35 pages 1 hour read

James M. Cain

Double Indemnity

Fiction | Novella | Adult | Published in 1936

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Background

Authorial Context: James M. Cain and Journalism

James Mallahan Cain was an American author, screenwriter, and investigative journalist. He is most well-known for pioneering the genre of hardboiled crime fiction, or crime fiction with stoic detectives as the protagonists. He is also well-known for popularizing the use of first-person confessionals in crime fiction, which he uses in Double Indemnity. Cain lived in California when he wrote Double Indemnity, which is also the setting for the novel.

Double Indemnity is loosely inspired by the case of Ruth Snyder, who murdered her abusive husband with her lover Judd Gray. The two of them planned to collect on her husband’s double indemnity clause. Their plot fell apart and they were executed by the state of New York.

Cain’s friend, Arthur Krock, suggested the motif of the insider double-agent, Walter Huff, to Cain. These suggestions came from stories from Krock’s own time as a journalist and some of the stories he had covered. Cain’s own experience as a journalist and network of friends and colleagues made him intimately familiar with the inner workings of white-collar crime.

Double Indemnity was published a year after Cain’s first novel, The Postman Always Rings Twice, which was banned in the city of Boston on obscenity charges.

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