Raymond Chandler Essays

  • The Simple Art Of Murder By Raymond Chandler

    254 Words  | 2 Pages

    of Murder”, by Raymond Chandler, he writes out the guidelines that are needed to able to call a detective story good. Chandler also wrote a book called The Big Sleep that is a detective story about two out of control sisters, a hardboiled detective, murders, and never ending of twist and turns. Chandler does follow his guidelines when he wrote The Big Sleep by being realistic, element uplift, fools the reader, and honest to the reader. Fiction can seem realistic, in which Chandler conveys it strongly

  • Raymond Chandler's The Big Sleep

    607 Words  | 3 Pages

    Blackmailing a person often ends in the blackmailer receiving cash from a particular person in order to prevent the release of private information to the public. Raymond Chandler’s novel The Big Sleep depicts a wealthy family that hires a private detective in order to take care of a case that involves blackmailing the family to gain money. The author, Chandler, illustrates that people struggling economically will do just about anything to receive money through the conflicts that arise in his novel. Chandler’s

  • Comparison Of Chandler And Mcbain

    1457 Words  | 6 Pages

    backgrounds, landscapes, architectures and “sets.” Raymond Chandler and Ed McBain are two flagships in detective fictions. Chandler’s Philip Marlowe brought readers a series of hot-blooded fictional detective stories that happened in Los Angeles (LA). McBain, the commander of the 87th Precinct, excited readers with many raw and realistic detective stories happened in “the city”, an imaginary city that based on New York City (NYC). If there’s one thing that Chandler and McBain share in common, it’s their extraordinary

  • The Pros And Cons Of Detective Fiction

    745 Words  | 3 Pages

    believes many detective stories lack today. Fiction writers today have more difficulty in controlling their stories and instead they had a life of their own and “flew away” states Wilson. Raymond Chandler writes in his article “The simple art of murder” (1944) how difficult it is to write fiction. According to Chandler, writers today have a poor knowledge of the society in which we live. Readers today will not care about the details that makes the story realistic, readers do not care about life as the

  • Rain In The Big Sleep

    952 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler is a mystery, crime fiction novel from the perspective of the detective Phillip Marlowe. Phillip was hired by a rich general to find out and stop his daughter from being blackmailed over gambling debts. Throughout the novel, there is a link between nature and the mood of the chapter. Rain is generally used to emphasise that it isn’t a happy time or chapter within the novel. The novel is set in Los Angles in the United States and rain is very uncommon there which

  • Comparing The Big Sleep And Devil In A Blue Dress

    1400 Words  | 6 Pages

    Both The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler and Devil in a Blue Dress by Walter Mosley depict women as simple characters acting as objects of sex and trouble, existing only to thwart the detective. Chandler does this through Philip Marlowe, a white Hard-Boiled detective who has a very guarded attitude towards women and will not trust them. Mosley depicts women through the point of view of his character Ezekiel “Easy” Rawlins, an African-American detective, who views white women as objects of misfortune

  • Corruption In Raymond Chandler's The Big Sleep

    1247 Words  | 5 Pages

    “What did it matter where you lay once you were dead?” (Chandler, pg. 230). Philip Marlowe, a cunning and sarcastic sleuth, has just pieced together a complex, dangerous crime in Raymond Chandler’s novel The Big Sleep. So, why isn’t he satisfied? Why do his final conclusions exude despair and bleak thoughts? Throughout the novel, it is evident that Marlowe feels the ambient corruption that plagues the society he lives in. Any hope or optimism he could have is diminished by his lonely reality. His

  • Compare And Contrast The Big Sleep And Batman

    1820 Words  | 8 Pages

    the extended texts ‘The Big Sleep’ by Raymond Chandler and ‘Noughts and crosses’ by Malorie Blackman along with the films ‘The Batman’ by Mat Reeves and ‘Matrix’ directed by the Wachowski sisters. These texts deals with the consequences similar to ‘The Big Sleep’ but are shown in different ways and how it affects them differently. The film ‘Matrix’ directed by the Wachowski sister, deals with similar morals of the protagonists to ‘The Big Sleep.’ Both Chandler and Wachowski’s invites us to consider

  • Euphemism In The Big Sleep

    976 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Big Sleep is what many call a “hardboiled” crime novel by author Raymond Chandler. It is the first in his crime novel series to feature the detective Philip Marlowe. The story is renowned for its complexity, with a multitude of characters duping one another whenever the opportunity arises and secrets constantly being exposed throughout the narrative. The title of the novel is a euphemism for death as it is revealed at the ending pages of the book, “You were dead, you were sleeping the big sleep…”

  • Romantic Illusions In Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window

    2270 Words  | 10 Pages

    The prologue of Waltz into Darkness undermines any romantic illusions as the story itself begins, circa 1900, introducing us to a wealthy Cuban coffee planter named Luis Durand who anticipates the arrival of a mail order bride named Julia Russell (Jolie). Handsome and rich, he has never married ("Love is not for me. Love is for those people who believe in it"). His expectations for the bride are realistic: "She is not meant to be beautiful. She is meant to be kind, true and young enough to bear

  • Cool Air Lovecraft Analysis

    729 Words  | 3 Pages

    Waiting on every exhausting whim of an 18 year old preserved corpse sounds absurd and impossible, but for H.P. Lovecraft’s first person narrator in “Cool Air” it is a shocking reality. The strategic application of first person point of view keeps the reader on edge with a limited view. Any other point of view would reveal too much information on the pivotal Doctor Muñoz, and not allow access to the narrator's thoughts and emotions. First person point of view in H.P. Lovecraft’s “Cool Air” connects

  • Eating Boy Book Analysis

    949 Words  | 4 Pages

    Jeffers, O. (2006). The Incredible Book Eating Boy. New York, NY: Philomel Books. Henry was a book lover, but not like how you and I love book he would eat them it all started will a few words from a text then moved on to him eating a whole book in one sitting. What will happen when Henry starts feeling ill? When I first got the book I thought it was interesting because in the back of the book in the left hand bottom corner where it a chuck of the book missing meant to look like someone eat the

  • Examples Of Greed In The Maltese Falcon

    1497 Words  | 6 Pages

    Greed Expressed in the Maltese Falcon Crime. Secrets. These words are often associated with the mystery genre. What often comes to mind is the common detective story, where a crime and a detective are introduced. Then, the heroic detective apprehends the culprit by deduction from clues. However, in the 1920s, a new era of crime fiction arose: American hard-boiled crime fiction. In this type of crime fiction, a sense of “graphic sex and violence, vivid but often sordid urban backgrounds, and fast-paced

  • Commentary On The Book Suspect By LAPD Officer Named Scott James

    298 Words  | 2 Pages

    Suspect is about an LAPD officer named Scott James. In the beginning of the book, Scott was not doing well. Eight months ago, his partner Stephanie was killed in a nighttime assault. After the night Stephanie was killed, Scott was ashamed and angry because of what had happened. Scott felt that he didn’t seem fit to be a police officer anymore. Then he meets his new partner Maggie, a German Shepherd. Like Scott, Maggie is not doing well. Maggie was smelling explosives in Iraq and Afghanistan and

  • The Great Gatsby Movie Vs Book Essay

    797 Words  | 4 Pages

    In 1925, Scott Fitzgerald released a novel that made its mark in American literature; The Great Gatsby is a story that continues to be retold throughout high schools across the country. Not only did the classic change the way we think about the world, but its effects on writing have spread throughout television and even into two movies, one published in 1974, and the other released decades later in 2013. The modernized edition of the novel, directed by Baz Luhrmann features a sum of dialogue stripped

  • Eric Edgar Cooke Essay

    2734 Words  | 11 Pages

    Abstract Eric Edgar Cooke the ‘Night Caller’ has struck Perth with murder, stabbings, hit-and-runs and burglaries which during 1931-64 until his death. Due to a neglected childhood with a alcoholism father and bullying Cooke’s murderous out take on the world and random killings not only make his next target difficult to find but also Cooke himself. Studies on Cooke have shown his psychopathic styles of killing are not only unique but also the work of a ‘Nedland monster’ in Perth district. As Cooke

  • Maltese Falcon Themes And Techniques

    1758 Words  | 8 Pages

    The Maltese Falcon. It follows the story of the private detective Sam Spade, who gets involved with three criminals in search of a priceless statue. Similar to film noir, neo-noir takes these key themes and repackages them to fit the current views of society. An example of a neo-noir film is Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. The movie tells the story of Harry Lockhart, who goes from being a criminal in New York City to a private detective in Los Angeles. The neo-noir narrative in Kiss Kiss Bang Bang was written

  • Masculinity In The Maltese Falcon

    855 Words  | 4 Pages

    Welcome, let's discuss crime fiction, specifically the one with the guns, and cigars as well as hot women and men, discussing the social values of through conventions, but first, what text? The Maltese Falcon reflects the period of the 1920s classifying it as hard-boiled. Hardboiled, refers to a person devoid of emotions and is morally ambiguous. Hardboiled crime fiction aims to make social commentaries on the corruption and hypocrisy of the power imbalance which was due to the great depression

  • The Dancer And The Thief Summary

    1773 Words  | 8 Pages

    The Dancer and The Thief by Antonio Skármeta is an attractive, energetic, and a genre-bending tale of crime and love. The book combined a series of crime melodrama, urban Western and social conscience drama. The story begins after General Augusta Pinochet was removed from the office. He was removed from his office for his evil acts to the people. Lots of people had arrested, died, and tortured during his regime. The police and the prison systems still remained unsolved after Pinochet was removed

  • Trainspotting Film Analysis

    1384 Words  | 6 Pages

    Even though it may be just a stereotype, the Scottish people are not generally known for their joyful nature and friendliness. No wonder, considering the geographical location of the country, the weather and the scarce population in the wild landscape. Kilts, mysterious countryside full of lochs and ruined castles, back pipes, whiskey and Brave Heart is what usually comes to people’s minds when Scotland is mentioned, but legends and nature are not exactly what the contemporary Scottish films usually