The Strange Case of Mr Pelham

"The Strange Case of Mr. Pelham" is a 1940[1] short story (later expanded in book form in 1957) by Anglo-Canadian writer Anthony Armstrong about a man involved in a serious car accident. The man recovers only to find himself being stalked by a seemingly identical version of himself.[2] It was made into an episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents which originally aired December 4, 1955, under the title "The Case of Mr. Pelham", and starring Tom Ewell as the victim of his own Doppelgänger.

The Strange Case of Mr. Pelham
First edition cover
AuthorAnthony Armstrong
LanguageEnglish
GenreSuspense
Media typePrint

The story was also made into the theatrical film The Man Who Haunted Himself in 1970 starring Roger Moore.[3] It was director Basil Dearden's last film, as he died soon afterwards in a car accident.

Anthony Boucher commented on the novel as "a lightly amusing tale of suspense and terror and, read as fantasy, an attractive book"; Boucher, however, also quoted another reviewer who found that, reading the novel as a genre mystery, it was "an extraordinarily irritating piece of cleverness."[4]

References

  1. "Armstrong, Anthony". Crime, Mystery, & Gangster Fiction Magazine Index.
  2. "The Strange Case of Mr. Pelham". Fantasticfiction.uk.
  3. Greenspun, Roger (September 4, 1971). "The Man Who Haunted Himself". The New York Times.
  4. "Recommended Reading," F&SF, May 1957, p.78.


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