I have not read a Chandler novel of detective Philip Marlowe and his hardboiled noir escapades of hustlers, femme fatales, the darker side of LA, and booze, lots of booze. I did see The Big Sleep years ago, and am familiar with some of Marlowe’s famous one-liners and cases through literary allusions and literature culture in general. But, being a fan of Lawrence Osborne, I decided to read this, knowing I wouldn’t have too many pre-conceived notions (if any) on how Marlowe’s character and actions should be executed. I wouldn’t be distracted by comparisons. So, if you’re looking for a reviewer that compares the two novelists, you’ve come to the wrong review. But I thought this book was solid and entertaining, and covered well the theme of decency, honor, aging and alienation.
The setting here is 1988, and Marlowe is 72, retired, and living alone in a house on a Mexican beach on the Baja California Peninsula, sipping margaritas at a hotel he frequents. In come two insurance gentlemen dressed like undertakers, urging Marlowe out of retirement for one last case that will take him to the badlands and border between Mexico and California. The gist if the case is that a debt-ridden man Marlowe’s own age, Donald Zinn, has washed up on the beach dead, and his insurance policy obligated a two-million dollar payout to the lovely wife, half his age. Moreover, Zinn’s body was immediately cremated, no minutes to spare. The insurance agents want Philip to investigate whether there was something fishy in this death and the policy.
Does Marlowe want to do this? His days of fistfights and gun-slinging are over. He relies on a silver-tipped cane—which hides a deadly Japanese blade—to limp around. He’s truly vulnerable physically, but also mentally nostalgic. “You have your books and your movies, your daydreams and your moments in the sun, but none of these can save you any more than irony can.” So, he’s talked out of retirement for one last case.
And the plot is mostly credible, in what is likely a Chandler-esque way. Sure, some bodies pile up and—okay, it is periodically larger than life. Could an elderly alcoholic really rough it this way and sustain this kind of stress? Probably not, but the cerebral and intellectual sovereignty of Marlowe sucked me in pretty quick, despite its slow start, and had me believing in his character and his gumshoe tactics. And, of course, there is a dame, isn’t there always a dame in a detective noir of the Marlowe variety? But, it isn’t like you may think. As Clint Eastwood once said, a man’s gotta know his limitations, and Marlowe knows his constraints.
The book isn’t a quick page-turner by any means, and it takes a while to get off the ground, but Osborne knows his settings, and two of the reasons I chose this book is his impeccable us of setting and atmosphere. And his tone is laconic but sympathetic. “You can be called to a last effort, a final heroic statement, because I doubt you call yourself to leave comforts and certainties for an open road. But the call is inside your own head. It’s a sad summons from the depths of your own wasted past. You could call it the imperative to go out with full-tilt trumpets and gunshots instead of the quietly desperate sound of a hospital ventilator.”
The plot itself didn’t win me over as much as Osborne’s writing. If you crave a fast-paced plot, this isn’t that novel—it does have twists and turns, and as Osborne wrote in his author’s note at the end, the narrative incarnates qualities of fairy tale and nightmare. He reckons with aging more than once, and in his poignant and wistful voice, reflects on his old age. “Count me as one of those who know that life is unbearable not because it’s tragedy but because it’s romance. Old age only makes it worse, because now the race against time has reached the hour of high noon.”