What Goes Around Comes Around-With Crime Novelist Robert
B. Parker In Mind- A Private Investigator Phil Larkin Sketch
By Zack James
Hey, Phil Larkin, Private Investigator, here, and if
you can believe it, I have been, me Phil Larkin have been “conned” by Zack
James into doing a book review of all things. Me, a guy who just snuck through by
high school by the skin of my teeth, a guy whose biggest literary efforts in
the past have been centered around writing alimony and child support checks for
two ex-wives and four not ex-children (two and two, boys and girls, and two by
each ex-spouse if anybody is asking). Miss Sonos, my old bat of an English
teacher at Riverdale High senior year, who practically brow-beat me to death to
get me to write a one page story must be turning over in her grave at the
thought of me reading a book never mind reviewing one.
I will just say here that Zack, not a bad guy but
clueless about the real private detection business having read as far as I can
tell too many Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett, and Mickey Spillane crime
novels and it has shown in his own reviews, had promised me that if I wrote something
up he would be more than glad to edit it-the best he could. With that proviso
(you know this is his word, so right away you know he is already editing,
editing like crazy) I have agreed to
review a book by Robert Parker, a crime detection novelist who after I read
some of his stuff also read way too much Chandler and Hammett, I don’t know
about Spillane. By the way, the book is kind of by Robert Parker okay as I will
explain in a minute.
How I got “conned” into this caper is kind of
interesting. See one time when Zack and I were sitting down at Jack Harris’ Bar
over on Norfolk Street in Gloversville where Zack has a small office across the
street from the bar he mentioned that this guy Robert B. Parker wrote crime
novels, good ones he said in the tradition of Chandler and Hammett. Immediately I was ready to get on my “high
horse” about these crime story writers who are clueless about the real deal,
would turn to jelly if they came up against any real thugs like the ones they
freely make up in their novels. More probably they would die of boredom if they
followed a real private investigator like me getting hassled doing “repo” work,
chasing after missing housewives who want to stay missing and “dunning” guys
for banks and credit card companies on any given day.
This “realism” crusade I have been on for a long time,
probably as long as I have been in the business myself, about twenty years now.
Zack had almost literally to hold me back for a minute when he mentioned Parker
and his profession knowing my low toleration for these cheapjack writers who
write big hardcover books for big money and who just make the stuff up, fantasy
stuff. Like I said already, but it bears repeating, they would pee all over
themselves if they had to deal with a serious private investigation matter. Would
cry “Uncle” and worse if they ran up again just one surly working-class
deadbeat husband ready to kick you in the groin or some unmentionable place when
you are looking for him for that hard ass child support check or trying to
“repo” a car when some thug is ready to cut you with a knife, a sharp knife, just
for suggesting that you were going to take his “baby” away despite the three
months behind in his payments that would allow you to do so legally. Yeah they
would definitely die of boredom if they knew the “skinny” knew how really
tedious 99.9% of the work is-and no off-hand sex in the bargain either. Jesus
do I look like a guy who ever came across a situation where I was ripping off a
piece from some “missing” woman to keep her missing. Give me a break, more likely
she would have a small hand grenade with the grip pulled.
This Parker, Robert B. Parker, a guy whose name I
didn’t know at the time since as far as crime detection novelists go, I had
only read Chandler, Hammett, maybe a little Spillane when I was a kid like lots
of kids, then re-read some of their stuff later when I was starting out as a
P.I. after I quit the public cops over in Riverdale. Get this I quit after I
wouldn’t play ball with the police chief and mayor when Mister Big in town was
looking to squash a manslaughter rap after he killed his young, very young
woman companion, not his wife, in a car accident when he was cold-stone drunk as
a skunk. So I would read those authors to see if they had anything to help me
out. Help me hold off a guy with a screwdriver ready to do serious bodily harm
when I finally found him under a rock and asked him if maybe he should go back
to the wife and kids and stop hanging with the hooker that he had met as some
low rent bar. Stuff like that not running into some rich girl sisters looking
for kicks, looking for some big goof’s Velma who didn’t want to be found and
had the wherewithal to stay unfound. I found out as good as they were as
literary detectives (Zack’s term, okay) they didn’t know jack about the real
thing. And, Jesus, Hammett had worked for the “Pinkies,” Pinkertons.
So Zack said this Parker was the cat’s meow, had been,
before he passed away several years before the night we meet at Jack Harris.’
Zack said Parker was the “heir” or something to Chandler and Hammett. Sold
plenty of big expensive hardback book at primo prices for few words and lots of
shooting off the cuff. Had his characters played on the screen, mostly
television, from what Zack said but I would have missed all that. Mostly I have
for a long time refused to watch anything but sports on television and maybe
every once in a while some old black and white crime detection stuff, film noir
stuff they call it now. You know Sam Spade in The Maltese Falcon, Philip Marlowe in The Big Sleep. Clueless guys but interesting except old Sam allowed
himself to almost wind up taking the big step off himself when he let some
twist with evil designs on a magic bird get under his skin and Marlowe almost
wound up as the doormat after letting a couple of wild sisters let their
jasmine scent get in the way of business.
So Parker followed in the big steps of those guys,
especially Chandler. Get this-wound up being asked by Raymond Chandler’s
estate, if you can believe that since Chandler died in 1959, to finish up a
piece of writing that Chandler had started before he died but never finished, a
Philip Marlowe story so it figured to sell a billion copies even if it was
nothing but where Parker thought Chandler might heading with the thing. A book
that Chandler had called Poodle Spring,
a place where the rich hung out in the desert in Southern California. Nice work
if you can get it. One night at Jack’s Zack mentioned that they had a copy of
that book in the Gloversville Public Library and that maybe if I had some time
I should read the thing, see what I thought. See if Parker via Chandler was as
clueless about the profession as the older guys. Zack played to my vanity with
that comment he thought I am sure. The book must have been popular because it
took me a couple of months to finally get it from the library. I read it over a
couple of nights like I used to do when I was a kid and got hopped up on
reading Chandler and Hammett late at night under the covers.
A couple of weeks later I ran into Zack at Jack’s and
mentioned that I had read the book, this Poodle
Spring, this “late” Chandler he called it. Zack offered to buy me a drink,
maybe a couple I forget, some high shelf whiskey so I know he meant business,
if I would sit down with him and tell him what I thought of the thing. See he
was writing one of those endless book reviews that he thrives on in between
bumps in the road in his real profession, a lawyer, a good one too if you are
in deep trouble with the law around Riverdale. And a lot of people are. So that
night I gave him my impressions, mostly kind of a sad-eyed think through since
old Philip Marlowe in Parker’s hands had lost a step or seven.
I won’t bore you with all the details of the book, of
what we talked about that night, but I will give some of the highlights because
they will lead the way into how Zack conned me into this book review business.
Like I said this book is late Marlowe not the young crusader chasing after
every skirt in town like in The Big Sleep,
grabbing dames and gangsters with every hand, but an older, more mature
guy, a guy who like a lot of us wound up getting married when he got older after
he decided he had to slow down a bit, couldn’t keep the hours and assignations
(that’s Zack’s word mind is “hitting the satin sheets,” sex okay) like in the
old days. Got some dish and from all reports she was a dish, and rich too so
that was a plus. Lived in splendor in that Poodle Springs of the title that
must have been just like it sounded, poodles, perfume and pansies.
But how did that set-up figure as the life for a guy
like Marlowe, a rough-hewn mass of manhood who cut his teeth on adventure and
solving other people’s messes, running after windmills when the deal went down.
So naturally out in “no tell” town he ran up against a buzz-saw of hellish
incidents. Got involved in a crazy case that would have been swept under the
rug in the real leafy wealthy suburbs. In the real world of real money, hell, even
just the so-so rich he would have been run off the thing so fast he wouldn’t
have time to pack his bags. Probably if he had done half the stuff he did in
this story he would have been face-down in some desert arroyo working as fodder
for the vultures. And the good citizens of Poddle-ville would have chuckled for
a minute and then headed for the polo matches.
See old Marlowe ran into a guy who was playing the
bigamy game-one of whose wives was nothing but waitress serving them off the
arm the other who was a friend of that jet-set wife of his, oh yeah, and an
off-hand homicidal maniac when she didn’t get her way- had this awful father
fixation (incestuous feelings-Zack). Let me back up a minute though and a give
few details. This dish Marlowe married, Linda, Linda of the ton of money was a
dame that he knew for a while before they decided to get hitched. So she knew
what Marlowe was like and he in turn knew that she was just a frothy piece of
breeze spending Papa’s dough on nice clothes and fresh sheets. It was not going
to work, no way but it took a while to figure that out, took a body count as
you might have expected. Let’s put it this way this Linda figured to spend the
days planning for the next cocktail party and Marlowe was figuring he could
make some easy dough working the key-hole peeping circuit.
But Poodle Springs or Hell’s Kitchen when people are looking
for kicks, you know, gambling, sex, dope and their off-shoots some “connected”
guy is hovering in the background ready, willing and able to provide the
action, to grease the skids. No sooner did Marlowe hits the streets of gold
town then he got a job, hell, a “repo” job if you think about it. Some guy was
into the local Mister Big (he had a name but I forgot, besides Mister Big gives
you all you need to know about such guys who talk funny and shoot straight, or
have somebody do it) for 100 big ones and he was having trouble collecting.
Marlowe nabbed the job, or else. Then all hell broke loose because like I said the
bodies started to pile up, including Mister Big’s. See that guy who owed the
dough was the “pet,” the “husband” of the daughter one of the local big money
guys. This Muffy, figures right, was nothing but poison but she loved her
two-timing man. Loved him enough to let that stack of bodies get pretty high. And
got wasted by our boy in the end, and her Papa took a hit too. Marlowe figured
the whole thing out but let’s face it in real poodle-town the bodies don’t get
stacked up, everything goes under the rug if there is enough cash changing
hands. Of course he and the wife split, agreed to be friends with privileges if
I read the thing right.
Yeah, I admit it was fast-paced story, a quick read and told
Zack the same. That’s when he hoodwinked me into this Parker caper. He played
the old “turnabout is fair play” maneuver on me. See Parker when he in turn
died left a bunch of stuff unfinished, left stuff some up and coming next
generation of crime detection novelist could come up and finish. Some clueless
young crime novelist who whether or not he or she was influenced by Chandler or
Hammett could fake out about thugs and shoots-outs and murder most foul with
bodies being stacked pretty high by the last sagging page. Parker, like I said,
well, like Zack who after all has time for such stuff, won his spurs in the
crime detection story racket with a semi-Marlowe (Zack’s term okay, I am not
semi anything I am all or nothing, the hell with semi okay) guy named Spenser
(like the old time English poet-Zack). That isn’t the book I reviewed though.
The one Zack had me snag was by some old three named Yankee, I guess, Reed
Farrell Coleman, who finished up Parker’s The
Devil Wins.
Get this though. This one is not even about the at least
honest profession of private detection but about the public cops, and not even
a sideways regular beat cop or nose-to-the-grindstone bureau detective but a
police chief, a guy named Jesse Stone. And not about the slumming streets of
Los Angles, San Francisco or Boston but some North Shore of Boston leafy
suburb, a place called Paradise. Which turned out not to be Eden when the bodies
started piling up to the rafters. I was ready after about page three to chuck
the whole thing, to toss the thing into the flames since anybody who knows
anything about small town life is that other than rolling up the sidewalk after
dark nothing like some wholesale discovery of long buried bodies and then more
bodies to cover up the details of how those bodies got there is going to upset
the evening’s television watching. Otherwise property values would go down so
low people would think they were in Detroit. As I was ready to heave though I
thought that Zack would just “con” me into another book probably with an even
more improbable plotline. So I held my nose and waded through the thing.
Held my nose was the right way to approach this one. See
this big winter storm, a northeaster which blow like hell in the East, providentially
(Zack, right) brought forth three bodies, two long gone and one recently
butchered, seemingly unrelated. Not so since the two long gone bodies, twenty
five years really were those of two young Catholic school girls who had been
missing all that time and who subsequently after autopsy had been found to have
been murdered. Jesse had his antenna up. Third body, long and tall, was of a
man.
The connection: the new body had knowledge of who, of what
parties, had murdered those young not so innocent girls long ago who, well at
least one of them, was into “doing the do.” Sex okay nice Catholic school girl or
not. That long tall description was the giveaway for me. See early on Chief
Stone was naturally in trouble from the local political establishment because
they did not want to see their leafy Eden fall down to the level of some crime
capital of the world and have those precious property values go below those of
Detroit. The only one to back up his investigative efforts was a councilman who
was a former captain of the basketball team. Bingo he did it, him and a couple
of his buddies on the team. So this weak-kneed witness had to go. And of course
when the heat was on, when this drunken sot of a public cop got close to
figuring him as the fall guy he got panicky and he had to off those buddies and
anybody else who could be linked to those murders. An easy solve for old Jesse
but I had it scoped way before him because anybody could tell you that you can
never trust a basketball player, never. And always trust that stupid high
school students in general will go off the deep end when sex is involved.
Jesus after reading this one I am praying for Robert B. Parker
to resurrect. Better for Chandler with his slumming streets angels and Hammett
with his bang-bang shoot ‘em up characters to come roaring back to life.
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