Chandler
I read the first few chapters of Farewell, My Lovely last night. Three things.
1. Chandler reads like a parody of Chandler. The writing is so self-conscious.
2. The people, Marlowe and especially Moose Malloy, are comic book characters. I don't believe in 'em.
3. The racism took my breath away.
I'm going back to my man Hammett. Hammett had been a Pinkerton. He knew the mean streets and Chandler didn't. Chandler's relish for the posturing of coarse, ugly, violent men makes me feel a little queasy.
As for the racism, well, I know he's writing about a racist society, but does he really have to enjoy it so much?
1. Chandler reads like a parody of Chandler. The writing is so self-conscious.
2. The people, Marlowe and especially Moose Malloy, are comic book characters. I don't believe in 'em.
3. The racism took my breath away.
I'm going back to my man Hammett. Hammett had been a Pinkerton. He knew the mean streets and Chandler didn't. Chandler's relish for the posturing of coarse, ugly, violent men makes me feel a little queasy.
As for the racism, well, I know he's writing about a racist society, but does he really have to enjoy it so much?
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I didn't have the same reaction to Farewell, My Lovely-- I actually always read the detectives in opposition to the racist/classist elements of the society around them. But that view may certainly be affected by the fact that I read his letters before I read his novels.
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Sometimes a writer just hits you all wrong and there's not a damn thing you can do about it.
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It works both ways. Some writers are a lot more likeable in their writing than they are in real life. Philip Larkin was a shit, but you wouldn't know it from his poems.
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Rudyard Kipling the man had some hardline, rightwing views, but very largely kept them out of his work. As an imaginative artist he was a lot wiser than he was in everyday life.
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Sexual Personae was described as badly written hate literature. Having read it, I find it interesting and thought provoking. Her views are strong, but I think thats commendable.
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Paglia likes to stir things up. We could with do with more like her.
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Great, though? That makes me curious as to the speaker's definition of 'great'.