Suicide Club: Locked Room Poet

I’d fact-check before I put it in a book, but memory tells me that Gary Warne ended up in San Francisco because his pals from West Virginia, the Breiding clan, came here first. Within a few years Gary launched The Suicide Club, and he was always trying to pull people into the exploits — especially G. Sutton Breiding, who chose instead of joining us in epic climbs to the tops of the Golden Gate and Bay Bridges, or participating in chase games through the alleys of Chinatown, or dozens of other regular breakneck adventures, to stay inside his rooms and write poetry. Finally, Gary couldn’t take it any more and challenged Sutton to go out and experience life and adventure to the hilt, to push his limits, test the boundaries. Sutton looked at Gary and challenged him to lock himself in a room for a few years with only his own thoughts.

Yeah. Which one would be harder to do?

Anyone curious to look into GSB’s writing now has a new website to prowl around in — you’ll find out soon enough if you like the fruits of his long seclusion. The photo comes from brother Mike Breiding’s Epic Road Trips blog, showing another brother, Bill, and GSB riding a bus in San Francisco in 1979, the very era we are talking about this time.

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Sinister Cinema: More Cheese

Five days from now Noir City opens its ten-day run in The Castro Theatre, each double-bill introduced by the Voice of Noir, Bill Arney. As mentioned earlier, Bill also has another movie gig going with his late-night show Cheese Theatre. He’s looking for sponsors, seeking that elusive break that’ll take Cheese to the big time. We showed you one promo video already. Now here’s another one — about fifteen minutes long. The War and Peace of promo videos. Buckle your seat belts:

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Rediscovered: Manchette

Finally. More Jean-Patrick Manchette makes the leap into English-language print. After nine years. Powers-That-Be, come on, speed it up.

In March 2002 City Lights Noir created a shockwave among noir cognoscenti with Donald Nicholson-Smith’s riveting translation of Three to Kill, Manchette’s 1976 thriller about businessman Georges Gerfaut on the run from a couple of incredibly well-armed hitmen named Carlo and Bastien. Absurdly funny, a lean 140 pages, ripped prose like early Parker from Richard Stark. Manchette (1942-1995) already had a tremendous reputation in Europe, and Three to Kill left no doubt why.

The Prone Gunman followed in December 2002, translated by the then current editor of the noir line from City Lights, James Brook: “Terrier drew back a little on his seat and stopped pressing the barrel of the HK4 against the throat of the young man.” A gleeful, relentless narrative in stripped-down behaviorist prose. First published in France in 1981, it was Manchette’s tenth thriller — apparently he decided he would never be able to top this compact 158 page masterpiece, and retired from the form at the absolute top of his game.

Now, New York Review Books has stepped in with Fatale, the 1977 novel that came between Three to Kill and The Prone Gunman. 112 tight pages, translated by Nicholson-Smith, including an afterword consisting of nine notes by Jean Echenoz, due out this May. A female assassin calling herself Aimée Joubert arrives in a small French town, and the usual Manchettean mayhem ensues. I can’t tell you how happy I was to get a review copy early and not have to wait another few months to read this one. Out of many great absurdist moments, I suppose my favorite was:

Pushing eastward, and inland, one came to refineries, then to a plant producing canned fish, baby food, and cattle feed in three adjacent factory buildings, each operation bearing its own company name so as not to alarm consumers.

There’s also an incident with a baby that brought the infamous baby episode in Charles Willeford’s radio soap opera The Story of Mary Miller rocketing back into my mind — I probably shouldn’t have laughed out loud, but I did.

I’m not recommending Manchette across the board to just anyone — people who like bread-and-butter series mysteries might well hate his work. But if you like truly noir writers such as David Goodis, or Willeford, especially in such books as The Burnt Orange Heresy, or Hammett in his The Glass Key mode, you should grab the two titles from City Lights and line up for Fatale. Put it this way: if you like existential crime novels, you’re not going to do better than Manchette.

And especially for Hammett fans, I couldn’t help but notice that Manchette seems to be doing a little riff on the town-tamer motif Hammett worked in Red Harvest, and the resulting effect of going “blood simple” on the main character with a gun.

Jean-François Gérault, Manchette’s biographer, selected The Prone Gunman and L’Affaire N’Gustro, the first crime novel the author wrote, as his favorites. L’Affaire remains unavailable in English. Seven more novels to go. Seven. And we noir fans need them all.

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Hammett: CULTur

If you want to practise your German, hop over to Culturmag for an article on the fiftieth anniversary of Hammett’s death by Peter Münder — if you’ve got no German worth speaking of, hit the translate button and it’ll spin into the American idiom for you. The piece includes cameos by Raymond Chandler, me and the Hammett tour, and a YouTube bit about Hammett’s life philosophy. And longtime vistors to this website may recall Peter’s much longer article on Hammett from 2006.

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Mort: Joe Gores

Just got an email from Vince Emery bearing bad news: “Joe Gores passed away Monday in Marin General Hospital — 50 years to the day after Hammett died.”

A cornerstone figure in the Hammett arena, gone.

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Tour: January 23, No Rain or Noir Rain

Various people asked for a walk this month, so show up at noon Sunday January 23 if interested —open to anyone with a tenspot, ready to gumshoe, and it won’t be cancelled because of rain. Check the drop-down menu under The Tour in the main menu bar above for details about where to meet, how long the walk goes (it is the normal four hour version). If you are really in the mood for hard-boiled and noir, you could walk the walk and then run over for a couple of Noir City films in the Castro Theatre.

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Sinister Cinema: Cheese Theatre

In only ten more days anyone lucky enough to attend Noir City — playing in the Castro Theatre from January 21-30 — will once again thrill to the dulcet tones of Bill Arney, the Voice of Noir, as he announces the opening of one bleak bullet-ridden double-bill after another. People in The Hammett Know remember Bill as the legendary Keeper of the Shrine, Sam Spade’s apartment in 891 Post Street — his stint at the stick remains unsurpassed. But he has moved on, taking with him an idea germinated in late night drinking sessions with pals in the building where Hammett created The Maltese Falcon. Yes, Bill has started up Cheese Theatre!

The first episode — featuring Lady Frankenstein — aired on a Marin County public access station on August 6, 2010, and since then every Friday at the stroke of midnight Bill pulls something out of his top hat. I’ve sat in as a guest a couple of times, once trying unsuccessfully to explain to Bill how damned great Dwight Frye was as we hosted Dead Men Walk, and again blurbing one of my favorite noir films, D.O.A. — I was pleased to see the episode with D.O.A. replayed beginning Christmas Eve at midnight and into the early hours of Christmas Day. Really, nothing says Christmas like a case of luminous toxin poisoning, right?

Eddie Muller has sat in on several shows (he and Bill gave Detour the ending it deserves in the editing room), sometimes other guests appear, sometimes it is just Bill holding down the fort. Better technological minds than mine have been unable to figure out a way to download the show to watch later — you have to stream it on your computer at midnight Friday Maltese Falcon country time or be sitting in front of the tube nearby in Marin County.

But Bill does have a plan to maybe move Cheese over to a more commercial local network, meaning he needs sponsors. Injury lawyers, car painters, voodoo magic shops — anyone who runs ads about 3a.m. ought to shoot Bill a note and contribute to the pop culture. And to prove we’re kind of serious, here’s Bill:

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Hammett: 1961-2011

Today marks the fiftieth anniversary of Dashiell Hammett’s death, and as far as I can tell, his literary legacy is stronger than ever. As a token of recognition from Hammett Tour Central, we honor the occasion with a new incarnation of the website, featuring a revamped look and an all-new blog — while retaining for the historical record the News posts of the last few years, as well as some of the usual featured essays and interviews — with more to come.

Posted in Dash |

News: September 2010

Don with crowd on The Tour

It doesn’t get any simpler than this: just like it says on the Tour Page, you’ll find a Hammett tour running each and every Sunday this month. Four hours. Ten bucks. If interested, just show up by noon. And remember the advice of the late, great Charles Willeford and make sure you wear comfortable shoes.

Posted in News, Willeford |

News: June-July 2010

Don Herron with Fabrice Tortey on The Hammett TourNOTHING SHAKING ON THE MEAN STREETS

Or, to put it another way, Don is doing miscellaneous summer stuff the next two months — he gets that way every time a new edition of his Hammett tour book comes out. No guilt that folk rolling into town can’t find the Hammett locales without him personally leading the way. You could even arrive in San Francisco one morning, call up a version of the tour book on your Kindle, do the walk, and fly out before dinner, that’s the world we’re living in. But there will be more walks in the fall, never fear, when Don will slip out of his sandals and back into his gumshoes.

PULPFEST

Meanwhile, Don was surprised to find himself in the herd of nominees for the Munsey Award presented annually during PulpFest at the end of July in Columbus, Ohio. For at least twenty years he has thought about going to one of the Ohio pulp conventions, but with one thing and another never has made the trip. Until now. Between being up for the award and the chance to tie in with some longtime pals — plus sharpening knives with some crime writers in advance of the Bouchercon in San Francisco later this year — plus seeing the Guest of Honor, Hammett biographer William F. Nolan, again — anyway, if you show up, too, Don will see you at PulpFest. He’s agreed to sit in on a panel about the pulp The Black Mask, and will be around ready to talk pulp writers such as Hammett, Robert E. Howard, E. Hoffmann Price, Don Wandrei, H. Warner Munn and company until the beer runs out. And while Don doesn’t believe he’ll nab the Munsey out of that crowded field of contenders, he appreciates the guys over on The Rap Sheet for name-checking him as one of three people up for the honor — if it were only three, not sixteen, the odds might be better.

TWO-GUN RACONTEUR

Our pal Damon Sasser also did a blog story about Don and the Munsey Award over on his Two-Gun Raconteur website. While Don did not make it to the annual Robert E. Howard Days in Cross Plains, Texas this year, he did contribute one of his signature reviews to the latest issue of the print magazine Two-Gun Raconteur — which Damon premiered on June 11 for Howard Days. The thrust of the review is that Don noticed that the academic-oriented Howard fanzine The Dark Man has reached its twentieth anniversary — but that none of the current editors, past editors, web blogs or general passersby was aware of the milestone. So, Don stepped in and said a few words on this momentous occasion. Trust us, an instant classic. . . .

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