The Dead All Have the Same Skin

The Dead All Have the Same Skin (French: Les morts ont tous la même peau) is a 1947 crime novel by the French writer Boris Vian. It tells the story of a mixed Black-White American, who manages to have a career in "white society" without anyone knowing of his origin; when his black half-brother turns up and tries to blackmail him by threatening to reveal his origin, his life turns into a downward spiral of violence. It was the second book published under the pseudonym Vernon Sullivan, after I Spit on Your Graves from 1946.

The Dead All Have the Same Skin
First edition
AuthorVernon Sullivan (Boris Vian)
Original titleLes morts ont tous la même peau
TranslatorPaul Knobloch
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
PublisherÉditions du Scorpion
Publication date
1947
Published in English
2007
Pages190

Reception

James Sallis reviewed the book in the Los Angeles Times in 2008: "Vian wrote two further Vernon Sullivan novels, in which he kicked out all the stops and skidded toward parody; neither has the authority or purchase of the first two. Reminiscent of Chester Himes' sadly neglected Run Man Run in its intensity and its protagonist's needless headlong rush to oblivion, The Dead All Have the Same Skin also verges -- with its fierce energy, candor and matter-of-fact savagery -- on Jim Thompson territory."[1]

gollark: I said "no" to some of the space empire ones.
gollark: I'm not entirely sure how anti-groupism and one-world-governmentism are compatible.
gollark: Apparently it puts me at "social darwinism", "one world government", "individualist", "anti-moral", "anti-groupism", "modern technology", "post-race", "secular", "regional centrism", "don't care ism", "realistic" and "irenic".
gollark: Why does the author like saying "spook" so much?
gollark: Why does this contain ridiculous straw nihilism and the phrase "intergalactic space empire"?

See also

References

  1. Sallis, James (2008-05-04). "Primal noir". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-03-11.
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