Modern Classics Revived

I was happily surprised to learn that Penguin Modern Classics has revived its crime and espionage series with titles by the likes of Josephine Tey,  John le Carré, Len Deighton and Chester Himes, published with an updated version of their “bottle-green” covers.

After being discontinued almost 30 years ago, the revived series, which is published in 10-book tranches, is being curated by author and Penguin Press publishing director Simon Winder. The publisher said the revival of Penguin Crime and Espionage “has seen Simon dig deep into the archives, reading hundreds of books to determine which of our existing titles should make the list, and which titles, previously not published by Penguin, should have been included years ago.”

 

The first 10 titles to be published will be: Call for the Dead by John le Carré; SS-GB by Len Deighton; Maigret and the Headless Corpse by Georges Simenon; In a Lonely Place by Dorothy B Hughes; Cotton Comes to Harlem by Chester Himes; The Franchise Affair by Josephine Tey; Beast in the Shadows by Edogawa Rampo; Journey into Fear by Eric Ambler; The Drowning Pool by Ross Macdonald; and The Night of the Hunter by Davis Grubb.

Winder said: “Penguin Modern Classics is one of the great publishers of crime and suspense fiction. I thought it would be enjoyable to pick out some highlights, add some new titles and revive the wonderful green livery Penguin used to use for all its crime fiction.

 

“These books are united by atmosphere, anxiety, a strong sense of time and place, and an often appalling ingenuity, both on behalf of the authors and their characters.  They have also all aged very well, gaining an additional pleasure from shifts in manners, clothes, wisecracks, politics, murder weapons and potential alibis.

“The novels were designed to be entertainments, albeit sometimes of a very dark kind, and they all plumb extremes.  Fear of fascism or communism, fear of the anonymous city or of a fetid swamp, fear of vast global conspiracies or of just one rather odd family member with a glint in his eye.”

The publisher added: “For lifelong crime lovers, who will no doubt be as excited as we are for the return of the bottle-green jackets as well as the previously unpublished titles, to new readers unsure where to start with the formidable back catalogues of Georges Simenon, Eric Ambler, or Len Deighton, the Penguin Crime and Espionage series is a collection of gems showcasing the best of the Golden Age of Crime.”

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3 Responses to Modern Classics Revived

  1. Barbara's avatar Barbara says:

    Omigoodness I love these book covers, thanks for sharing. I’ve read some of these, and I’m adding some to my “to be read” pile.

  2. These are really neat covers, especially the clever imagery on “Maigret and the Headless Corpse.”

  3. Hana's avatar Hana says:

    Great designs. Reminds me of a series of paperbacks published in Czechoslovakia in 1968-1992 as “vacation reading”, mostly translated works, printed on light green paper to be easier on the eyes, very light weight to be easily held.

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