I recently read a short story by the
late Stephen Marlowe titled “Terrorists”. It was published in the January 1956
issue of Accused; I read it in the 1997 anthology American Pulp.
It is a hardboiled private eye story.
Chester Drum is a Washington D.C. private detective, and on a late and warm August night as he walks past his office he notices a light inside. He makes a routine check with the elevator operator who tells him the cleaning staff should be done. Drum then takes the elevator to his floor and quietly approaches his office; inside he finds a cleaning woman with a very cold war tale.
Chester Drum is a Washington D.C. private detective, and on a late and warm August night as he walks past his office he notices a light inside. He makes a routine check with the elevator operator who tells him the cleaning staff should be done. Drum then takes the elevator to his floor and quietly approaches his office; inside he finds a cleaning woman with a very cold war tale.
Her son is involved with a Puerto
Rican youth group and they plan to assassinate the Secretary of State. The
group is concerned with an independent Puerto Rico, but the mother tells Drum
the boys are being used by a socialite Red—a communist—who cares nothing for
Puerto Rico or the youth group, but is using them to further her own cause; the
embarrassment of the United States and the advancement of Soviet-style
communism.
The story is swift and, as expected
from Marlowe, exciting. The plotline is sleek and straight and there really
aren’t any surprises to a twenty-first century reader. That doesn’t mean it
isn’t a good story, because it is a terrific story, but rather it means it is a
story of its time. A small capsule filled with the popular fear and turmoil of
the 1950s.
The plot can easily be traced to two
events that occurred in 1950. The era of extreme paranoia brought on by
McCarthy with his wild accusations of communist spies everywhere, and the
failed assassination attempt on President Truman by three Puerto Rican
terrorists.
I make this point not to
weaken“Terrorists,” but rather to make the point that fiction, including
popular fiction, is a mirror of the culture that creates it. Go into any used
bookstore or library and take a novel from the shelf and you will find a nugget
of truth about the time and place it was written; not the whole truth, but
rather an image that represents the truth and atmosphere of the era. The
fiction of the 1950s was saturated with communism and paranoia, just as the
fiction of the 1980s was ripe with greed, drugs and Vietnam.
“Terrorists” is a brilliant example
of both entertainment and place. When it is read it grabs the reader by the ear
and jerks him into a past that only exists in memory and archive; it is a capsule
that helps the reader’s understanding of where he came and, hopefully, where he
can go or, at least, avoid returning. It also allows the reader to understand
how little civilization has changed over the past fifty years; the enemies have
changed (maybe), but the fear is very much alive.
And
it does it all in a brilliantly entertaining fashion. Can it get any better?
Maybe it can, because Chester Drum can be found plying his trade in no less
than 20 novels.
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