Since I read James Ellroy’s (fictional) The Black Dahlia I have had his (memoir) My Dark Places on my list. The Black Dahlia is one of the best known true crime LA stories about a woman who was killed and left in an abandoned lot. Many women were killed in LA before that, of course, and many after that, of course, and many more were even killed that year, but for some reason this story of this one woman captured the public imagination, the subject of dozens of books and films. Bettie Short was the dark obsession of Ellroy for many years until he finally crafted a great book about her (and the LAPD, and so many women killed and dumped on the streets over years).
I’ve now completed all four books in Ellroy’s late forties through late fifties LA Quartet, the first of which is the 1987 Black Dahlia, based on the rape and murder in 1947 of Bettie Short, but in the process of reviewing that book I discovered that Ellroy’s lifelong obsession with Short and with crime in LA generally was largely informed by the death of his own mother, Jean, in 1958 when he was ten years old. His parents were divorced, and as too often happens, each of them told lies about each other to their young son to separate the child from the other parent. Initially the son sided with the more fun Dad, who trashed his mom as a tramp, though both parents were liars, and finally maybe Dad was more so than mom, whom he discovered much about as he teamed with an LA detective to reopen the case and investigate it for a year.
The book begins with Ellroy’s early life with them, including the murder and his wil years with his fathern; it follows with a (to me) surprising section of his messed-up life after his Dad also died when he was seventeen. He became A Rebel without a Cause (James Dean, a film and youth icon also of the late fifties), a drug addict, a drunk, a thief, a burglar, who was jailed multiple times. He hated just about everything and everybody, and he was largely alone, rudderless. But he was nevertheless pretty bright, he always read, and somehow wrote a crime novel in his early thirties. He followed this with many novels, but it was not until he had achieved what might be shocking national success (given his life in the gutter)for some of his books that he decided to go back and see if he could help solve the (long closed) murder case of his mother, with an LA detective. The last section is a kind of biography of her that he developed, a truer image of her than the woman he thought he had known.
“I was afraid of all girls, most boys and selected male and female adults. My fear derived from my apocalyptic fantasy apparatus. I knew that all things went chaotically bad.”
This is a great and brutally honest memoir, a noir true crime story, a moving biography and a kind of reconciliation with and tribute to his mother. Maybe some of the police procedural section becomes a little long, but on the other hand, the style is less staccato than the LA Quartet. And maybe a little kinder to the LAPD cops, the worst of which he beats up pretty badly in the LA Quartet for racism and corruption. Don’t get me wrong, Ellroy can be a jerk, he can he harsh, and difficult to be around, as he makes clear in his honest depiction of his post-parent disaster years, as most of his life been filled with rage for corruption, for hypocrisy, for the worst of human nature, and that rage is still here, but in this book it’s muted, as this is his most tender and personal book yet, bringing his mother back to life, to raise her from the dead and make her real for himself and for us.
“I want to burn down the distance between us.”
I’ll say 4.5 stars, rounded up for the tribute to his mother, and that determination to find the truth, kind of gripping and admirable. None of these folks are saints, but hats off to Ellroy for not romanticizing any of them, and for being honest, especially about all of his own flaws. With this book we can better understand the dark passions that inform all of his rich and often harsh stories of American life.
PS: This is just a weird sidenote, but again, just coincidentally (?) I have read five books this year so far set in 1957-58. What can that be about? It was not deliberate, I swear.And all of them are dark: and A book about Eddie Gein, the macabre killer in Plainfield, Wisconsin; a novel set in Ireland by John Banville, Snow; a memoir set in Paris by Annie Ernaux, a somewhat ominous tale of romantic obsession; the fourht in the LA Quartet, White Jazz, and now this memoir/biography of Ellroy's murdered mother. Is this synchronicity, leading to. .. what, and why? Or is it paranoia? Kafka's Trial? Or just coincidence? Also, the Eddie Gein story is set in Plainfield, the WI where I visited recently as I read the book; and now I have my map out where I can see Tunnel City, which is a tiny town where Jean Ellroy grew up and where her son visited in his investigation, just thirty minutes from Plainfield. Madness? Nah, just weird life.