Above, very nice Mitchell Hooks art for Gil Meynier’s Stranger at the Door, originally 1948, with this Crest Books edition coming in 1955. We gave it a read and you should think of it as an early Psycho. The main character Joe runs a Tucson boarding house, and we learn via his vivid internal dialogues that he hates all people, particularly those who possess authority through education or social position. His disorder soon focuses on Dorry, an attractive new boarder who has no idea how disturbed Joe really is. He schemes, sneaks around, spies, and steals, and his first attempt at serious harm involves running someone over with his car. That person isn’t the last. An unusual book for the time period, which we enjoyed because it’s so different.
Hi, I'm lost and alone and if I disappeared off the face of the Earth nobody would question it or care.