From Publishers Weekly
Chandler, author of such hard-boiled detective classics as The Big Sleep and The Long Goodbye, wrote highly entertaining letters on subjects ranging from literature to Hollywood to cats letters, no question, from a poet of the mean streets and an extremely witty curmudgeon. Regarding detectives, he notes: "The real life private eye is a sleazy little judge from the Burns Agency, or a strong arm guy with no more personality than a blackjack." On publishers: "If you start talking about money, they retire coldly to their professional eminence, and if you start talking about literature, they immediately yank the dollar sign before your eyes." Hiney, author of a 1997 biography of Chandler, has gathered this collection largely from the superior The Selected Letters of Raymond Chandler (1981), edited by MacShane (who did the first full biography on Chandler in 1976). Hiney's notes presume a bit too much knowledge for a new reader (and, oddly, he seems to think that Dashiell Hammett and Lillian Hellman were married). Previously unpublished scraps provide fresh material, and the few paragraphs about trench warfare in WWI fought by the young author and a late-life meeting with gangster "Lucky" Luciano that Chandler was too drunk to clearly recall are very nice. Reinventing such a standard author for a new century is only a matter of course; since this is Chandler's writing, quotable, funny, even hilarious comments appear on every page.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
It would be a mistake to brush this work aside as just one more collection of letters written by yet another opinionated author with a drinking problem. This slim volume packs a powerful punch! Examining the selected letters and nonfiction of Chandler (1888-1959) reveals the occasionally softer side of the man behind the hard-boiled mysteries. Readers will chuckle at Chandler's views of Hollywood, television, literary critics, dust jacket designs, and author photographs, and they will be touched by his letters to colleagues showing his compassion for his sickly wife, Cissy, his sense of loss after her death, and the disintegration that followed. Also included are a few fun letters to fans who asked him to divulge more facts about the fictional world of Philip Marlowe, such as the character's fondness for pets, his favorite movies, and the caliber of his guns. Editors Hiney (Raymond Chandler) and MacShane (ed., The Selected Letters of Raymond Chandler) have carefully selected pieces to enable diehard fans and students of literature to watch Chandler's life blossom, unfold, and collapse. Recommended for popular culture collections, this would be an ideal work for book discussion group leaders. Joyce Sparrow, Juvenile Welfare Board Lib., Pinellas Park, FL
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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