Hollywood big-shot Vivien Spender has waited ages to produce the work
that will be his masterpiece: a film adaptation of Thomas Mann's The
Magic Mountain. He's spent years grooming young starlets for the lead
role, only to discard each one when a newer, fresher face enters his
view. Afterwards, these rejected women all immediately fall from grace;
excised from the world of pictures, they end up in rehab, or jail, or
worse. But Kitten Agnew, the most recent to encounter this impending
doom, won't be gotten rid of so easily--her contract simply doesn't
allow for it. Accompanied by Mr. Spender on a train journey from Los
Angeles to Chicago, she begins to fear that the producer might be
considering a deadly alternative. Either way, it's clear that something
is going to happen before they reach their destination, and as the train
barrels through America's heartland, the tension accelerates towards an
inescapable finale.
Reprinted for the first time in over twenty years, Dread Journey is a
taut thriller that exemplifies Dorothy B. Hughes's greatest strengths as
a writer--namely, her sharpened prose and mastery of psychological
suspense. While its fine-tuned plot is just as exciting as it was in
1945, when the novel was first published, and its portrayal of
Hollywood's less savory elements remains all-too-relevant today, the
book's characters and setting provide pure Golden Age fare, sure to
please any devotee of classic mystery novels.