Acknowledgments
Introduction: Mass Art as Experimental Storytelling
Part I
1. The Art Novel Meets 1910s Formalism
2. Making Confusion Satisfactory: Modernism and Other Mysteries
3. Churn and Consolidation: The 1940s and After
Part II
4. The Golden Age Puzzle Plot: The Taste of the Construction
5. Before the Fact: The Psychological Thriller
6. Dark and Full of Blood: Hard-Boiled Detection
7. The 1940s: Mysteries in Crossover Culture
8. The 1940s: The Problem of Other Minds, or Just One
Part III
9. The Great Detective Rewritten: Erle Stanley Gardner and Rex
Stout
10. Viewpoints, Narrow and Expansive: Patricia Highsmith and Ed
McBain
11. Donald Westlake and the Richard Stark Machine
12. Tarantino, Twists, and the Persistence of Puzzles
13. Gone Girls: The New Domestic Thriller
Conclusion: The Power of Limits
Notes
Index
David Bordwell is the Jacques Ledoux Professor Emeritus of Film Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. His many books include, most recently, Reinventing Hollywood: How 1940s Filmmakers Changed Movie Storytelling (2017), as well as the widely used textbook Film Art: An Introduction (twelfth edition, 2020). He cohosts the “Observations on Film Art” series of video essays on the Criterion Channel.
David Bordwell has a brain I envy, one that makes connections and
associations about books, film, and the arts that are
breathtakingly unorthodox and exactly correct. I learned so much
from reading Perplexing Plots about how crime narratives are
situated in the larger literary and cinema spheres, and rejoiced in
how much pleasure Bordwell's criticism provided, once more and
always.
*Sarah Weinman, author of Scoundrel: How a Convicted Murderer
Persuaded the Women Who Loved Him, the Conservative Establishment,
and the Courts to Set Him Free*
My favorite of David Bordwell’s many important books, this is an
engrossing tour of crime and mystery storytelling in literature
high and low, with asides on film, theater, and other media. I’m in
awe of its encyclopedic reach, erudition, analytic brilliance,
clarity, and wit. It’s wonderfully instructive and fun.
*James Naremore, author of More than Night: Film Noir in Its
Contexts*
Perplexing Plots is the most illuminating study of narrative
technique that I’ve read. David Bordwell’s investigation of popular
storytelling benefits from his exceptional breadth of knowledge and
analytic skills. But what is especially impressive is his ability
to present information and insights so persuasively—and so
readably. An admirable achievement.
*Martin Edwards, author of The Life of Crime: Detecting the
History of Mysteries and their Creators*
Bordwell's is the first-ever-historical poetics of cross-media
storytelling in which inventions and conventions, the new and the
old, the brainy and the brainless are considered not as successive
stages of, as Mandelstam called it, a "boring bearded development,"
but as complementary components of a creative symbiosis.
*Yuri Tsivian, author of Approaches to Carpalistics: Movement
and Gesture in Art, Literature and Film*
Perplexing Plots is a must. Rare is scholasticism this engaging —
you’ll put it down with more than a handful of authors to discover,
not to mention the movies adapted from them.
*Boulder Weekly*
Bordwell’s work is exceptionally well-researched and offers
fascinating examinations of plot devices, patterns, and structure
in crime fiction. This book is sure to be enjoyed by fans of crime
fiction and film noir.
*Hometowns to Hollywood*
[Bordwell's] voluminous work on film underpins his sensitivity to
questions of narrative voice, points of view and misdirection in
novel-writing. Better yet, his writing radiates an enthusiasm that
will please both genre fans and literary scholars. The book is
readable and very entertaining.
*Sight and Sound*
An engaging study of how twentieth- and twenty-first-century
storytellers across literature, film, radio, and stage have coaxed
audiences along as collaborators in the narrative process . . .
reading Perplexing Plots is a hell of a lot of fun.
*Noir City Magazine*
[A] terrific book.
*Washington Post*
Perplexing Plots is unfailingly rich and fascinating, and
Bordwell’s exegeses on popular narrative will be central to studies
of the concept far into the future.
*New Review of Film and Television Studies*
Wildly illuminating.
*The Film Stage*
A highly recommended title.
*Popcultureshelf.com*
Like the great detectives he writes about, Bordwell shows off his
encyclopedic knowledge and his dazzling analytic powers, laying out
his case with an abundance of evidence. . . . Highly
recommended.
*Choice Reviews*
Bordwell, America’s finest film scholar, has connected the dots
between movies and popular detective stories . . . for a thrilling
X-ray of genre.
*The Millions*
Highly recommended.
*Journal of Popular Culture*
[A] brilliant book . . . Bordwell has been one of the great
exponents of precise formal analysis for whom methods of narration
are never to be taken for granted. His writing is at once
impeccably scholarly and acutely sensitive to the human use of
stories and the part they play in people’s lives . . . I was
exhilarated by Bordwell’s multiple demonstrations of the pleasures
of deflection and distraction, shapely detours and sidewise turns,
in the service of what he calls the “playful experience of
form.”
*New York Review of Books*
A deeply researched dive into the history of crime fiction on the
page and on the screen. It’s a perfect capper to a career that
revelled in the intricate, puzzle-like nature of film
construction—the way that shots, cuts, sounds, and images clue us
in to deeper patterns of meaning.
*The New Yorker*
Weaving cultural history and textual analysis into an account
that's as engaging and revealing as the popular fiction he
investigates, Bordwell displays the full measure of research and
erudition that were his hallmarks.
*Cineaste*
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