Since this book is about film noir, I'll post about it here. It's very worthwhile checking out:
Into the Dark: The Hidden World of Film Noir, 1941-1950
The book is a pictorial history of "the big studio melodramas that characterized film noir" during those years. The author goes further to provide quotes and information he gleaned from archival documents, letters, conference transcripts, interviews, film reviews, production notes, marketing campaigns, exhibitor feedback, etc.
From the foreword and preface of the book:
In the 1940s,
"... films noir--a scholarly appellation that wouldn't be applied for another twenty or so years--were originally labeled 'crime thrillers' or 'murder dramas' ... This book tells the story of film noir in its own voice. Filmmakers, journalists, and exhibitors tell how the trend evolved. Unheard voices and unseen images from eighty-two films transport you to the '40s. This is time travel, a ticket to the smoky, glamorous world of film noir..."
There are some fascinating films from the genre that I've recently come across:
I Wake Up Screaming (1941), starring Betty Grable, Victor Mature, Carole Landis, et al., is included in this book on p. 30. Another film that is not included in the book,
The Man Who Cheated Himself (1950), starring Lee J. Cobb, Jane Wyatt, John Dall, and Lisa Howard, has some unexpected casting (including Jane Wyatt of
Father Knows Best fame as a noir femme fatale

). But this is a really interesting film and it's very enjoyable watching. The back story on the production, location shots, actor biographies, etc., is intriguing:
en.wikipedia.org
Some of the film's SF location shots were famously later used by Alfred Hitchcock in
Vertigo:
Travel guide to filming locations for Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo (1958) around San Francisco and Northern California.
movie-locations.com
Considering the many movies shot in San Francisco—hey there, Mrs. Doubtfire, The Rock, and the rest of you—we have to hand it to Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo for truly getting around San Francisco...
sf.curbed.com