New York Review of Books, 2013
If you like film noir, and noir novels, this may be one you missed. An absolutely ideal book to read in one-sitting under your favorite summer shade tree.
Alfred Hayes (1911–1985) was born into a Jewish family in
Whitechapel, London, though his father, a barber, trained violinist, and
sometime bookie, moved the family to New York when Hayes was three.
After attending City College, Hayes worked as a reporter for the New York American and Daily Mirror
and began to publish poetry, including “Joe Hill,” about the legendary
labor organizer, which was later set to music by the composer Earl
Robinson and recorded by Joan Baez. During World War II Hayes was
assigned to a special services unit in Italy; after the war he stayed on
in Rome, where he contributed to the story development and scripts of
several classic Italian neorealist films, including Roberto Rossellini’s
Paisà (1946) and Vittorio De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves (1948), and gathered material for two popular novels, All Thy Conquests (1946) and The Girl on the Via Flaminia(1949), the latter the basis for the 1953 film Act of Love, starring Kirk Douglas. In the late 1940s Hayes went to work in Hollywood, writing screenplays for Clash by Night, A Hatful of Rain, The Left Hand of God, Joy in the Morning, and Fritz Lang’s Human Desire,
as well as scripts for television. Hayes was the author of seven
novels, a collection of stories, and three volumes of poetry. In
addition to My Face for the World to See, NYRB Classics publishes In Love.
David Thomson, film critic, writes a fine appreciation of Hayes fitting the tone .
"The most vivid picture of Hollywood since Nathaniel West's
Day of the Locust."
Nelson Algren
