WORKS CITED

Babener, Liahna. 1994. “De-feminizing Laura,” in It’s a Print!: Detective Fiction from Page to Screen, ed. William Reynolds and Elizabeth Trembley. Bowling Green, OH: Popular Press.

Bakerman, Jane S. 1984. “Vera Caspary’s Chicago, Symbol and Setting,” in MidAmerica XI: The Yearbook of the Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, ed. by David D. Anderson. East Lansing, MI: Midwestern Press.

———. 1980. “Vera Caspary’s Fascinating Females: Laura, Evvie and Bedelia.” Clues 1.1: 46–52.

Caspary, Vera. 1941. “Laura.” [catalogued as “Untitled Murder Story”]. Box 11. The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

———. 1942 “Laura, 1942, Synopsis.” Box 5. The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

———. 2006. Bedelia. Philadelphia: Blakiston, 1945; New York: Feminist Press at the City University of New York.

———. n.d. “General Correspondence January 1946–June 1962–March 1980.” Box 2. Folder 1. The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

———. Script of Recorded Interview [later used in The Boston Herald] by Dudley Fraser for Little, Brown & Company, 15 July 1950. Box 13. The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theatre Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

———. 1960. Letter to Joan Khan, December 31. “Correspondence from Readers 1957–58,” The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

———. 1971. “My ‘Laura’ and Otto’s.” Saturday Review, June 26.

———. 1978. “Mark McPherson.” In The Great Detectives, edited by Otto Penzler. Boston: Little, Brown.

———. 1979. The Secrets of Grown-Ups. New York: McGraw-Hill.

———. “Correspondence from Readers 1979–1981.” Box 28. Folder 5. The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

———. 2006. Laura. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1943; New York: Feminist Press at the City University of New York.

———. n.d. “Discards and Rewritten Pages.” The Secrets of Grown-Ups. Box 29. Folders 4, 12. The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

———. n.d. “Draft Article.” Box 28. Folder 17. The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

———. n.d. “Screen Stories.” Box 9. The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

———. n.d. “Women in Crime.” Box 29. The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

———. n.d. “Working Draft 1927–1954.” The Secrets of Grown-Ups. Box 29. Folders 3. The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

Caspary, Vera and George Sklar. n.d. “The Exiles.” Box 10. The Vera Caspary Papers. Film and Manuscript Archive, Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison.

Caspary, Vera and George Sklar. 1945. Laura: A Play in Three Acts. New York: Houghton Mifflin.

Emrys, A.B. 2005. “Laura, Vera and Wilkie: Deep Sensation Roots of a Noir Novel.” Clues 23: 5–13.

Jackson, Kevin. 1998. The Language of Cinema. New York: Routledge.

Maio, Kathi. 1980. “Rebel With A Cause.” Books. Sojourner, January 12.

McNamara, Eugene. 1996. Laura as Novel, Film, and Myth. Lewiston: Mellen.

Preminger, Otto. 1977. Preminger: An Autobiography. Garden City, NY: Doubleday.

Schloff, Linda Mack. 2003. “We Dug More Rocks: Women and Work.” In American Jewish Women’s History: A Reader, edited by Pamela S. Nadell. New York: New York University Press.

Warren, Ann L. 1988. Word Play: The Lives and Work of Four Women Writers in Hollywood’s Golden Age. Ph.D. diss., University of Southern California.