This anthology contains 35 of Stanley Ellin's stories from 1948 to 1978, including all the stories from Ellin's three previous collections. More than 600 pages! That's an extremely generous selection of stories by a writer hailed by Mystery Writers of America (MWA) as a Grand Master in 1981, a rare honor. I picked up the Kindle version on sale for only $1.99, an unbeatable deal. The first story in this collection and the title story, “The Specialty of the House,” is Ellin's famous debut about a gourmet restaurant that serves only one dish per night. The book also includes Ellin's two Edgar-award-winning stories, “The House Party” and “The Blessington Method.” Several of these stories were adapted for television for Alfred Hitchcock Presents and Tales of the Unexpected.
Ellin was a famously meticulous writer who published roughly one story a year. He was also known to revise a single paragraph dozens of times until he was satisfied. It shows. These are well-polished, perfectly-structured stories. They have compelling characters and a rich sense of atmosphere, but what stands out for me is Ellin's perfect endings, which often rely on an ironic twist, conform to a predictable pattern, or simply leave the story open-ended because readers intuitively know exactly what happens next. Ellin, who died in 1986, truly was a master.