I’ve long been a fan of Robert Parker’s “Spencer” novels, having discovered him back in the early 1980s when he was on his 5th or 6th in the series. Now there are over 30, I’m sure, and he’s added two more detective series, starring Jesse Stone and Sunny Randall. Not as interesting as Spencer, but still good.
Parker has been called the successor to Raymond Chandler, a 1940s-era fellow known for writing “The Big Sleep.” I started reading “The Big Sleep” some years ago, but for whatever reason, I lost interest early on and never finished the book. But a couple years ago, I read one of Chandler’s short stories and was absolutely enthralled. What a masterful writer! I’ve since read several of his books, including “The Big Sleep,” and several more sit on my bookshelf.
But Chandler also aroused my interest in other old-time detective writers, like Dashell Hammet and Jim Thompson and Patricia Highsmith. I’ve fallen in love with the whole noir genre, books starring hard-boiled detectives and set earlier in the century, and written in the first-person with sarcasm and wit deluxe. Part of my attraction to these books is that writers in those days couldn’t freely use obscenity or write sex scenes. Thankfully, plenty of people still get killed. But there’s an innocence to the mayhem.
Most recently, I discovered Philip Kerr’s “Berlin Noir” series, three books set in Berlin circa WW2. He’s a more contemporary writer, so there was some language and other stuff. But it’s still a period book in the same genre. Last night I finished the first book in the series, “March Violets,” which occurs in 1936 at the time of the Berlin Olympics. The plot is a nothing-special murder mystery, but it’s set in the context of Hitler’s consolidation of power. You see people disappear, you see concentration camps arise, you see Jews and others persecuted, and you catch the mood of a city and of a country which is still unsure of what exactly is happening. So while this murder investigation unfolds, a huge drama is occurring all around you. Fascinating stuff. I’m looking forward to the next two books.