My
reading habit was mostly self-inflicted, though heavily influenced by my
father's collection of boyhood books, notably the works of Edgar Rice Burroughs,
Zane Grey, Tom Swift and lots of other popular action writers of the early 20th
century now lost in obscurity.
But the mystery addiction
is all my mother's fault. She didn't know the term, but she was an avid
Cozy freak, in love with Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, P.D. James, Martha
Grimes (not technically a Brit) and any other female British writer she
could find in the local library. And male, for that matter, especially
John Creasy. While stretching the definition, she also dug Eric Ambler,
Graham Greene and Ian Fleming. And she had a serious thing for Earl
Stanley Gardner, creator of the Perry Mason series, who's all but forgotten
these days, even though he was one of the most successful (and prolific)
crime writers of all time. I think a mild crush on Raymond Burr (not
knowing and likely not caring that he was gay) helped that along.
Hundreds of these books
flowed through my house when I was growing up, usually tattered mass paperbacks
that got passed around my extended family of mystery-loving grandmothers,
aunts and great uncles. The production quality of those books was
minimal, as they were considered essentially pulp trash, so to this day I tend
to associate the smell of moldy paper with action and suspense.
I was allowed to read
anyone but Mickey Spillane, who my mother rightly determined was gratuitously
violent. I thought it was also too much sex, suggested by the cover art,
which I was disappointed to learn to be a flagrant bait and switch when finally
getting my hands on a copy of I, The Jury.
When I
was getting my masters in creative writing at Antioch in London, we had an exhausting reading list of 20th
century literary heroes, which I loved, though it got a bit weighty. So I took The
Maltese Falcon out of the local library, hoping for some light
reading. Instead, I realized I’d just
read one of the greatest heroes of Western literature. Scheme foiled, life-long addiction to mysteries
entrenched.
We know
that Hammett read Hemingway, since every one did at the time, and you can see
plenty of Hemingway’s muscular minimalism in Hammett’s prose. I suspect, however, that Hemingway also read
Hammett. Maybe someone out there knows
for certain, but the great early 20th century American anti-hero,
the tough, cynical, but ultimately moral, even idealistic, Sam Spade bears more
than a faint resemblance to Hemingway’s protagonists, more so as the author
matured.
Humphrey
Bogart bridges it all. His Harry Morgan
in To Have and Have Not was an easy
transition from his Sam Spade and Philip Marlowe roles. The debate over what constitutes literature
and genre fiction rages on, but to me, at the very top of the work, it’s all of
a piece.
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This is the latest blog from Chris discussing the literary world, be it reading, writing, or publishing. He’s had a successful career as a wordsmith, starting with a career
in advertising and moving on to write a string of highly successful mysteries.
His most recent Sam Acquillo mystery Tango Down is available on Amazon. Chris
has won innumerable awards and has had dozens of rights sales around the world,
including audio sales to Blackstone Audiobooks. Do pass this on to others you
know, post comments on the Cockeyed Pessimist website, and feel free to share
your thoughts with Chris via View my Blog The Cockeyed Pessimist, or email
Chris directly cknopf@thepermanentpress.com or Martin Shepard at
shepard@thepermanentpress.com.