Sunday, 25 December 2011
Saturday, 24 December 2011
The Goodbye Look
'Look if you feel you'll have to turn around and go back there i'll understand'. She added 'I can leave my body to medical science or put in an application for equal time'.
Ross MacDonald
The Goodbye Look
Ross MacDonald
1969
Tuesday, 20 December 2011
That's Nothing
Stealing a man's wife that's nothing. But stealing his car that's larceny.
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Love; when you get fear into it, it's not love any more. It's hate.
James M. Cain
More excellent Hardboiled quotes on www.pulpjournals.wordpress.com
Tuesday, 13 December 2011
Manhattan Noir
I spun my chair around and stared out at Times Square. The Camels spectacular on the Claridge puffed fat steam smoke rings out over the snarling traffic.The dapper gentleman on the sign, mouth frozen in a round O of perpetual surprise, was Broadway's harbinger of spring. Earlier in the week teams of scaffold-hung painters transformed the smoker's dark winter homburg and chesterfield into seersucker and panama straw, not as poetic as capistrano swallows, but it got the message across.
Falling Angel
William Hjortsberg
1978
Monday, 12 December 2011
Letters Home
James Crumley and Gustav Hasford give us another couple of links between serving in Vietnam and becoming a writer in the Hardboiled vein.
Hasford in Vietnam
An excerpt from Gypsy Good Time
is on www.gustavhasford.com
Sunday, 11 December 2011
The Lady who Shot Lee Morgan
Jazz trumpeter Lee Morgan was murdered in the early hours of February 19th 1972 at Slugs, a jazz club in New York's East Village where his band was performing. Following an altercation between sets Morgan's 46 year old common-law wife Helen More shot him in the chest onstage, killing him within moments. He was 33 years old. Morgan had just started to get back up onstage to begin the last set when More re-entered the club, having left unnannounced earlier, and called out his name. He turned round and she shot him in the heart. Doorman Lee Holman immediately grabbed her by the wrists and wrestled the gun away from her. She then started to scream 'Baby, what have i done ?' and ran toward the stage.
An interview with Helen More years later
by Larry Reni Thomas is on
Saturday, 10 December 2011
Friday, 9 December 2011
Fat City - Leonard Gardner
'Outside it was still dark.The rain that had kept Tully in the room with a fifth of whiskey and a loaf of whole-wheat bread was still falling'.
'The northbound Greyhound droned into Stockton's fume filled terminal, and among the passengers who filed stiffly out was a short Mexican wearing a camel's hair overcoat and pointed high-heeled yellow gaiter shoes'.
Fat City
Leonard Gardner
1969
Thursday, 8 December 2011
Wednesday, 7 December 2011
Post-Nam Shadows
From late sixties onwards the Post Noir era of American cinema was probably under a heavier influence of the anxieties and fears of the returning Nam veteran than the classic Noir era had previously felt and portrayed in relation to those same fears felt by WWII vets.The lack of recognition and sometimes negative reaction those returning were subjected to was also brought to light in a number of classic books such as Born on the Fourth of July, The Things they Carried, and Paco's Story. The obvious movie portrayals of how life could be 'back in the world' such as Taxi Driver, Mr Majestyk, Cutter's Way, Dead Presidents, Jacob's Ladder etc only represent a small number of those which relate in some way to a new feeling amongst those returning and spreading amongst most who knew them.