After-Dinner Story is a 1944 short story collection by American crime writer
Cornell Woolrich under the pseudonym William Irish. It comprises six stories, and includes two of Woolrich's best known works, novella Marihuana and Rear Window (originally published in Dime Detective Magazine under the title "It Had to be Murder"),[1] which was made into
a movie byAlfred Hitchcock in 1954.[2]
Story Summaries
After-Dinner Story – Six men were trapped in an elevator after a terrifying accident. But that can't explain how, by the time they are rescued, one of them has been shot to death. The death is labelled as a suicide until, a year later, the murdered man's father invites the survivors of the accident together to tell them "an after dinner story".
The Night Reveals – An insurance agent suspects his wife of being a dangerous
pyromaniac behind a recent spree of deadly housefires. But how can he be sure, and how can he stop her?
An Apple a Day – This story centres around a criminal who after desperately stealing ten thousand dollars unwittingly throws away five times that sum with the toss of an apple.
Marihuana – Depressed after breaking up with his wife Eleanor, Vinnie is pressured into trying
marijuana for the first time by his friends. Under the influence, he turns into a
psychoticspree killer and starts a night of rampage on the city.
Rear Window – After breaking his leg, Hal Jeffries has nothing better to do than sit at the window and observe his neighbours in the apartment building across the way. Soon he starts to realise something isn't quite right in one of the apartments – can he really be witnessing the aftermath of a murder?
Murder-Story – A writer becomes a prime suspect in a murder case, especially after the police discover one of his unpublished stories almost exactly recounts what must have happened the night of the crime.
Adaptations
After-Dinner Story and The Night Reveals were both adapted for the
Suspense radio show in October[3] and March[4] 1943 respectively.
After-Dinner Story was first published in the
United States in 1944 by
Lippincott. It was reprinted in
paperback in 1948 under the title "Six Times Death."