“I’ll be leaving one of these days, and the day I do they’ll never forget it.”
He wrote in the heyday of the paperback original. His best work was published by Gold Medal, and his novels stand above most of his contemporaries as hard, uncompromising masterpieces of hardboiled crime and suspense.
His life was as strange as his fiction: he is likely
the plainest womanizer exported by Massachusetts; he gambled professionally for
several years; he befriended, lived with, and co-wrote several short stories
with the notorious bank robber Al Nussbaum; and late in life he developed
memory loss and something called aphasia—“partial or total inability to write
and understand words.”
And all that is only the beginning. Not to mention it was parroted from the
introduction, written by Marlowe’s biographer Charles Kelly, to the new trade
paperback double published by Stark House Press. It features two of Marlowe’s best novels, which
really, are two halves a single story: The
Name of the Game is Death (Gold Medal 1962), and One Endless Hour (Gold Medal 1969).
The novels tell the genesis story of Marlowe’s Earl Drake series character. Drake is not a likable man. He is a bank robber with a predilection for killing people. He doesn’t kill simply to kill, but kill he does. The Name of the Game is Death opens at the scene of a botched bank robbery with Drake shot in the escape. He and his partner split up, and Drake finds a doctor and a dark place to hide until he is recuperated and the heat is off, which is when the story really begins. His partner went missing with the money, and Drake is broke. The rest of Name of the Game is Drake’s search for his partner, and the money, and One Endless Hour is the fallout.
The novels tell the genesis story of Marlowe’s Earl Drake series character. Drake is not a likable man. He is a bank robber with a predilection for killing people. He doesn’t kill simply to kill, but kill he does. The Name of the Game is Death opens at the scene of a botched bank robbery with Drake shot in the escape. He and his partner split up, and Drake finds a doctor and a dark place to hide until he is recuperated and the heat is off, which is when the story really begins. His partner went missing with the money, and Drake is broke. The rest of Name of the Game is Drake’s search for his partner, and the money, and One Endless Hour is the fallout.
The two novels merge into one complete and
engrossing story, which is not to say either is dependent on the other; both
are complete with beginning, middle, and end.
However the plot in One Endless
Hour is built directly from Name of
the Game. In fact, the final chapter
of Name of the Game is included, with
a few adjustments as the Prologue to One
Endless Hour.
Name
of the Game is the stronger of the two novels. It includes an exposition of Drake’s
childhood, explaining (without apologizing) for Drake’s seeming amoral
character. Its backstory emphasis and
character development is reminiscent of John D. MacDonald, but only just. Its prose is raw and hardboiled—
“I swear both his feet were off the ground when he fired at me. The odds must have been sixty thousand to one, but he took me in the left upper arm. It smashed me back against the car. I steadied myself with a hand on the roof and put two a yard behind each other right through his belt buckle. If they had their windows open they could have heard him across town.”
—and it is more thematically related to Jim Thompson than John D.
“I swear both his feet were off the ground when he fired at me. The odds must have been sixty thousand to one, but he took me in the left upper arm. It smashed me back against the car. I steadied myself with a hand on the roof and put two a yard behind each other right through his belt buckle. If they had their windows open they could have heard him across town.”
—and it is more thematically related to Jim Thompson than John D.
One
Endless Hour is more of a straight caper novel. It lacks Name
of the Game’s character development, and backstory, but it flashes pure action. And, if you consider the two novels as one
story, it is the climactic resolution. The
differences in pacing and plotting act to strengthen the two novels’ impact
rather than diminish it, and the new Stark House edition is the perfect way to
experience the story arc.











