American Noir
eBook - ePub

American Noir

The Pocket Essential Guide to American Crime Fiction, Film & TV

Barry Forshaw

Share book
  1. 192 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

American Noir

The Pocket Essential Guide to American Crime Fiction, Film & TV

Barry Forshaw

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

Barry Forshaw is acknowledged as a leading expert on crime fiction and films from Britain and the European countries, but a further area of expertise is American crime fiction, film and TV, as demonstrated in such books as The Rough Guide to Crime Fiction and Detective. After the success of earlier entries in his Noir series - Nordic Noir, Brit Noir and Euro Noir - he now tackles the largest and, some might argue, most impressive body of crime fiction from a single country, the United States, to produce the perfect reader's guide to modern American crime fiction. The word 'Noir' is used in its loosest sense: every major living American writer is considered (including the giants Harlan Coben, Patricia Cornwell, James Lee Burke, James Ellroy and Sara Paretsky, as well as non-crime writers such as Stephen King who stray into the genre), often through a concentration on one or two key books.

Many exciting new talents are highlighted, and Barry Forshaw's knowledge of - and personal acquaintance with - many of the writers grants valuable insights into this massively popular field. But the crime genre is as much about films and TV as it is about books, and American Noir is a celebration of the former as well as the latter. US television crime drama in particular is enjoying a new golden age, and all of the important current series are covered here, as well as key important recent films.

'The book canters through American Crime fiction of the early 21st century, conveys information in an easily accessible manner and provides a readable overview of the whole area, one that can be dipped into at random, consulted for specific information or read for general interest' - Mystery People

'Forshaw's deep knowledge of Noir ensures this is a fascinating guide, as well as a top-notch reading list' - Crime Scene Magazine

Look out for the other books in Barry Forshaw's Noir series Euro Noir, Nordic Noir, Brit Noir and Historical Noir, and for his latest book, Crime Fiction: A Reader's Guide.

Frequently asked questions

How do I cancel my subscription?
Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on “Cancel Subscription” - it’s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time you’ve paid for. Learn more here.
Can/how do I download books?
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
What is the difference between the pricing plans?
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlego’s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan you’ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
What is Perlego?
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Do you support text-to-speech?
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Is American Noir an online PDF/ePUB?
Yes, you can access American Noir by Barry Forshaw in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & North American Literary Criticism. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

1: Introduction
The Big Country
The best crime novels can provide – as well as consummate entertainment – incisive and penetrating guides to the countries in which they are set. And nowhere is this syndrome more true than in American crime fiction, which freights in among the detection, betrayal and rising body count a detailed picture of US society. And it’s a picture, moreover, that provides unforgiving psychological and societal insights into this big country, a world away from the more constrained parameters of the UK. And the impulse behind this painting on the largest of canvases? Very often anger at political corruption, beginning with the scorching Red Harvest and The Glass Key of Dashiell Hammett. But that progenitor of the genre is not to be found within these pages – American Noir attempts to tackle the contemporary scene. You will find such writers as James Ellroy and James Lee Burke, both of whom write novels powered by indignation (Burke’s contempt for the George Bush regime practically leaps off the page, and Ellroy loathes political correctness). In the twenty-first century, there are signs that writers are beginning to examine their divided country’s dark comedy of the Donald Trump era; it’s surely only a matter of time before such sardonic crime writers as Carl Hiaasen tackle this. But American writers have always been good at skewering demagogues (think of – in the non-crime field – Sinclair Lewis’s Elmer Gantry, Budd Schulberg’s A Face in the Crowd or Robert Penn Warren’s All the King’s Men), just as the books of Scandinavian writers such as Jo Nesbo anatomised the rise of the far right in their own countries.
Issues
The genre has often tackled hot-button issues affecting society – often more keenly than in more avowedly ‘serious’ fiction. Readers are given an imaginative access to the various strata of US society – from the alienated underclasses to the upscale haunts of the rich – and a complex panoply emerges. Several writers have used the apparatus of the crime thriller to examine post-Vietnam America, social instability and modern fears of terrorism. Such writers as George Pelecanos have tackled issues of race in uncompromising fashion, and the problems facing modern women in the US are rigorously addressed in the work of writers such as Sara Paretsky, while the role of professional women is central to the novels of Patricia Cornwell. None of these writers, however, have forgotten the first imperative of crime fiction: keeping the reader transfixed with a powerful, page-turning narrative.
The formidable bestselling authors mentioned above are the merest tip of the crime fiction iceberg; the American crime-writing fraternity is exhilaratingly wide and provocative, with edgy new writers constantly emerging, not least in the currently popular domestic noir genre. Let’s face it, a book such as American Noir can only ever be a snapshot of a given moment in crime fiction, but I’ve tried to cover as many writers as I can. I’ve also included some interviews I’ve conducted with writers including James Ellroy and Karin Slaughter.
Definitions
As with the other books in my ‘Noir’ series, the ‘reader’s guide’ format I’ve used has entries ranging from expansive to capsule form. The remit of this study, though, has been as wide as possible: every conceivable genre that is subsumed under the heading of American crime fiction is here, from the novel of detection to the blockbuster thriller to the occasional story of espionage (although they are the exception). And, again, as with other books in the series, several of the authors included here stretch the definition of ‘noir’ to breaking point (and beyond). My aim once again was to include as many writers as I could (although there are virtually no historical crime novelists, whom I hope to cover in a later book). And the spectrum ranges from the truly dark noir region to its less unsettling polar opposite, in whose pages bloodshed is notably less copious. And although they receive a separate mention along with other crime fiction colleagues at the end of this book, I feel a keen need to give a preliminary tip of the hat to my confrères J Kingston Pierce and Craig Sisterson for their invaluable input and suggestions. Thanks, gents.
American Noir is principally designed to be used as a reference book to contemporary US crime fiction. And ‘contemporary’ here means ‘living’, at least at the time of writing – if the Grim Reaper has been a-roving since I began the book, that’s beyond my control. So, don’t look for Dashiell Hammett or even (more recently) the late James Crumley – it was damned difficult just fitting living writers into the allocated page count here (and my Rough Guide to Crime Fiction covers the hard-boiled and pulp era). And, as always with this series, the text is not designed to be read straight through from cover to cover – though that’s up to the reader. You pays your money, you takes your choice.
Brit Noir had a layout based on the locations in which UK crime writers set their books, while Nordic Noir and Euro Noir were arranged by country; it seemed to me that the most useful order for American Noir, however, was a straightforward alphabetical one (to avoid, for instance, a humongous mass of author entries under ‘California’).
But now, it’s time to take that Greyhound on Route 66…
2: American Crime Writers
JEFF ABBOTT’s publishers prided themselves on how their strikingly designed new jackets helped sell his books (the strategy was even used as a blandishment to lure new authors to the imprint: ‘Join us and we’ll give you Jeff Abbott-type jackets!’). But finally, of course, it’s the writing that counts. Abbott, in fact, is an exemplar of one of the several ways in which a writer of crime thrillers can guarantee one crucial imperative: the reader turns to the next chapter. James Patterson (discussed later) has a simple strategy: extremely short chapters that invariably end with a cliffhanging situation. Harlan Coben and Gillian Flynn (ditto) tease the readers with a series of perfectly timed revelations that keep us glued to the page. But Jeff Abbott, in such books as Panic and Fear, has a double-pronged tactic: establish a tense and unusual situation in the first chapter, then orchestrate the developments in hypnotic fast/slow segments. Panic used this alternating tempo to deliver the taut tale of a man struggling to find out the truth behind the disappearance of his father and the death of his mother, and the lean, polished storytelling surprised those who thought Abbott was a debut author. In fact, he had seven books under his belt; efficient enough, though they hardly hinted at the top-notch practitioner he’d become. If Fear wasn’t quite in the same league as Panic, it was still pretty galvanic stuff. The protagonist, Miles Kendrick, starts the book at the end of his tether – and things get worse from then on. In an echo of Fight Club, Miles is being taunted by his best friend Andy, who is threatening him with humiliation and violence. But Miles has killed Andy – or so he believes. Andy isn’t there, except as a taunting voice in his mind. Miles is in the witness protection programme, concealing his whereabouts from mob killers, even as he tries to deal with the guilt he feels at his friend’s death. He has one ace in the hole: psychiatrist Allison Vance, trying to pull him back to some kind of mental equilibrium while sorting out the traumatic events of the night of his friend’s death. But an explosion in her office kills Allison and destroys Miles’ chance of regaining his sanity. He finds himself in a desperate cat-and-mouse game with FBI operative Dennis Groote, a man whose own madness takes a much more lethal form than that of Miles. The key to his survival lies in cracking the truth of just how his friend Andy died. If the levels of tension engendered here don’t match those of Abbott’s Panic, that’s principally because the earlier book set the bar high for any follow-up. Forget direct comparisons, and you’ll find that those tube or bus stops will fly by unnoticed.
One of the most astute of psychological crime novelists, the energetic MEGAN ABBOTT is responsible for such trenchant and commanding books as Queenpin, The Song Is You, Die a Little, Bury Me Deep, The End of Everything, Dare Me and The Fever, the latter selected as one of the ‘Best Books of the Summer’ by The New York Times. A native of Detroit, she received her PhD in English and American literature from New York University. She has taught at NYU, the State University of New York and the New School University. Apart from her nuanced and incisive novels (more interested in the complex psychology of her characters than many of her confrères, who sketch such things in), Abbott is also the author of an influential non-fiction book, The Street Was Mine: White Masculinity in Hardboiled Fiction and Film Noir – notably more sympathetic to her male subjects than much feminist writing in this area – and the editor of A Hell of a Woman, an anthology of female crime fiction. Talking to her at the inaugural ‘Noirwich’ crime fiction festival, I found her depth of genre knowledge was quickly apparent. She has been nominated for many awards, including three Edgars, the Hammett Prize, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and the Folio Prize.
CHARLES ARDAI may also be award-winning mystery writer Richard Aleas. Or he might like us to think it’s the other way round. Ardai’s pithy writing has appeared in publications such as Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine and Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine and has graced anthologies including Best Mysteries of the Year. His first novel, a quirky piece entitled Little Girl Lost, was published in 2004 and was nominated for both the Edgar Allan Poe Award from the Mystery Writers of America and a Shamus Award from the Private Eye Writers of America; his second, bearing the Blakean title Songs of Innocence, was selected as one of the best books of the year by Publishers Weekly and won a Shamus Award. Both books were written as ‘Richard Aleas’.
Routinely hailed (along with such masters as Ross Macdonald) as one of the heirs apparent of Raymond Chandler, Robert B. Parker sustained a truly impressive level of invention over a long career, his death in 2010 seemingly bringing to an end the classic tradition of the tough and sardonic private eye. But Parker’s gumshoe was revivified in the talented hands of ACE ATKINS, one of whose Spenser novels, titled Robert B. Parker’s Wonderland, had all the hallmarks of the original creator, with the detective encountering a mysterious and seductive woman (par for the course), a terrifying Las Vegas criminal and a plot involving some suspect land development. If the truth be told, even the great Parker’s invention was flagging a touch on some of his later books, but his new amanuensis/successor has conjured all the energy of his predecessor’s best work. What’s more, Atkins has added a quirky new perspective of his own. Reader response was along the lines of ‘Welcome back, Spenser.’
PAUL AUSTER has long been a writer who inspires a keen following among those drawn into the dark world of his novels. Auster readers accept both ambitious, exuberant books presented on large canvases and pared-down, lean fables that demand total concentration. Travels in the Scriptorium lies firmly within the latter category of Auster’s work, and while its rewards are many, it’s a novel for those coming to the author as long-term aficionados rather than new converts. It begins with an ageing man sitting in a room, with no con...

Table of contents