Anska’s
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(group member since Feb 28, 2018)
Anska’s
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from the Reading the Detectives group.
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Vera and Lombard also probably are the most interesting aspect of the book from a story teller's point of view: They had to be relatable (perhaps even likeable) enough to be suitable as the reader's main point-of-view characters, since they accompany you through the whole book, while at the same time had to have convincingly committed the worst crimes. Christie solved this in a rather spirited fashion by turning the qualities which would have made both of them heroes of any other tale (They are both clever, quick-thinking, take charge and face problems head on *coughs*) into exactly the qualities which made them capable of committing the most shocking crimes.
Though, admittedly, Christie took the easy way out in Lombard's case, as his crime is never much discussed. He admits to it, explains it and that's about it.

If I had to choose, The Long Goodbye would probably be my favorite - it introduced me to my favorite cocktail and raised my interest in alternative methods to brewing coffee; both of which the book deserves extra credit for for on my very personal scale.

Looking back, I am not quite sure how I feel about the book yet. Reading it was fun enough, because I enjoyed learning more about the characters and their inner turmoils as the story progressed and I had fun making up theories who died when and during which activity.
On the other hand I can so very well relate to Chandler's resentment towards this kind of book at the moment. All of the characters have more or less gruesome actions in their past - and in Vera's case they are even beautifully explored in her shifting states of self-denial - but in the context of the island all those crimes of greed, envy and cold self-righteousness succumb to mere puzzle pieces in someone's twisted amusement. Wargrave says it himself, he wanted to kill someone, he just needed an excuse so he could still feel good about himself while doing it.

Another thing I think is rather charming about the books is how they contradict the assumption that pulp crime fiction intended for a male audience, is action heavy. If you look a Chandler's books at least - I still haven't read all those short stories - there is little emphasis on action or on the crime solving. Both are generally told in normal or compressed time, it's daily routine for Marlowe. In descriptions of uncanny places, people or charged situations however, Chandler expands time enormously - and it's usually these emotionally charged situations that generate suspense too.
Those books are pure romanticism.

The anecdote Patrick told says it all though. If I remember correctly all books follow roughly the same pattern: They start with Marlowe being hired for what seems just another day's work but of course is but the first step into a maze of bizarre locales and human vices - including several murders. All crimes get more or less resolved more or less along the way and the denouement are Marlowe's melancholy musings about the events.
A first person narrator makes you always wonder whom they are talking to. In Marlowe's case my bet is on: the barkeeper while getting wasted. I believe Playback is the only one which ends with him being genuinely happy.

Chandler is all about style. I believe he even said so himself. He's like a gourmet cook who had to turn to flipping burgers for a living and in turn poured all his skill into this mundane task. So, while you might still get fast food in the end, it's some fast food.
On the other hand if you care for plot-construction, specifically a carefully constructed murder ... I think I never heard someone praise his plots. They are usually a bit convoluted.
In the end, I still think his books are great (some more than others) but I can very well understand how someone might disagree and not like them at all.

So, this is how I ended up reading and rereading classical detective fiction and how I ended up joining this group - since traveling alone is dreary. Before joining I had set out to tackle Agatha Christie’s body of work, but I am happy to stray from my path to follow the leads of monthly or annual reads … like I said, I am a breadcrumb reader.