Raymond Chandler never wrote a memoir or autobiography. The closest
he came to writing either was in—and around—his novels, shorts
stories, and letters. There have been books that describe and evaluate
Chandler’s life, but to find out what he himself felt about his life
and work, Barry Day, editor of The Letters of Noël Coward (“There
is much to dazzle here in just the way we expect . . . the book is
meticulous, artfully structured—splendid” —Daniel Mendelsohn;
The New York Review of Books), has cannily, deftly chosen from
Chandler’s writing, as well as the many interviews he gave over the
years as he achieved cult status, to weave together an illuminating
narrative that reveals the man, the work, the worlds he created. Using
Chandler’s own words as well as Day’s text, here is the life of
“the man with no home,” a man precariously balanced between his
classical English education with its immutable values and that of a
fast-evolving America during the years before the Great War, and the
changing vernacular of the cultural psyche that resulted. Chandler
makes clear what it is to be a writer, and in particular what it is to
be a writer of “hardboiled” fiction in what was for him “another
language.” Along the way, he discusses the work of his
contemporaries: Dashiell Hammett, James M. Cain, Hemingway,
Fitzgerald, Agatha Christie, W. Somerset Maugham, and others (“I
wish,” said Chandler, “I had one of those facile plotting brains,
like Erle Gardner”). Here is Chandler’s Los Angeles (“There is a
touch of the desert about everything in California,” he said, “and
about the minds of the people who live here”), a city he adopted and
that adopted him in the post-World War I period . . . Here is his
Hollywood (“Anyone who doesn’t like Hollywood,” he said, “is
either crazy or sober”) . . . He recounts his own (rocky)
experiences working in the town with Billy Wilder, Howard Hawks,
Alfred Hitchcock, and others. . .We see Chandler’s alter ego, Philip
Marlowe, private eye, the incorruptible knight with little armor who
walks the “mean streets” in a world not made for knights (“If I
had ever an opportunity of selecting the movie actor who would best
represent Marlowe to my mind, I think it would have been Cary
Grant.”) . . . Here is Chandler on drinking (his life in the end was
in a race with alcohol—and loneliness) . . . and here are
Chandler’s women—the Little Sisters, the “dames” in his
fiction, and in his life (on writing The Long Goodbye, Chandler said,
“I watched my wife die by half inches and I wrote the best book in
my agony of that knowledge . . . I was as hollow as the places between
the stars.” After her death Chandler led what he called a
“posthumous life” writing fiction, but more often than not, his
writing life was made up of letters written to women he barely knew.)
Interwoven throughout the text are more than one hundred pictures that
reveal the psyche and world of Raymond Chandler. “I have lived my
whole life on the edge of nothing,” he wrote. In his own words,
and with Barry Day’s commentary, we see the shape this took and the
way it informed the man and his extraordinary work.
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In His Own Words
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780385352376
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Random House Digital Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter