
| The Living and the Dead | |
Cover of 1st edition |
|
| Author | Boileau-Narcejac |
|---|---|
| Original title | D'entre les morts |
| Translator | Geoffrey Sainsbury |
| Country | France |
| Language | French |
| Genre(s) | Crime novel |
| Publisher | Hutchinson |
| Publication date | 1954 |
| Published in English |
1956 |
| Media type | Print (Hardback) |
| ISBN | NA |
The Living and the Dead (also published as Vertigo) (French: D'entre les morts) is a 1954 crime novel by Pierre Boileau and Pierre Ayraud (Thomas Narcejac), writing as Boileau-Narcejac. Alfred Hitchcock directed an adaptation of the novel in 1958 as Vertigo.
The story concerns a former detective who suffers from acrophobia, who is hired to follow the wife of a friend who suspects her of infidelity. The detective becomes obsessed with the woman, eventually falling in love with her but unable to explain her strange trances and her belief in a previous life. When she falls to her death from a tower, he is unable to save her due to his fear of heights and experiences a psychotic break. After his partial recovery he encounters a woman who is nearly the image of his dead love, and the obsession begins all over again...
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