The Best American Noir
of the Century
Edited by James Ellroy & Otto Penzler
1923 • TOD ROBBINSSpurs
1928 • JAMES M. CAINPastorale
1938 • STEVE FISHERYou’ll Always Remember Me
1940 • MACKINLAY KANTORGun Crazy
1945 • DAY KEENENothing to Worry About
1946 • DOROTHY E. HUGHESThe Homecoming
1952 • HOWARD BROWNEMan in the Dark
1953 • MICKEY SPILLANEThe Lady Says Die!
1953 • DAVID GOODISProfessional Man
1956 • GIL BREWERThe Gesture
1956 • EVAN HUNTERThe Last Spin
1960 • JIM THOMPSONForever After
1968 • CORNELL WOOLRICHFor the Rest of Her Life
1972 • DAVID MORRELLThe Dripping
1979 • PATRICIA HIGHSMITHSlowly, Slowly in the Wind
1984 • STEPHEN GREENLEAFIris
1987 • BRENDAN DUBOISA Ticket Out
1988 • JAMES ELLROYSince I Don’t Have You
1991 • JAMES LEE BURKETexas City, 1947
1993 • HARLAN ELLISONMefisto in Onyx
1995 • ED GORMANOut There in the Darkness
1996 • JAMES CRUMLEYHot Springs
1996 • JEFFERY DEAVERThe Weekender
1998 • LAWRENCE BLOCKLike a Bone in the Throat
1999 • JAMES W. HALLCrack
1999 • DENNIS LEHANERunning Out of Dog
2000 • WILLIAM GAYThe Paperhanger
2001 • F. X. TOOLEMidnight Emissions
2002 • ELMORE LEONARDWhen the Women Come Out to Dance
2002 • SCOTT WOLVENControlled Burn
2005 • THOMAS H. COOKWhat She Offered
2005 • ANDREW KLAVANHer Lord and Master
2006 • CHRIS ADRIANStab
2006 • BRADFORD MORROWThe Hoarder
2007 • LORENZO CARCATERRAMissing the Morning Bus
The French word noir (which means “black”) was first connected to the word film by a French critic in 1946, and has subsequently become a prodigiously overused term to describe a certain type of film or literary work. Curiously, noir is not unlike pornography, in the sense that it is virtually impossible to define, but everyone thinks they know it when they see it. Like many other certainties, it is often wildly inaccurate.
This volume is devoted to short noir fiction of the past century, but it is impossible to divorce the literary genre entirely from its film counterpart. Certainly, noir most commonly evokes the great crime films of the 1940s and 1950s that were shot in black-and-white with cinematography that was heavily influenced by early-twentieth-century German expressionism: sharp angles (Venetian blinds, windows, railroad tracks) and strong contrasts between light and dark. Most of us have a collective impression of film noir as having certain essentials: a femme fatale, some tough criminals, an equally tough cop or private eye, an urban environment, and night …endless night. There are bars, nightclubs, menacing alleys, seedy hotel rooms.
While it may be comforting to recognize these elements as the very definition of film noir, it is as simplistic a view as that which limits the mystery genre to detective fiction, failing to accept the numerous other elements of that rich literature, such as the crime novel and suspense stories.
Certainly the golden age of film noir occurred in those decades, the ‘40s and ‘50s, but there were superb examples in the 1930s, such as M (1931), in which Peter Lorre had his first starring role, and Freaks (1932), Tod Browning’s unforgettable biopic in which the principal actors were actual carnival “human curiosities.” And no one is likely to dispute that the noir motion picture continued into the 1960s and beyond, as evidenced by such classics as The Manchurian Candidate (1962), Taxi Driver (1976), Body Heat (1981), and L.A. Confidential (1997).
Much of film noir lacks some or all of the usual clichéd visual set pieces of the genre, of course, but the absolutist elements by which the films are known are less evident in the literature, which relies more on plot, tone, and theme than on the chiaroscuro effects choreographed by directors and cinematographers.
Allowing for the differences of the two mediums, I also believe that most film and literary critics are entirely wrong about their definitions of noir, a genre which famously — but erroneously — has its roots in the American hard-boiled private eye novel. In fact, the two subcategories of the mystery genre, private detective stories and noir fiction, are diametrically opposed, with mutually exclusive philosophical premises.
Noir works, whether films, novels, or short stories, are existential, pessimistic tales about people, including (or especially) protagonists, who are seriously flawed and morally questionable. The tone is generally bleak and nihilistic, with characters whose greed, lust, jealousy, and alienation lead them into a downward spiral as their plans and schemes inevitably go awry. Whether their motivation is as overt as a bank robbery, or as subtle as the willingness to compromise integrity for personal gain, the central figures in noir stories are doomed to hopelessness. They may be motivated by the pursuit of seemingly easy money or by love — or, more commonly, physical desire — almost certainly for the wrong member of the opposite sex. The machinations of their relentless lust will ‘cause them to lie, steal, cheat, and even kill as they become more and more entangled in a web from which they cannot possibly extricate themselves. And, while engaged in this hopeless quest, they will be double-crossed, betrayed, and, ultimately, ruined. The likelihood of a happy ending in a noir story is remote, even if the protagonists own view of a satisfactory resolution is the criterion for defining happy. No, it will end badly, because the characters are inherently corrupt and that is the fate that inevitably awaits them.
The private detective story is a different matter entirely. Raymond Chandler famously likened the private eye to a knight, a man who could walk mean streets but not himself be mean, and this is true of the overwhelming majority of those heroic figures. They may well be brought into an exceedingly dark situation, and encounter characters who are deceptive, violent, paranoid, and lacking a moral center, but the American private detective retains his sense of honor in the face of all the adversity and duplicity with which he must do battle. Sam Spade avenged the murder of a partner because he knew he “was supposed to do something about it.” Mike Hammer found it easy to kill a woman to whom he had become attached because he learned she had murdered his friend. Lew Archer, Spenser, Elvis Cole, and other iconic private eyes, as well as policemen who, like Harry Bosch and Dave Robicheaux, often act as if they are unconstrained by their official positions, may bend (or break) the law, but their own sense of morality will be used in the pursuit of justice. Although not every one of their cases may have a happy conclusion, the hero nonetheless will emerge with a clean ethical slate.
Film noir blurs the distinction between hard-boiled private eye narratives and true noir stories by employing similar design and camerawork techniques for both genres, though the discerning viewer will easily recognize the opposing life-views of a moral, even heroic, often romantic detective, and the lost characters in noir who are caught in the inescapable prisons of their own construction, forever trapped by their isolation from their own souls, as well as from society and the moral restrictions that permit it to be regarded as civilized.
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