for her performance) as Christine Penmark, Henry Jones as Leroy Jessup, and child actress Patty McCormack in a chilling performance as Rhoda.

The play was itself adapted as a classic film two years later, with Kelly, Jones, and McCormack reprising their Broadway roles. Unfortunately, the stifling Hollywood Production Code was still in effect and it forbade showing criminals getting away with their crimes. Director Mervyn LeRoy was forced to change the ending somewhat.

To get the Code Seal and placate other censors, (at the time, states and cities had their own film censorship boards) in an obviously tacked on final scene after Rhoda survives her mother's murder attempt, she sneaks out on a rainy night to look for the penmanship medal and is struck by lightning and killed. This is followed by a cutesy "curtain call" scene - a nod to the film's Broadway origins.

In this scene, the cast members come out to take a bow, the actors introduced to the audience. After little Patty McCormack takes her bow, Nancy Kelly, who played her mother, takes the girl over her knee and playfully spanks her, while Patty laughs hysterically.

The film, which made Patty McCormack a horror icon, was remade twice, first as a made-for-TV movie in 1985 that starred Blair Brown as Christine Penmark, David Carradine as Leroy Jessup, and a talented child actress named Carrie Wells as Rhoda, who is renamed Rachel Penmark here. Panned when it first aired, this movie now has its fair share of admirers.

The second remake was released in 2018, and aired on the Lifetime cable channel. It's pretty much an "in name only" adaptation of the novel and play, but it's still worth watching for the performances of the very talented young actress Mckenna Grace as Rhoda (renamed Emma Grossman) and Rob Lowe (who produced and directed) as her anxiety-racked and overmedicated single dad.

A grown-up Patty McCormack appears as a child psychologist who assures Lowe that his daughter is "one hundred percent perfectly average. In fact, I told her that she reminds me of myself!" A sequel, The Bad Seed Returns, with Mckenna Grace reprising her role as Emma, premiered on Lifetime in May of 2022.

Legendary horror director Eli Roth has said that he plans to make a new feature film adaptation of The Bad Seed. Roth, who invented the "torture porn" subgenre of horror films with his 2005 horror classic Hostel and its 2007 sequel, Hostel: Part II, said that his version will be darker and gorier than the novel and its previous adaptations.


Quote Of The Day

"Everybody must seem crazy if you see deep enough into their minds."

- William March


Vanguard Video

Today's video features a complete live performance of the stage play adaptation of William March's novel, The Bad Seed. Enjoy!

Friday, April 4, 2025

Notes For April 4th, 2025


This Day In Literary History

On April 4th, 1928, the legendary African-American writer Maya Angelou was born. She was born Marguerite Ann Johnson in St. Louis, Missouri. When Maya was three, her parents divorced. She and her four-year-old brother Bailey were sent to live with their paternal grandmother in Arkansas.

Maya's grandmother managed a successful general store, so for the next four years, Maya and Bailey lived a relatively comfortable and happy life during the early years of the Great Depression. Then, when Maya was seven, her father showed up out of the blue and decided to bring his children to live with their mother.

The move would prove to be a tragic disaster. Maya was sexually abused and assaulted by her mother's boyfriend. She told her brother, and he told the rest of the family. The boyfriend was arrested and convicted, but served only one day in jail. Four days after his release, he was murdered by Maya's uncles - but it couldn't be proven.

After the boyfriend's murder, Maya and Bailey were sent back to their paternal grandmother in Arkansas. The trauma of her sexual abuse would cause Maya to become mute for nearly five years, as she believed that she had killed her mother's boyfriend with her voice.

A teacher and a family friend would help Maya overcome her psychosomatic muteness. That same family friend, Bertha Flowers, introduced her to literature and great authors such as Charles Dickens, Edgar Allan Poe, and William Shakespeare.

When Maya was fourteen, she and her brother were again sent to live with their mother in Oakland, California. While she attended high school, she worked part time jobs, including a position as the first black female streetcar conductor in San Francisco.

At seventeen, Maya found herself pregnant. After graduating from high school, she gave birth to her son, Clyde, who grew up to be a poet like his mother. Struggling to provide for her son with no help from his father, she took up the life of a working single parent.

With employment opportunities for black women very limited at the time, Maya picked up work where she could find it, drifting from city to city. She plunged into poverty and was forced to turn to crime to support herself and her child, prostituting herself and managing other prostitutes.

Maya determined to escape the streets and did so using her talent for dancing. While taking modern dance classes, she struck up a friendship with legendary African-American dancer-choreographer Alvin Ailey.

Together, they formed a dance team called Al and Rita (Rita was her nickname) and performed for black organizations in San Francisco. The team ultimately proved unsuccessful, so Ailey and Maya parted ways.

A year later, Maya had built a successful solo act, dancing and singing at clubs in San Francisco. Sometimes she used her real name, Marguerite Johnson. Sometimes she used her nickname and billed herself as Rita Johnson.

While performing calypso songs and dances at the famous nightclub The Purple Onion, her managers and her fans both encouraged her to adopt a distinctive stage name. So, she chose the name Maya Angelou.

A couple years later, in 1954, Maya landed a role in a production of George and Ira Gershwin's classic opera, Porgy and Bess, and toured Europe for a year. After that, she recorded Miss Calypso, an album of calypso songs she had written. She would perform them in an Off-Broadway show called Calypso Heat Wave.

By 1961, Maya switched gears and took up acting, co-starring in a production of Jean Genet's classic play, The Blacks. Her cast mates were a who's who of great African-American actors and actresses, including Roscoe Lee Browne, James Earl Jones, Godfrey Cambridge, Cicely Tyson, and Abbey Lincoln.

At this time, Maya had become a civil rights activist after hearing Martin Luther King, Jr. speak in 1960. She also became friends with civil rights leader Malcom X and helped him build the Organization of Afro-American Unity.

She would be devastated twice when first Malcolm X was assassinated, then another assassin's bullet claimed the life of Martin Luther King, Jr. - on her 40th birthday. She was consoled by her close friend, legendary African-American novelist James Baldwin, who encouraged her budding writing career.

Though she had started her literary career writing plays, it was her first book that made her name as a writer. I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1969) was the first of a six volume series of autobiographies. Covering the first seventeen years of her life, it was more than just an autobiography - it was a remarkable work of literature.

Maya not only chronicles her own childhood rape, she also uses rape as a metaphor for the suffering of blacks at the hands of racist whites - which she had witnessed firsthand for nearly the first fifty years of her life.

I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings would be adapted as an acclaimed made-for-TV movie in 1979; Maya wrote the teleplay. Other memorable volumes of her autobiography series include Gather Together in My Name (1974), Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like Christmas (1976), and The Heart of a Woman (1981).

Of course, Maya was most famous for her poetry collections. She wrote nearly two dozen of them. Her most famous of these is her classic 1978 poetry collection, And Still I Rise. The title poem was used for a famous advertising campaign for the United Negro College Fund.

Maya Angelou also wrote children's books, essays, and screenplays, and recorded spoken word albums. She received numerous awards for her works - too numerous to mention here.

She held numerous honorary degrees and a lifetime Reynolds Professorship of American Studies at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, where she taught everything from philosophy and science to writing.

In 1993, Maya read her classic poem On the Pulse of Morning at the inauguration of President Bill Clinton. In 2011, President Barack Obama presented her with the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Maya Angelou died in November of 2014 at the age of 86.


Quote Of The Day

"Nothing so frightens me as writing, but nothing so satisfies me. It's like a swimmer in the [English] Channel: you face the stingrays and waves and cold and grease, and finally you reach the other shore, and you put your foot on the ground — Aaaahhhh!"

— Maya Angelou


Vanguard Video

Today's video features a full length BBC documentary on Maya Angelou. Enjoy!

Thursday, April 3, 2025

Notes For April 3rd, 2025


This Day In Literary History

On April 3rd, 1957, Endgame, the classic play by the legendary Irish playwright Samuel Beckett, premiered in London. Although Beckett was an Irishman, he originally wrote Endgame and other works in French.

Beckett had become hugely famous for his classic avant garde play Waiting For Godot, which had been written four years earlier, in 1953. Endgame would prove to be just as avant garde, if not more so.

Endgame is a four-character play. The cast includes Hamm, a blind man who is unable to stand. His servant, Clov, is unable to sit. Nagg and Nell are Hamm's parents. They have no legs and live in adjacent garbage cans.

All four characters live by the sea, but the dialogue implies that there is actually no sea at all - or clouds or sun, for that matter. Hamm and Clov, trapped in a mutually dependent relationship, bicker endlessly.

Clov always wants to leave, but for some reason, is unable to. Meanwhile, Hamm's legless parents Nagg and Nell spend their time asking for food and getting into inane arguments. The dialogue suggests that the characters had a past, but have no future.

A major theme is the hell of repetition - how humans keep repeating their mistakes and bad habits, never learning from the past to create a better future, and instead becoming devoted to pointless traditions and rituals.

When Samuel Beckett's play Waiting For Godot premiered in Paris, it created an international sensation. But Endgame was so avant garde that no company in France was willing to take a chance on producing it.

The Royal Court Theatre in London contacted Beckett with an offer to produce Endgame, and he agreed to travel to England. However, he was very skeptical about the Theatre company's abilities after they'd botched the English language premiere of Waiting For Godot.

To insure that Endgame would be produced properly, Beckett made sure to include precise stage and acting directions in his script:

HAMM     What's happening?

CLOV      Something is taking its course. (Pause)

HAMM     Clov!

CLOV      (Impatiently) What is it?

HAMM     We're not beginning to... to... mean something?

CLOV      Mean something! You and I, mean something! 
(Brief laugh)
Ah, that's a good one!

HAMM      I wonder.
(Pause)
Imagine if a rational being came back to earth, wouldn't he be liable to get ideas into his head if he observed us long enough.
(Voice of rational being)
Ah, good, now I see what it is, yes, now I understand what they're at!
(Clov starts, drops the telescope and begins to scratch his belly with both hands)
(Normal voice)
And without going so far as that, we ourselves...
(with emotion)
... we ourselves... at certain moments...
(Vehemently.)
To think perhaps it won't all have been for nothing!

CLOV     (anguished, scratching himself) I have a flea!...


Working with the Theatre's producer and director was once again agony for Beckett. The reviews for the French language production of Endgame weren't good. Still, the playwright agreed to come to London again in eighteen months for the English language premiere of Endgame.

The English premiere's reviews weren't any better. Critic Kenneth Tynan's famous bad review of Endgame took the form of a parody of the play:

Foreground figure a blind and lordly cripple with superficial mannerisms... Sawn-off parents in bins, stage right, and shuffling servant all over the stage...

Slamm      Is that all the review he's getting?

Seck      That's all the play he's written.

Slamm      But a genius. Could you do as much?

Seck      Not as much. But as little.


Despite the inability of critics to understand Endgame, it would go on to become one of Samuel Beckett's most celebrated plays and is still staged to this day.


Quote Of The Day

"Art has nothing to do with clarity, does not dabble in the clear, and does not make clear."

- Samuel Beckett


Vanguard Video

Today's video features a complete performance of Samuel Beckett's classic play Endgame, starring Michael Gambon and David Thewlis. Enjoy!

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Notes For April 2nd, 2025


This Day In Literary History

On April 2nd, 1805, the legendary Danish writer Hans Christian Andersen was born in Odense, Denmark. The Andersens were a working class family, but speculation (which persists to this day) suggests that Hans's father was of a different lineage.

The senior Andersen may have been an illegitimate son of the Danish royal family. When he was a boy, King Frederick VI took a special interest in him and paid for part of his education. His son wasn't so fortunate.

Hans Christian Andersen had to leave school at 13 and work to support himself. He first found employment as an apprentice weaver, then as a tailor's apprentice. A year later, at the age of 14, he moved to Copenhagen, hoping to become an actor.

However, it was Andersen's excellent soprano singing voice, not his acting, that gained him entrance into the Royal Danish Theatre. When his voice changed, his theatrical career faltered. When one of his theater colleagues pointed out his talent for poetry, he decided to become a writer.

In a chance meeting, Andersen encountered Jonas Collin, a director for the Royal Danish Theatre, who became very fond of him. Collin decided to help Hans become a writer. He sent him to school and paid for his education.

Hans attended schools in Slagelse and Elsinore, but because of his dyslexia, he was a fair student at best. Older than his classmates, he felt alienated from them. At one school, he lived with the headmaster, who beat him frequently "to improve his character."

His teachers discouraged him from becoming a writer, driving him to depression. For these reasons, he would describe his school years as the darkest and most bitter years of his life. Despite his teachers' discouragement, Hans Christian Andersen did become a writer.

He burst onto the literary scene in 1824 with his short story A Journey on Foot from Holmen's Canal to the East Point of Amager. He also published a poetry collection and a comic play. In 1833, he received a traveling grant from the King and embarked on the first of many travels throughout Europe.

During his traveling years, Andersen wrote his first novel, The Improvisatore, which would be published in early 1835. It became an overnight sensation. That same year, he also published a short story collection, Eventyr, the first of several volumes, known in English as Fairy Tales.

The book sold poorly, as the brilliance and beauty of the stories had yet to be recognized. Andersen returned to novel writing, and his next two novels, O.T. (1836) and Only A Fiddler (1837), were just as successful as his first.

The year his third novel was published, Andersen made his first visit to Sweden. Inspired by Scandinavism, he decided to write about the Scandinavian brotherhood shared by the Danes, Swedes, and Norwegians.

The result was his classic poem Jeg er en Skandinav (I am a Scandinavian), which would be set to music by Swedish composer Otto Lindblad. Andersen continued his travels throughout Europe. He would write travelogues about his experiences in countries such as Switzerland, Spain, and Portugal.

In 1847, he made his first visit to England. His writing career was then at its peak, and his volumes of fairy tales were celebrated throughout Europe - except in his native Denmark, where at the time, they still received a lukewarm reception.

In England, Andersen became a noted guest at the famous parties of Marguerite Gardiner, the Countess of Blessington, who was a writer herself. Her parties were known as gathering places for writers, intellectuals, and other illuminati.

Andersen was a hit at the parties - a big social success. At one party, he got to meet his literary idol, the legendary Enlgish novelist Charles Dickens. He was thrilled.

During one of his later visits to England, Andersen stayed with Dickens for five weeks, oblivious to his host's blatant hints that he had worn out his welcome.

The friendship between the two men soured, and Dickens was said to have modeled the character of Uriah Heep, from his classic novel David Copperfield (1849), after Hans Christian Andersen.

As for Andersen's personal life, he was openly bisexual. He preferred women, but was very shy and awkward around them. He would fall in love with unattainable women, and their inevitable rejection of him would result in great heartbreak.

His most famous paramour was the legendary Swedish opera singer, Jenny Lind. He fell madly in love with her, and his fairy tale The Nightingale was a tribute to her singing. Her famous nickname, "the Swedish Nightingale," was inspired by Andersen's story.

Hans proposed to Jenny, but she turned him down. She had come to love him like a brother, and referred to him as her brother in a dear john letter. Andersen's failures with women would be repeated in his gay relationships; he would become attracted to unattainable men who failed to reciprocate his love.

Ultimately, he never married or had any children. He gave up on love and most likely patronized brothels; shortly before his death, in the throes of severe illness, he dictated journal entries recalling memories of his many relationships with "loose women."

In 1872, Hans Christian Andersen fell out of bed and injured himself severely. He never recovered and his health began to deteriorate. Three years later, he died of liver cancer. At that time, he had finally been recognized in his native Denmark for his legendary fairy tales.

Over 150 years later, his classic stories, such as The Little Mermaid, The Snow Queen, The Little Match Girl, The Princess and the Pea, The Ugly Duckling, The Red Shoes, Thumbelina, and The Emperor's New Clothes, continue to enchant readers of all ages. They would be adapted as plays, ballets, and feature films.

Readers are quite surprised that, like the original Brothers Grimm fairy tales, Andersen's stories are quite different from the retellings and adaptations they spawned. The Little Mermaid, for example, ends on a tragic note.

The little mermaid makes a deal with the Sea Witch to become human so she can marry the Prince, but he marries another girl whom he discovers is his true love - the girl who had saved him from drowning.

Heartbroken, the little mermaid can only return to mermaid form if she kills him with a dagger given to her by the Sea Witch. She sneaks up on the Prince, asleep with his new wife, but can't bring herself to kill him, and commits suicide instead, throwing herself into the sea.


Quote Of The Day

"Life itself is the most wonderful fairy tale."

- Hans Christian Andersen


Vanguard Video

Today's video features a reading of a collection of Hans Christian Andersen's classic fairy tales. Enjoy!


Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Notes For April 1st, 2025


This Day In Literary History

On April 1st, 1841, The Murders in the Rue Morgue, the classic short story by the legendary American writer Edgar Allan Poe, was published. Appearing in Graham's Magazine, it's considered to be the first detective story.

It also incorporates elements of horror, as its author was famous for his horror fiction, which made up the bulk of his writings. Horror elements also appeared in his poems, such as the classics Annabel Lee and The Raven.

The Murders in the Rue Morgue opens with a bizarre and brutal double murder that took place in the Rue Morgue, a fictional street in Paris. The victims, Madame L'Espanaye and her daughter, were found dead in an inaccessible room that had been locked from the inside.

Madame L'Espanaye's throat was slashed so deeply that her head was nearly severed. Her daughter was strangled and stuffed in the chimney. Parisian detective C. Auguste Dupin and his unnamed friend, who narrates the story, read an account of the murders in the newspaper.

Dupin's interest in the case is piqued, especially when a man named Adolphe Le Bon is arrested for the horrible crime and imprisoned, despite the fact that there is no evidence to prove his guilt. Dupin offers his services to the prefect (chief) of police.

The plot thickens as Madame L'Espanaye's neighbors, who heard the murders take place, give contradictory statements, each claiming to have heard the killer speak a different foreign language - a language that none of them could recognize.

This leads Dupin to conclude that the witnesses weren't hearing a human voice. His theory is proven correct when he finds a hair at the crime scene that is not human. It belongs to an orangutan.

Dupin places an ad in the newspaper asking if anyone has lost an orangutan. A sailor shows up at his home to answer the ad. He had been keeping a pet orangutan he'd acquired in Borneo, but the animal escaped. Dupin interrogates the sailor and solves the crime.

When the orangutan escaped, it made off with the sailor's straight razor. When it got into Madame L'Espanaye's apartment, it attempted to shave her, mimicking its owner. The resulting bloodbath incited the orangutan to a frenzy.

It strangled
Madame L'Espanaye's daughter, and, fearing its owner's whip, stuffed her body in the chimney to hide it. When the sailor learned of the "murders," he panicked and fled, allowing the orangutan to escape again.

The Murders in the Rue Morgue was a huge hit with both readers and critics. A review in the Pennsylvania Inquirer proclaimed that "it proves Mr. Poe to be a man of genius... with an inventive power and skill, of which we know no parallel."

Poe's detective, C. Auguste Dupin, would return in The Mystery of Marie Roget (1842), and The Purloined Letter (1844). The Murders in the Rue Morgue would be adapted several times for the radio, screen, and television.

The Murders in the Rue Morgue would also start a new subgenre - the locked room mystery. A locked room mystery involves a logically impossible crime, a crime where no evidence exists to prove that a crime was committed, or a crime where a person is convicted by evidence proving his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, but the sleuth doubts it and proves his innocence.


Quote Of The Day

"It will be found, in fact, that the ingenious are always fanciful, and the truly imaginative never otherwise than analytic."

- Edgar Allan Poe, from
The Murders in the Rue Morgue


Vanguard Video

Today's video features a complete reading of Edgar Allan Poe's classic short story, The Murders in the Rue Morgue. Enjoy!


Monday, March 31, 2025

IWW Members' Publishing Successes For The Week Ending 3/30/25


Pamelyn Casto

My flash fiction piece, SOS, Somebody Said, will be published in the next issue of Dog Throat Journal, which should go live April 1st. Thanks to the Practice-W Group for the prompt and to the members for their comments.

Mark Budman

My new story, Frankenstein's Mirrors, has been published by Antipodean SF. My mom taught me that every man has to leave a mark on this world, something that posterity would remember him by. I listened. Her wisdom and my obedience brought me nothing but trouble.


Friday, March 28, 2025

Notes For March 28th, 2025


This Day In Literary History

On March 28th, 1909, the famous American writer Nelson Algren was born. He was born Nelson Ahlgren Abraham in Detroit, Michigan, to a German Jewish mother and a Swedish father. When Nelson was three, his family moved to Chicago.

The Abrahams first settled in the South Side. When Nelson was eight, they moved to an apartment in the North Side. Nelson was a lifelong White Sox fan.

Growing up in Cubs country, the other kids teased him frequently for being a White Sox fan. The teasing would increase exponentially during the Black Sox Scandal of 1920, when it was revealed that eight White Sox players had been bribed to throw the World Series.

In 1931, Neslon Algren graduated from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with a Bachelor's degree in journalism. With the Great Depression in full effect, all he could do to make ends meet was drift around the country looking for work like so many other people did.

Two years later, Algren wrote his first short story, So Help Me. At the time, he was working at a gas station in Texas. Before his planned return home to Chicago, he found a typewriter in an abandoned classroom and took it, as very few publications accepted handwritten manuscripts.

Algren was caught, arrested, convicted of theft, and sentenced to prison. He was released after serving five months of a possible three and a half year term. While in prison, he was moved by the scores of other men jailed for taking desperate measures in desperate times.

He found kindred spirits among the outsiders, misfits, failures, and other tragic characters spawned by the Depression. They strongly influenced his writing. In 1935, his short story The Brother's House, published by Story magazine, won him his first of three O. Henry Awards.

That same year, Algren published his first novel, Somebody in Boots. It sold only 750 copies before going out of print, which didn't bother the author because he considered it primitive - his worst work.

His second novel, Never Come Morning (1942), courted many good reviews. Ernest Hemingway wrote of it, "I think it very, very good. It is as fine and good stuff to come out of Chicago..." It also courted controversy.

Never Come Morning told the haunting, tragic, and lyrical story of Bruno "Lefty" Bicek, a small time hoodlum and aspiring boxer from the "Polish Triangle" - the Polish section of Chicago's North Side. Algren tells the story without making any moral judgement on his characters.

Growing up desperately poor, Bruno dreams of escaping the slums by becoming a boxing champion, but ultimately realizes that he was born a thug and will be a thug until the day he dies - a revelation that comes when he fails to save his girlfriend Steffi Rostenkowski from being gang raped by his thug buddies.

Algren's grim and frank depictions of the Polish Triangle as a hopeless cesspool of crime, corruption, and misery outraged Polish-American groups in Chicago, who accused him of being a Nordic Nazi sympathizer.

They didn't realize hat he was actually Jewish and a leftist. Nevertheless, the pressure groups succeeded in getting Never Come Morning banned by the Chicago Public Library.

In 1949, Nelson Algren published his most famous novel, The Man With the Golden Arm. It would win him the National Book Award. The Polish-American protagonist, Francis Majcinek, known as Frankie Machine, is a professional card sharp.

Also an aspiring jazz drummer, Frankie longs to escape the seedy world of professional gambling by becoming a professional musician, but his personal problems threaten both his dream and his life.

When he served in World War II, Frankie took shrapnel in his liver and was treated with morphine. He recovered but became a morphine addict - a habit he refers to as the "thirty-five-pound monkey on his back." He keeps his friends and wife in the dark about his habit, which is a source of great shame for him.

Speaking of his wife, Frankie is trapped in a miserable marriage to wheelchair-bound Sophie, whom he thinks he crippled in a drunk driving accident. Her paralysis is actually psychological, and she takes her frustration out on Frankie, using guilt to keep him from leaving her. The stress adds to his drug habit.

After Frankie ends up accidentally killing his drug dealer "Nifty Louie" Fomorowski, he and his friend, petty crook Sparrow Saltskin, cover up Frankie's involvement in the crime. Then, Frankie's life takes a turn for the better when he has an affair with his childhood sweetheart, Molly "Molly-O" Novotny.

Molly was also trapped in a rotten marriage until her abusive husband got arrested. Reunited with Frankie, she uses her love to help him beat his drug addiction. Unfortunately, Frankie screws up again, but in a different way - he gets busted for shoplifting.

While Frankie serves his time, Molly moves away and they lose contact. After his release, without Molly to lean on, Frankie goes back on the needle. When his friend Sparrow breaks down during an intense police interrogation over the death of Nifty Louie, Frankie must go on the lam.

While on the run, Frankie finds Molly working at a strip joint. He hides out at her apartment and, with her help, kicks his drug addiction once and for all. The cops learn where he's hiding and he's forced to flee again. He barely escapes from them.

Hiding out in a sleazy flophouse, Frankie realizes that he'll never be free or have his Molly again, so he commits suicide, hanging himself in his room. The novel ends with a poem for Frankie called Epitaph.

Several years after The Man With the Golden Arm was published, the legendary director Otto Preminger decided to adapt it as a feature film. Unfortunately, the stifling Production Code was still in effect, and the Code forbade any stories dealing with drugs.

In 1953, Preminger successfully defied the Production Code to adapt the risque romantic comedy The Moon is Blue, which had been a hit Broadway play. When the PCA (Production Code Administration) once again denied him a Code Seal for The Man With the Golden Arm, Preminger released it without one, like he'd done for The Moon is Blue.

He had several key factors working in his favor; the Legion of Decency didn't condemn the film. Theater owners, granted independence from the studios in a landmark Supreme Court antitrust decision in 1948, didn't care about the Code Seal anymore. Last, but certainly not least, Preminger had cast legendary singer Frank Sinatra in the lead role.

The film adaptation of The Man With the Golden Arm was a cinematic milestone in that it finally cajoled Hollywood to amend the Production Code, which hadn't changed in over 25 years. It was also the first Hollywood feature film in over two decades to deal with drug addiction as its main theme.

Even anti-drug propaganda films like Reefer Madness (1936), Marihuana (1936), and The Cocaine Fiends (1935) could only be made by low budget exploitation filmmakers and booked into small, local theaters. The Code forbade studios from making drug movies.

Despite Frank Sinatra's excellent performance as Frankie Machine, Nelson Algren hated Otto Preminger's adaptation of his novel. He had been brought in as a screenwriter, then quickly replaced by Walter Newman.

Although an acclaimed film and a big hit at the box office, the screenplay took extensive liberties with the novel and changed the ending. To make matters worse, Algren, believing he had been duped into selling the adaptation rights for far less than they were worth, sued producer-director Otto Preminger for his fair share. He lost.

During the 1950s, Nelson Algren ran afoul of McCarthyism - the government's relentless and mostly illegal persecution of suspected communists and communist sympathizers.

Algren never joined the Communist Party because of negative experiences he and his friend, legendary African-American novelist Richard Wright, had at the hands of party members. However, he had belonged to the John Reed Club, a social club for left-leaning artists, writers, and intellectuals.

He had also belonged to a committee that protested the persecution of alleged spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were both executed. So, the FBI began surveillance of Algren, deeming him a subversive.

The FBI's dossier on Nelson Algren would clock in at over 500 pages long, but never contain any concrete evidence against him. Still, the government denied him a passport until 1960.

He had wanted to visit his girlfriend, legendary French writer and philosopher Simone de Beauvoir, in Paris. By the time he finally got his passport, their relationship had begun to wane.

In 1956, Algren finally followed up The Man With the Golden Arm with another classic novel. A Walk on the Wild Side opens in South Texas during the early years of the Great Depression, telling the story of Dove Linkhorn, another casualty of the Depression and his own upbringing.

At sixteen, Dove is illiterate. His father refused to allow him to go to school because the principal was Catholic. So, he learned about life from the movies and from the hobos, pimps, prostitutes, hustlers, and bootleggers who lived and worked nearby.

Another denizen of the town is Terasina Vidavarri, the owner of a bleak little cafe who teaches Dove how to read. Terasina was once raped by a soldier. She and Dove become lovers, though he rapes her as well.

Dove begins hopping trains to look for work. His surreal, poetic, tragicomic adventures find him working everywhere from a steamship to a brothel to a condom factory. He also gets caught up in petty crime and has many affairs but ultimately returns to Terasina's cafe.

This novel contained Algren's famous "three rules of life," which were "Never play cards with a man called Doc. Never eat at a place called Mom's. Never sleep with a woman whose troubles are worse than your own."

A Walk on the Wild Side was adapted as a feature film in 1962, but because the Production Code was still in effect, the novel was bowdlerized and changed considerably for the screen.

Despite the efforts of the great director Edward Dmytryk behind the camera and Laurence Harvey in the lead role, the film was a bomb at the box office. Bosley Crowther, the celebrated film critic for The New York Times, panned the movie, describing it in his review as a "lurid, tawdry, and sleazy melodrama."

In 1975, Nelson Algren was commissioned to write a magazine article on the trial of boxer Rubin "Hurricane" Carter, who had been convicted again for a double murder he didn't commit.

Carter wouldn't be acquitted until 1985, when his convictions were overturned after a Federal Appeals Court determined that he'd been the victim of racism and malicious prosecution.

While researching his article, Algren visited Carter's hometown of Paterson, New Jersey, and liked it so much that he decided to live there. He spent five years in Paterson before moving to Long Island, where he died at home of a heart attack. He was 72 years old.


Quote Of The Day

"A certain ruthlessness and a sense of alienation from society is as essential to creative writing as it is to armed robbery."

- Nelson Algren


Vanguard Video

Today's video features a Chicago Humanities Festival 40-minute panel discussion of a recent documentary on Nelson Algren. Enjoy!