[Home]History of Raymond Chandler

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Revision 5 . . (edit) November 18, 2001 9:30 am by Ortolan88 [*add brief quotation, Phillip Marlowe's self description]
Revision 4 . . October 19, 2001 10:42 am by Paul Drye
Revision 3 . . June 8, 2001 12:53 am by (logged).121.110.xxx
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

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:Raymond Chandler 1888 -- 1959
Raymond Chandler (1888-1959). American crime stories and novels writer.

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American crime stories and novels writer. His finely-wrought prose was admired by many who looked down on detective novels generally; indeed, his use of lyrical similes has become the emblem of private-eye fiction for those who know little of it, the basis of innumerable parodies and imitations. His essay The Simple Art of Murder is a standard academic reference on detective fiction.
Chandler's finely-wrought prose was admired by many who looked down on detective novels generally; indeed, his use of lyrical similes has become the emblem of private-eye fiction for those who know little of it, the basis of innumerable parodies and imitations. His essay "The Simple Art of Murder" is a standard academic reference on detective fiction.

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Novels include: The Big Sleep, his first; Farewell, My Lovely; The Lady in the Lake; The Little Sister; and The Long Good-Bye. All concern the cases of a Los Angeles investigator named Phillip Marlowe.
Novels include: The Big Sleep, his first; Farewell, My Lovely; The Lady in the Lake; The High Window, The Little Sister; and The Long Good-Bye. All concern the cases of a Los Angeles investigator named [Phillip Marlowe]?, "a nice clean private detective who wouldn't drop cigar ashes on the floor and never carried more than one gun," as Marlowe describes himself on the first page of The High Window.

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