Freddie Otash is finis. He’s fading in and out of focus. He’s finking, feeding the straight alte kockers the stuff of their fetishes.
That’s the start of this, at least. Otash declares there are only two things he wouldn’t do as part of his sordid work extorting, strong-arming, and setting up celebrities and truly sick pervo rapist-killers: kill someone himself and work for the commies.
He’ll admit to having done both, multiple times, before the novel is a third of the way over.
It’s been an ugly life, Freddie admits in those opening pages, and he’s sharing some of high-low-lights to the other aged Hollywood types at his favorite diner. Then, a bite of deli goes down the wrong pipe, his heart clenches up, and it’s a heart attack, stroke, or something. He’s in and out over the next week or two, coming to consciousness in the late 1990s to set up his narrative, but mostly he’s lost in the past, lost in an L.A. that glitters on the screen and begrimes anyone who comes near it in real life.
What begins as confession, then, morphs into the stream-of-corruption patois that Ellroy has mastered. It’s colored by the breathless prose style of Confidential magazine, an organ that pops up throughout Ellroy’s work. (Organs pop up often in his work, but that’s another matter.)
I’ll admit, I think it’s a kind of prose magic. I listen to Ellroy’s writing like I’m listening to jazz – and that’s true whether I’m doing an audiobook, as here, or a paper copy. He does things with word choice and rhythm that seems Coltrane-esque. You get flurries of nouns; you get nouns compelled into verbs. You get metaphors pushed to absurd limits. Sure, he can write an ordinary sentence, and he often does, but that just feels like setting the background tempo. After that he flies off on solos that no one else can match.
So, I’m a sucker for all things Ellroy. That’s even as I acknowledge the often-horrifying politics of his pieces. This is right-wing snuff fantasy stuff. That current canard that Democrats are behind child sex-trafficking rings? Ellroy gives the same sort of dirt. Here, we have JFK covering up a one-night stand who’s been dumped dead beside the road. We have Marlon Brando giving blow jobs while he’s pushing simpering liberal politics. We have John Wayne with a thing for dressing in women’s clothes, and Elizabeth Taylor picking up second-rate detectives. And, more centrally, there’s a young James Dean who, notwithstanding his bisexual honeypot extortion routines, is perpetrating breaking-and-entry jobs as “research” for Rebel Without a Cause.
I can’t say whether Ellroy believes all that he insinuates – or even says outright – but it’s clear he’s plumbing an ugliness that goes deeper than even he can see. This is a man who, in his real teenage life, had to deal with the unsolved murder of his mother. This is a man who believes all humans are depraved. A man who, as he’s shown in his larger and more ambitious L.A. Quartet(s) and American trilogies believes that our contemporary culture was authored not by enlightened men and women of “the greatest generation,” but by liars, killers, and con-artists. His history hasn’t just been written by the victors but rather by the ghost writers they’ve hired to whitewash the affair.
His heroes are the hesitantly murderous front-line killers and strongarm goons who’ve done the dirty work and then been written out of those stories. They’ve seen and performed the hurting, and then they find their handlers want nothing more to do with them.
It’s a powerful place to stand. This is ultimately an interrogation of “America” as a shining city on the hill, with the perpetual conclusion that, wild as the ride might be, we’ve made a mess of this fresh green (occasionally bitten off) breast of the new world.
There is a plot here, which is more than I can sometimes admit getting out of an Ellroy novel. After a lot of backstory – perhaps more than half the novel – Freddie falls hard for Lori, a woman who’s determined to see real-life rapist-murderer Caryl Chessman put to death. Lori had a friend torture-raped by the man, a friend she knew from the actor’s studio which makes her friends with the Brandos and James Deans who float in and out.
As the protagonists of L.A. Confidential do, Freddie eventually figures out the web of conspiracy behind Churchill’s crimes. He takes out at least one associate and gathers some of the dirt that seals Churchill’s failure to appeal his death sentence. The girl digs him, then she doesn’t, then she’s gone for reasons that aren’t quite clear. It fits the tune, though, and the larger episode ramps up the energy of the novel as a whole, making the prose sing even more.
It is, in other words, Ellroy in his late-career stride, and that’s a very good thing.
The Ellroy universe is so intertwined, so dependent on having a sense of how his different characters interact, that this one – since it’s outside the various quartets and trilogies – is actually a good place to begin. Beware, though, and don’t drive your Packard pimpmobile anywhere near Ellroyville unless you’re prepared to be shocked and offended.
This is not great literature, but it is literature. And it’s surely a great something.