Allen Barra at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch offers a review of Barry Day's The World of Raymond Chandler In His Own Words.
With seven novels, a handful of stories, a famous essay on the American detective story (“The Simple Art of Murder”), and film scripts for Billy Wilder’s “Double Indemnity” and Alfred Hitchcock’s “Stranger on a Train,” Raymond Chandler may have had more impact on American culture with fewer words than any other 20th-century writer.
From the detective pulps of the 1920s and 1930s to film noir in the 1940s, Chandler gave vision to a new kind of American alienation embodied in his glamorous but empty Los Angeles.
His incorruptible knight, private detective Philip Marlowe, has been imitated (most notably by Ross MacDonald’s Lew Archer), parodied (most effectively by Steve Martin in “Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid”) and revived (most recently by Irish novelist John Banville/Benjamin Black in last year’s “The Black Eyed Blonde”).
Barry Day, who has done similar service on the works of Noel Coward and Dorothy Parker, has culled from “The Big Sleep,” “Farewell, My Lovely,” “The Long Goodbye” and other Chandler books as well as the writer’s voluminous correspondence to take us on a tour of Chandler’s sinister, neon-lit world.
You can read the rest of the review via the below link:
http://www.stltoday.com/entertainment/books-and-literature/reviews/trouble-was-his-business-the-words-of-raymond-chandler/article_07f4df06-7c1c-56e1-8148-1908195ee13f.html
You can also read my Crime Beat column on Raymond Chandler via the below link:
http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2009/11/on-raymond-chandlers-influence-on-crime.html
Looks like a winner that I must read.......Thanks for alerting me to the title.....
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