
The World of Raymond Chandler
In His Own Words
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نقد و بررسی

August 11, 2014
As he did previously with the work of Noel Coward, P.G. Wodehouse, and Dorothy Parker, editor Day has assembled the letters and published writings of Raymond Chandler to create not a biography, but a portrait of the writer “in his own words.” While the volume mentions Chandler’s education, life prior to becoming a writer, and wife Cissy (18 years his senior), the focus here is on Philip Marlowe, Los Angeles and Hollywood, and writing. Day includes some juicy tidbits from Chandler’s letters about Hemingway and Veronica “Moronica” Lake, and from the writer’s experiences with Hollywood productions like The Big Sleep, Double Indemnity, and Strangers on a Train. However, most of the book consists of Chandler’s quotes on a host of topics ranging from smoking to cracking wise to cops. Day also gives an inventory of Chandler’s hard-boiled argot and famously ornate similes, and explores minutiae, such as the evolution of Marlowe’s office decor over the course of the novels featuring him. This encyclopedic mastery of Chandler’s work is impressive in small doses, but becomes tedious taken as a whole. When Chandler’s letters are being quoted, though, on anything from the philosophy of a private eye “earning a meager living in a corrupt world” to trends in Los Angeles architecture, the book sparkles. 115 illus.

June 1, 2014
Day, whose compilation work has illuminated the lives of authors like Dorothy Parker and Noel Coward, binds together extracts from Chandler's novels, short stories, and letters with his own commentary to show how an American-born product of Dulwich College, London, got himself to Los Angeles and wrote some of the best hard-boiled mysteries in the business. Lots of photos, plus promotion at Bouchercon.
Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

October 1, 2014
Day has made a cottage industry of producing books about the famous in their own words. His previous books have gleaned the writings, both published and personal, of such writers as the eminently quotable Oscar Wilde, Dorothy Parker, P. G. Wodehouse, and No'l Coward (Day is best known for his eight books on Coward). Chandler is the latest big name to get Day's excavation treatment. Since Chandler wrote no autobiography, this is both intriguing and useful information. Chandler's letters, shorts stories, and, especially, his novels starring Philip Marlowe give us a surprisingly rounded look at Chandler's opinions, ranging from his childhood, his many jobs (including working as a tennis-racket stringer), how he got into writing pulp fiction, his views on his craft, and his views (and Marlowe's) on women, bad guys, contemporary writers (he despised Hemingway and pitied Fitzgerald), and the vicissitudes of Hollywood. Day's basic method is to set up each chapter and provide links between Chandler's own words. A graceful addition to Chandler studies.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)
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