Evan Hunter
Appearance
(Redirected from Ed McBain)
Evan Hunter (born Salvatore Albert Lombino; October 15, 1926 – July 6, 2005) was an American author of crime and mystery fiction. He is best known as the author of 87th Precinct novels, published under the pen name Ed McBain, which are considered staples of police procedural genre.
Quotes as Evan Hunter
[edit]- To spend his allotted time on earth as a bank teller or an insurance salesman would have seemed an utter waste to Rick. Women, he had reflected had no such problem. Creation had been given to them as a gift and a woman was self-sufficient within her own creative shell. A man needed more which perhaps was one reason why a woman could never understand a man’s concern for the job he had to do.
- The Blackboard Jungle (1954), Pt. 2, Ch. 6
- They'd taught him how to milk cows, and now they expected him to tame lions.
- The Blackboard Jungle (1954), Pt. 2, Ch. 6
Quotes as Ed McBain
[edit]- A detective sees death in all the various forms at least five times a week.
- Ten Plus One (Simon & Schuster, 1963)
- He sees death in convicted thieves, the burglars, the muggers, the con men, the pimps, a death imposed by law, the gradual death of confinement behind bars.
- Ten Plus One (Simon & Schuster, 1963)
- He sees death in the prostitutes who have witnessed the death of honor, and daily multiply the death of love, who bleed away their own lives 50 times a day beneath the relentless stabbings of countless conjugations.
- Ten Plus One (Simon & Schuster, 1963)
- He sees it in the juvenile street gangs, who live in fear of death and who propagate fear by inflicting death to banish fear. And he sees it at its worst, as the result of violent emotions bursting into the mind and erupting from the hands.
- Ten Plus One (Simon & Schuster, 1963)
External links
[edit]Categories:
- Novelists from the United States
- Short story writers from the United States
- 1926 births
- 2005 deaths
- Screenwriters from the United States
- Mystery authors
- Memoirists from the United States
- Playwrights from the United States
- Edgar Award winners
- People from New York City
- Non-fiction authors from the United States