***Out In The 1940s Crime Noir Night-
Death Be Not Proud- Raymond Chandler’s The
Big Sleep
The Big Sleep, Raymond Chandler, Vintage
Books, New York, 1976
Recently, after doing one of my
periodic re-readings of Raymond Chandler’s tough as nails P.I. (private
investigator, private detective, private dick, gumshoe, shamus, key-hole
peeper, sleuth or whatever you call guys who do heavy lifting for short dough
and expenses trying to keep the world on its axis in your neighborhood), Philip
Marlowe, I noted in reviewing The Lady In
The Lake that the story-line and the action there paled against certain
earlier works like Farewell, My Lovely
and the crime novel under review here, The
Big Sleep. Needless to say someone,
in response to that characterization, took exception to my remark. And
forthwith had to be sure that I was informed that I was totally off-base in my
evaluation. That person, a person unknown to me, but clearly with more than a
passing knowledge of Chandler’s works, and, more importantly, with a knowledge
of the evolution of the Marlowe character through several books, believed that
Marlowe in Lady although maybe a
little world –weary, maybe not as committed to endlessly tilting at windmills
for light cash and many bruises represented a, get this, more mature Marlowe,
rather than the hot-headed and impetuous younger Marlowe whom he or she
characterized as a “bull in a china shop.”
No question there are many Marlowes,
or rather Marlowe characteristics, which made him along with Dashiell Hammett’s
Continental Op (and the classic P.I., Sam Spade in The Maltese Falcon but we
only got one look, admittedly a full-blown and robust look, but only one at
that guy), the premier tough guy detective of the 1930s and 1940s when such men
were needed, and necessary to get through the crime noir night. So that
recklessness, that tilting at windmills, that gallant (to the ladies, although
he only passed by them in his gallantry), that getting rid of the bad guys, or
at least holding them in check, that ability to take a low-blow punch to the
groin and elsewhere, take a couple of well-placed but not fatal slugs in the
pursue of a little rough justice in this wicked old world gets a much better
work-out in The Big Sleep. In Lady
it is clear our boy had lost a step or two in the battle against the bad guys.
And that is probably the biggest distinction I could make between the two
novels Brother Marlowe had taken a few too many punches, a few too many slugs
and so was kind of slumming out in the boondocks on that one. Here our man in
ready to take on some rough hombres, en masse, to keep such guys in check, and
to give an old man a little peace before he went to his big sleep, to his
rest.
Let me give you the “skinny” and
maybe you will see my side in the great Marlowe night. See that old man, old
General Sternwood, a guy with two wayward, reckless and wild daughters was
going to need all the peace he could grab due to their careless unrestrained ways. Seems the younger daughter, the wilder
of the two, slightly wilder, liked her dope (a lanadum cocktail in those days,
maybe a little sister morphine) and not afraid to take her clothes off at the
drop of a hat, was the subject of blackmail by parties unknown, or rather
relentless, once they knew they could keep tapping the old man to keep things
hush-hush. And of course there was that matter of the strange disappearance of
the older daughter’s husband, Rusty Regan, who was from the old school, and had
kept the old man company in his last hurrah. Enter one Philip Marlowe.
Yes enter one multi-tasker Philip
Marlowe to track down those low-rent blackmailers, to track down the
whereabouts of old Rusty, and to single-handedly break-up one bad guy gangster
Eddie Mars’ hold on the Sternwood family. Yes, Philip took a few beatings from
Eddie compliant cops and from no good back alley guys in Eddie’s employ but he
got the sweaty thing tied together with a bow before he was through. And along
the way he got a little justice for a stand-up guy who was took his our fatal
beating for being a stand-up guy, opened some eyes about what one Eddie Mars
was all about, and gave an old man some peace. What he couldn’t do was bring
old Rusty back to life, or make those daughters come to heel, give up their wild
ways, but what can you expect in this wicked old world. Our boy Marlowe gave it
his all here, and he has the bumps to prove it.
Oh yah, about Raymond Chandler,
about the guy who wrote the books. Like I said in that other review he, along
with Brother Hammett, turned those dreary drawing room sleuths who dominated
the reading market back in the day on its head and gave us detectives we could
admire, could get behind, warts and all. Thanks, guys.
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