"For most people, crime is an abstraction, but an abstraction that generates surreal fear; hence the popularity of mysteries and horror stories. Aldous Huxley said the subject matter of literature came from the crime pages of newspapers, in effect, real life. Auden said a poet is a 'gossip.' Eburne knows this and respects the psyche's integral measure of terror in this examination of 'the role of violent crime in the writing, art, and political thought of the surrealist movement' after the horrors of WWI. Copiously (in places grotesquely) illustrated, this study is an original take on the necessary blend of politics and sociology and their nefarious offshoots of gutter journalism, lurid dime novels, rumor, propaganda, and finally, serious art—a shaky, volatile mix that is in one's face, mind, and sometimes nightmares. The visuals contribute viscerally to the substantive research, presented in journalistic, readable prose that depicts the noirish nature of subjects and people. Would one expect otherwise with chapters titled 'On Murder, Considered as One of the Surrealist Arts,' 'Germaine Berton and the Ethics of Assassination,' and 'Persecution Mania'? This book is well done and delicious fun. Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty, general readers."—Choice, March 2009