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Richard Deming

    Richard Deming was a prolific crime writer whose work spanned from the late 1940s pulp magazines to early 1980s digests. He is best remembered as a significant contributor to Manhunt and Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. His writing was characterized by its solid and reliable craftsmanship, delivering suspenseful crime fiction to readers. Later in his career, he also penned popular non-fiction volumes.

    Der Fall des Verbrecher königs
    Schlag auf Schlag
    She'll Hate Me Tomorrow
    This Exquisite Loneliness
    Manhunt, June 1953
    Touch of Evil
    • 2023

      Imbued with sensitivity and a touch of memoir reflecting Deming's own struggles with loneliness, this work is a meditation on how loneliness permeates the human condition and can inspire creativity. Loneliness is often stigmatized, dismissed as mere emotional neediness, but Deming argues that this perspective is a misunderstanding. He examines this unwelcome feeling in his life and art, as well as in the work of six influential figures. From Melanie Klein's psychoanalytic contributions and Zora Neale Hurston's seminal literature to Walter Benjamin's philosophical writings, Walker Evans' urban photography, Egon Schiele's avant-garde paintings, and the ethical dimensions of Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone, Deming uncovers a common thread: loneliness as a catalyst for profound creative expression. He explores the "cosmic loneliness" of Hurston and the detachment experienced by Serling during his fame, revealing loneliness as a complex, multifaceted subject that is both painful and rich with potential for artistic innovation. This exploration highlights how some of the most original art and writing of the twentieth century emerged from the depths of loneliness.

      This Exquisite Loneliness
    • 2021

      Manhunt, June 1953

      • 150 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      This replica of the June 1953 MANHUNT digest magazine showcases a collection of thrilling stories from notable authors in the crime and mystery genre. Featuring works like "Far Cry" by Henry Kane and "Hot-Rock Rumble" by Richard S. Prather, it presents a diverse array of gripping narratives, including tales of loyalty, deception, and murder. Each story offers a unique glimpse into the darker aspects of human nature, making it a fascinating read for fans of classic pulp fiction.

      Manhunt, June 1953
    • 2020

      Touch of Evil

      • 104 pages
      • 4 hours of reading
      4.2(31)Add rating

      Orson Welles' classic 1958 noir movie Touch of Evil, the story of a corrupt police chief in a small town on the Mexican-American border, starring Charlton Heston, Janet Leigh and Marlene Dietrich, is widely recognised as one of the greatest noir films of Classical Hollywood cinema. Richard Deming's study of the film considers it as an outstanding example of the noir genre and explores its complex relationship to its source novel, Badge of Evil by Whit Masterson. He traces the film's production history, and provides an insightful close analysis of its key scenes, including its famous opening sequence, a single take in which the camera follows a booby-trapped car on its journey through city streets and across the border.

      Touch of Evil