13 July 2026

Cozy up


            In Raymond Chandler’s famous essay, The Simple Art of Murder, he eloquently provided the artistic and intellectual foundation of hardboiled crime fiction.  As one of his committed devotees, I lapped it up, and eagerly followed his direction (unwittingly, not having yet read the essay) with my own hardboiled series, trilogies and standalones.


            That notwithstanding, I’ve never believed that embracing one form, or sub-genre, requires rejecting all the others.  I lean more toward the omnivorous, having begun my reading life with my mother’s handoffs of Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, Rex Stout and Earl Stanley Gardener.  And all on my own, Arthur Conan Doyle.  Lately I’ve been back at it, with a deeper appreciation for everything that Chandler condemned, realizing that these presumed shortcomings are actually the point.

            You might have noticed there’s no surfeit of cynicism, treachery and immorality on display in our daily newsfeed.  This was equally true in the first half of the 20th century, probably more so, since they experienced two world wars and economic upheaval we can only imagine.  What most people wanted to do was escape, and these master hands understood just how to provide the ideal transport.  But as I read now, having lived the intervening years in the back alleys and mean streets of Noir fiction, is that there was much more to it than that.

               

                Looked at objectively, Hercule Poirot, Nero Wolfe and Sherlock Holmes are exceedingly bizarre individuals.  Even with their loyal sidekicks and benighted enablers, they exist entirely apart from general society. Introverted to the edge of misanthropy, riddled with obsessive compulsions and hints at dark caverns of the subconscious, any would fit nicely into one of Marlowe’s sidetracks.  It isn’t just that they easily read the criminal mind, they empathized, familiar with the moral ambiguities that entangle even the most callow and supercilious.  All three are honorable men, yet none could be called trusting or emotionally available.  All would afford an interesting date, but you wouldn’t want to move in together. 


            Anyone tempted to belittle Agatha Christie should give it a try themselves.  In particular, her prose has a distinct clarity, efficiency and immediacy, required for packing a lot of setting, character development and extravagant plotting into fairly compact spaces.  She never wastes a sentence, much less a full passage, on anything unessential to her story.  I relish Marlowe’s circuitous diversions and introspections, but it would be fair for Christie to say, ”For pity’s sake, young man, get to the point.”

            

            In order to have the description “mystery” appended to any work, it needs to have a puzzle.  It’s no accident that ”Ludwig”,  a new show from Brit Box, features an actual puzzle creator thrust into a career of solving mysteries.  You may seek out Agatha Christie as an unthreatening pastime, but you better be on your mental toes, the plots so thick with clues, both portentous and incidental, that I’m tempted to open a spreadsheet.  Even then, you may not be able to crack the code, since she had only a passing loyalty to the principle of fair play.  Modern mystery critics would find this irredeemable, but I like to point out that no such problem ever occurred to Arthur Conan Doyle.  Sherlock isn’t only a deductive genius, he spends a lot of time offstage performing capers we only learn about in the final pages when the mystery is triumphantly solved for us. 


Speaking of Brit Box, a first-rate mystery needn’t unfold at an English country estate, though for me, the form achieves its most sublime in the presence of Jeff caps, sheep, ancient pubs and a whole population of flinty, emotionally repressed tea drinkers.  I find refreshing the absence of histrionics (who needs grief counselors when you can put on the kettle or have a barman pull a draft), abundance of deadpan humor and rich colors muted under permanently overcast skies.  Along with the nobility of simply carrying on despite it all. 

12 comments:

  1. Melodie Campbell13 July, 2026 10:07

    Chris, your last paragraph is the clincher for me. "I find refreshing the absence of histrionics" - I think that is why I like Christie and the old writers so well. And why I choose to emulate them.

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    1. Melodie, I absolutely agree. I can only take so much angst before I dive back into Christie or Simenon or Sayers. And I will always take time to reread "The Woman in White" (Wilkie Collins), "East Lynne" (Mrs. Henry Wood), "Mildred Pierce" (the book, not the movie - let that little bitch Veda rip the way James M. Cain wrote her!), "The Big Sleep" (my favorite Chandler - again the book, not the movie), and "The Thin Man" (again, the book, not the movie, no matter how much I love William Powell & Myrna Loy, by Dashiell Hammett).

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    2. Modern critics are also a little disturbed by the Upstairs/Downstairs nature of these old time mysteries, but they fail to note how little regard the writers held for the upper classes. They're often portrayed as venal, hyprictical and callow, while the working stiffs - the caretakers, maids and cops, bend to the heroic.

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    3. Melodie Campbell13 July, 2026 11:50

      That's a good point, Chris! Wow - another reason I find those books refreshing.

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  2. I re-read the Simple Art of Murder two weeks ago in prep for the library panel we will both join in a few months, and I agree with everything you and Chandler say. My mother read Christie, Stout, Sayers, Gardener, Allingham, and Ngaio Marsh, so we had similar mentoring. Speaking as a teacher a century after the fact, I think Poirot, Holmes, and, to a lesser degree, Wolfe are all somewhere on the spectrum.

    The puzzle mystery is less common now, but Hammett and Chandler gave us the template for Elvis Cole, Patrick Kenzie, Moe Prager, Kinzie Milhone, V. I. Warshawsky, and our own protags. Ed McBain is still the gold standard for police procedurals.

    And Eve, absolutely "The Woman in White" and "The Big Sleep." Did you know that William Faulkner wrote the screen play for the first film version? My all-time favorite puzzle PI story is the often overlooked California Fire and Life by Don Winslow. Isn't that the same insurance company Cain features in Double Indemnity?

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    1. Actually, it's the Pacific All-Risk Insurance Company - close enough!

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    2. Okay, Anonymous is me, Steve Liskow. For some reason, my computer has stopped saving passwords and access to many sites.

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    3. You always were a man of mystery, Steve.

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  3. When I saw the sheep photo, I thought you were going to mention The Sheep Detectives. The German author was inspired by Agatha Christie, and while the current movie is charming, the book is better.

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    1. PS The book title in English was Three Bags Full.

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    2. I really enjoyed The Sheep Detectives. That was fun!

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  4. Chris, you managed to kick off a whole new article in the comments!

    I confess to a romance with cosies. Lindsey Davis sets her novels in Roman times, but she's definitely mastered the cosy gig. When I grow up, I want to write cosies.

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