![]() ![]() It, we're not sure what exactly Marlowe is working on, or if he's even The Long Goodbye is a more sprawling novel than we're used to from Chandler. The edge is blunted but the change is often mistaken for the growing subtlety of maturity. Or is Chandler just starting to lose it? There's a loss of focus, a coarsening of sensibility, that seems to afflict aging alcoholic American writers (think late Steinbeck or Hemingway or Fitzgerald). Is the author in late life perhaps losing patience with his character's limited role? Perhaps starting to doubt whether a slumming angel like Marlowe can have any effect in cleaning up the moral corruption of American big-city life? ![]() ![]() Is The Long Goodbye long because it is saying goodbye to the strictures of the mystery genre and venturing into more mainstream areas of social criticism and psychological analysis? Chandler-that is to say, sleuth Philip Marlowe in the book-certainly seems more cynical than usual about the state of civilization. Or if maybe they think it must be deep since it's so long. Which makes me wonder whether it's the length the critics are praising. CRITIQUE | THE TEXT | THE MOVIES So long, or too long?Ĭhandler's longest novel is also his most praised. ![]()
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