Russell H. Greenan's It Happened in Boston? is one of the most radical
narratives to appear in the late 1960s (this is a book that encompasses
everything as David L. Ulin noted in Bookforum). Yet due in large part
to the difficulty of classifying Greenan's fiction, many readers are
unaware of his other novels. In The Birth of Death and Other Comedies:
The Novels of Russell H. Greenan, Tom Whalen, drawing widely from the
American literary tradition, locates Greenan's lineage in the work of
Hawthorne and Poe where allegory and dream mingle with and illuminate
realism, as well as in the fiction of Twain, West, Hammett, Cain, and
Thompson. Examining Greenan's characteristic themes and strategies,
Whalen provides perceptive readings of the dark comedies of this
criminally neglected American master, and in a coda reflects on
Greenan's career and the reception of his work.