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RAYMOND CHANDLER


'Raymond Thornton Chandler' (July 23, 1888March 26, 1959) was an author of crime stories and novels. His influence on modern crime fiction has been immense, particularly in the writing style and attitudes that much of the field has adopted over the last 60 years. Chandler's protagonist, Philip Marlowe, has become synonymous with the tradition of the hard-boiled private detective, along with Dashiell Hammett's Sam Spade.

Contents
Biography
Novels
Short stories
Detective short stories
Non-detective short stories
Published as
Cultural references
Further reading
External links

Biography


Chandler was born in Chicago, Illinois, in 1888, but moved to Britain in 1895 with his mother after they were abandoned by his father, an alcoholic civil engineer for an American railway company. His mother's brother, a successful lawyer, supported them. Chandler entered Dulwich College in London in 1900, where he received a classical education. He did not attend university, instead spending time in Europe. He was naturalised as a British citizen in 1907 in order to take the Civil Service exam. He passed with the third highest score and took a job at the Admiralty, where he worked for just over a year. His first poem was published during this time. Chandler disliked the Civil Service's mindset of servility and quit, to the consternation of his family. Chandler unsuccessfully tried journalism, published some reviews, and continued to write poetry in the late Romantic style. It was the age of the Clever Young Man, but "I was distinctly ''not'' a clever young man," he later said of himself.
In 1912, after borrowing money from his uncle (who made it clear the loan was to be repaid, with interest), Chandler returned to the United States and eventually settled in Los Angeles. He found work stringing tennis rackets and picking fruit. It was a lonely period of scrimping and saving. Finally taking a correspondence course in bookkeeping, he finished ahead of schedule and found steady employment. When the United States entered World War I in 1917, he enlisted in the Canadian Army, served in France, and was in flight training in England when the war ended.
After the armistice of 1918 he returned to Los Angeles and began an affair with a married woman, Cissy Pascal, who was 18 years his senior. They married in 1924 upon the death of Chandler's mother, whom he had brought to Los Angeles and who opposed the union. By virtue of his American wife Chandler now had both British and American nationalities. By 1932 Chandler had attained a vice-presidency at the Dabney Oil syndicate but a year later his alcoholism, absenteeism, and at least one suicide threat got him fired.
He taught himself to write pulp fiction in an effort to draw an income from his creative talents, and his first story, ''Blackmailers Don't Shoot'' was published in ''Black Mask'' in 1933. His first novel, ''The Big Sleep'', was published in 1939.
Chandler worked as a Hollywood screenwriter following the success of his novels, working with Billy Wilder on James M. Cain's novel ''Double Indemnity'' (1944), and writing his only original screenplay, ''The Blue Dahlia'' (1946). Chandler also collaborated on the screenplay of Alfred Hitchcock's ''Strangers on a Train'' (1951), a story he thought implausible. By this time the Chandlers had moved to La Jolla, California, an affluent enclave on the coast near San Diego.
Chandler's wife died in 1954 after a long illness, during which Chandler was writing ''The Long Goodbye''. Lonely and depressed, he turned once again to drink and never again turned away for long. His writing suffered in quality and quantity, and he attempted suicide in 1955. His life was both helped and complicated by the women who attracted his attention, notably Helga Greene (his literary agent); Jean Fracasse (his secretary); and Sonia Orwell (George Orwell's widow), who assumed Chandler was a repressed homosexual. After a stay in England he moved back to La Jolla, where he died of "Peripheral Vascular Shock and Pre-Renal Uremia" caused by Pneumonia at Scripps Memorial Hospital (Death Certificate). Helga Greene was awarded his estate after a legal wrangle with Fracasse. Chandler was buried at Mount Hope Cemetery, in San Diego. According to Frank MacShane, the author of ''The Raymond Chandler Papers'', the struggle over his estate resulted in Chandler being interred in a section reserved for paupers and indigents.
Chandler's finely wrought prose was widely admired by critics and writers from W.H. Auden and Evelyn Waugh to Ian Fleming. Although his swift-moving, hardboiled style was inspired largely by Dashiell Hammett, his use of both sharp and lyrical similes in this context was quite original. Turns of phrase such as ''The muzzle of the Luger looked like the mouth of the Second Street tunnel'', and ''The minutes went by on tiptoe, with their fingers to their lips'', defines private eye fiction and a ''Chandleresque'' literary style, which is also the subject and object of innumerable parodies and pastiches. However, his most famous character, Philip Marlowe, is not a stereotypical tough guy, but rather a complex and sometimes sentimental figure who has few friends, attended college for a while, speaks a little Spanish, at times admires Mexicans, and is a student of chess and classical music. He will also refuse money from a prospective client if he is not satisfied that the job meets his ethical standards.
In his short stories and novels Chandler wrote very evocatively of Los Angeles and its environs in the 1930s and '40s. Many of the locations which he describes are real, some pseudonymous: "Bay City" is generally taken to represent Santa Monica, "Gray Lake" was the analog for Silver Lake, while "Idle Valley" is a synthesis of various wealthy enclaves in the San Fernando Valley.
Chandler was also a perceptive critic of pulp fiction, and his essay "The Simple Art of Murder" is a standard reference.
All of Chandler's novels have been adapted for film, most notably ''The Big Sleep'' (1946), directed by Howard Hawks and starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall. Novelist William Faulkner also received a screenwriting credit for this film. Chandler's screenwriting, as limited as it was, and the adaptation of his novels to screen in the 1940s were important influences on American film noir.

Novels



★ ''The Big Sleep'' (1939)

★ ''Farewell, My Lovely'' (1940)

★ ''The High Window'' (1942)

★ ''The Lady in the Lake'' (1943)

★ ''The Little Sister'' (1949)

★ ''The Long Goodbye'' (1954) (Edgar Award for Best Novel, 1955)

★ ''Playback'' (1958)

★ ''Poodle Springs'' (1959) (incomplete; completed by Robert B. Parker in 1989)
All concern the cases of a Los Angeles private investigator named Philip Marlowe. The plot lines often follow a pattern in which the individuals who hire Marlowe are revealed to be as corrupt and/or criminally complicit as those he is hired to protect them from.

Short stories


Chandler's short stories typically chronicled the adventures of Philip Marlowe or other down-on-their luck private detectives (John Dalmas, Steve Grayce) or similarly inclined good samaritans (such as Mr. Carmady). Exceptions are the macabre ''The Bronze Door'' and ''English Summer'', a self-described Gothic romance set in the English countryside. Interestingly, in the 1950s radio series ''The Adventures of Philip Marlowe'', which included adaptations of the stories, the name Marlowe was replaced by the names of other protagonists (for example Steve Grayce, in the adaptation of ''The King in Yellow''). These changes actually restored the originally published versions. It was only in their later republished forms that Philip Marlowe was used (with the exception of ''The Pencil'').
Detective short stories


★ ''Blackmailers Don't Shoot'' (1933)

★ ''Smart-Aleck Kill'' (1934)

★ ''Finger Man'' (1934)

★ ''Killer in the Rain'' (1935)

★ ''Nevada Gas'' (1935)

★ ''Spanish Blood'' (1935)

★ ''The Curtain'' (1936)

★ ''Guns at Cyrano's'' (1936)

★ ''Goldfish'' (1936)

★ ''The Man Who Liked Dogs'' (1936)

★ ''Pickup on Noon Street'' (1936; originally published as ''Noon Street Nemesis'')

★ ''Mandarin's Jade'' (1937)

★ ''Try the Girl'' (1937)

★ ''Bay City Blues'' (1938)

★ ''The King in Yellow'' (1938)

★ ''Red Wind'' (1938)

★ ''The Lady in the Lake'' (1939)

★ ''Pearls Are a Nuisance'' (1939)

★ ''Trouble is My Business'' (1939)

★ ''No Crime in the Mountains'' (1941)

★ ''The Pencil'' (1959; published posthumously; originally published as ''Marlowe Takes on the Syndicate'', also published as ''Wrong Pigeon'' and ''Philip Marlowe's Last Case'')
Most of the short stories published before 1940 appeared in pulp magazines like ''Black Mask'', and so had a limited readership. Chandler was able to recycle the plot lines and characters from those stories when he turned to writing novels intended for a wider audience.
Non-detective short stories


★ ''I'll Be Waiting'' (1939)

★ ''The Bronze Door'' (1939)

★ ''Professor Bingo's Snuff'' (1951)

★ ''English Summer'' (1976; published posthumously)
Note: ''I'll Be Waiting'', ''The Bronze Door'' and ''Professor Bingo's Snuff'' all feature unnatural deaths and investigators (a hotel detective, Scotland Yard and California local police, respectively), but the emphasis is not on the investigation of the deaths.
''Atlantic Monthly'' magazine articles:

★ ''Writers in Hollywood'' (December 1944)

★ ''The Simple Art of Murder'' (November 1945)

★ ''Oscar Night in Hollywood'' (March 1948)

★ ''Ten Percent of your Life'' (February 1952)

Published as



★ ''Stories & Early Novels: Pulp Stories, The Big Sleep, Farewell, My Lovely, The High Window'' (Frank MacShane, ed.) (Library of America, 1995) ISBN 978-1-88301107-9.

★ ''Later Novels & Other Writings: The Lady in the Lake, The Little Sister, The Long Goodbye, Playback, Double Indemnity, Selected Essays & Letters'' (Frank MacShane, ed.) (Library of America, 1995) ISBN 978-1-88301108-6.

Cultural references



★ The British rockers Robyn Hitchcock & The Egyptians released a song called "Raymond Chandler Evening" on their 1986 album ''Element of Light.''

★ In the '' episode "Field of Fire", Odo and Miles O'Brien admit to being fans of Chandler and his novels.

★ In an episode of the American sitcom ''Friends'' ("The One With Rachel's Dress"), the character Chandler mentions Raymond Chandler in response to Joey asking if there were any famous Chandlers. Joey, in response, believes that Chandler made the name up.

★ In Jim Carroll's song "Three Sisters", the lyrics include the phrase "But she just wants to lay in bed all night reading Raymond Chandler."

★ On a rare split 12" (with Castanets), free jazz duo I Heart Lung titled each track in homage of Chandler: "Speedboats for Breakfast" referring to Chandler's guess as to what the early residents of Santa Monica ate in the morning, "Song of the Boatman of the River Roon" from an early poem by Chandler, and "If I Were A Young Man Now" from a letter written late in his life.

★ The detective novelist Robert B. Parker based many of the characteristics of his detective, Spenser, on the Chandler tradition, to the degree that Spenser was described as born in Laramie, Wyoming, the same town in which Chandler was said to have been conceived. Parker holds a Ph.D. in English literature, and his doctoral thesis was partially about Chandler's writing.

★ In the movie Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, the "titles" of each of the days in the movie are also titles of Raymond Chandler works: the short story 'Trouble is My Business'; the novels 'The Lady in the Lake', 'The Little Sister' and 'Farewell, My Lovely'; and the essay 'The Simple Art of Murder'. However, the movie itself refers not to Chandler but to a fictional detective writer "Johnny Gossamer" as its inspiration.

★ In James O'Barr's The Crow graphic novel, the lyrics to the song, Raymond Chandler Evening by Robyn Hitchcock & The Egyptians, are featured in the panels leading up to lead character Eric Draven's bursting into the character Fun Boy's room.

★ Country/Goth band Miss Derringer uses the Chandler line "Dead Men Weigh More Than Broken Hearts" (from 'The Big Sleep') as song title on their second album 'Lullabies'.

Further reading


MacShane, Frank (1976). ''The Life of Raymond Chandler''. N.Y.: E.P. Dutton.
Hiney, Tom (1999). ''Raymond Chandler''. N.Y.: Grove Press. ISBN 0-80213-637-0
Ward, Elizabeth and Alain Silver (1987). ''Raymond Chandler's Los Angeles''. Woodstock, N.Y.: Overlook Press. ISBN 0-87951-351-9
Howe, Alexander N. "The Detective and the Analyst: Truth, Knowledge, and Psychoanalysis in the Hard-Boiled Fiction of Raymond Chandler." ''CLUES: A Journal of Detection'' 24.4 (Summer 2006): 15-29.

External links



The Raymond Chandler website



''Raymond Chandler's Los Angeles'' Excerpts from the book by Elizabeth Ward and Alain Silver

Raymond Chandler Photo Portfolio Photographs of locations in Raymond Chandler's work, taken by Catherine Corman.

Raymond Chandler's LA: In A Lonely Place tour from L.A. bus adventure company Esotouric

Raymond Chandler at Thrilling Detective

Bibliography of UK 1st Editions

The Opposite of Show Business A play by Jim Grover about how Raymond Chandler became a writer.

Writing The Long Goodbye

1996 Essay by George Pelecanos

Voice Recording of Raymond Chandler interviewed by Ian Fleming for BBC Radio, July 1958

Raymond Chandler's Shamus Town A history of Los Angeles via the locations where Raymond Chandler lived and wrote about, 1912-1946.

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