Monday, September 27, 2010

Books mentioned last time

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Sorry for the delay. Here are books that you all recommended during our last meeting. Links should take you to the library catalog.


Author Donna Leon


Mistress of the Art of Death. And there's a follow-up, A Murderous Procession.


Author Maj Sjowall


Author Alexander McCall Smith


Ghostwritten, by David Mitchell


Thanks!

Friday, September 10, 2010

Maps!

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The Big Sleep's Marlowe runs all over Los Angeles. Here is a link for a map that shows his various locations. (If you click on the different sections, they get big enough to read.)


Raymond Chandler himself lived in 24 different houses around Los Angeles. Here's a  link to a map of those spots, for any L.A. buffs out there.

Philip Marlowe, Cowboy

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I got excited after finishing The Big Sleep, and decided to look up hard-boiled detective fiction in the library's "Academic Search Complete" database. There, I learned that some critics have compared characters like Marlowe to the cowboys or frontiersmen of western fiction. The detectives are described as "carving civilization out of the wilderness," even if they contend with an urban landscape instead of a natural one -- "a world in which [the detective] is constantly under siege." Like a cowboy, the hard-boiled detective is a loner who solves problems with action and adventuring.


Does this comparison work for The Big Sleep? Is Marlowe like a frontiersman or the hero of a Western? How might Chandler be creating a wilderness landscape for his detective?


Also: Did you think there was an awful lot of talk about thumbs and fingers and teeth in The Big Sleep? You're not alone... 


(The links above will ask you to log in with your library card number and pin).