All
honest readers with sense are hierarchical readers. We instinctively rank
writers and books as lousy, good or excellent; essential, optional or a waste
of time. There’s no serious argument about, say, Gogol or Henry James, but placing
Chandler is trickier. To call him “the greatest American novelist” as at least one
enthusiast has done is stupid and provincial. But to dismiss him as “merely a gifted
genre writer,” as another misguided reader has done, is equally obtuse. Who
wouldn’t prefer reading Chandler over Ann Beattie, Robert Coover or Joan
Didion, to cite three overinflated reputations almost at random?
I
almost never read crime writers, and detest Hammett and most of his imitators,
but Chandler, like Ross Macdonald, I’ve been rereading for more than forty
years and they stick with me. Think of the face of the corpse, “a swollen pulpy
gray white mass without features,” floating to the surface in The Lady in the Lake (1943). Or the
smell of scorched flesh in “Goldfish” (1936). Or Candy, Roger Wade’s houseboy
in The Long Goodbye (1953), looking
at his passed-out boss and saying to Marlowe: “`Pobrecito,’ he murmured as if he meant it. `Borracho como una cuba,’” and Marlowe replying: “`He may be drunk
as a sow but he sure ain’t little. You take the feet.’” Chandler’s metaphors
and scenes upholster my memory more thoroughly and with more accompanying pleasure than anything written by
such soft-headed sentimentalists as Steinbeck or Vonnegut. In the same letter to Hamilton, Chandler writes:
“Well,
all this matters nothing, except that a writer to be happy should be a good
second-rater, not a starved genius like Laforgue. Not a sad lonely man like
Heine, not a lunatic like Dostoevski. He should definitely not be a mystery
writer with a touch of magic and a bad feeling about plots.”
Chandler
was born on this date, July 23, in 1888, in Chicago, and died March 26, 1959,
in La Jolla. Go here to see a clip of Chandler’s cameo in Billy Wilder’s Double Indemnity (1944), based on the
novel by James Cain, with a screenplay by Wilder and Chandler.
2 comments:
Thank you for alerting me to the few seconds of Raymond Chandler in Double Indemnity - a favourite film but I had missed this.
I'm curious as to why you react so differently to Chandler vs. Hammet. I realize the subjects and styles are different, but I haven't come across too many folks who really like one and really dislike the other.
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