from ED GORMAN’S Desk |
Nov. 10, 2005
The first time I ever spoke to Richard
Neely, suspense novelist extraordinaire, he kept trying to place my name. “It’s
so damned familiar—wait a minute, you’re the guy who called me the de Sade of
crime fiction.”
Loose
lips sink ships. So can old reviews. I figured that our business would sink if
he ever remembered that long ago review. But he laughed. “I think I was just
ahead of my time.”
Actually,
I’d meant that remark as a compliment because I was pointing out that Neely,
despite the Irish name, took a very French approach to the psychological
machinations of sex in his books. Two of his books became French movies.
Somebody apparently agreed with me.
Neely,
a very sleek and successful advertising man, is gone now and so, undeservedly,
are his books. The Walter Syndrome, his bestselling suspense novel, was
almost ruined for me when I guessed the ending on page two, something I never
do. But I pressed on and it was well worth it. This was a take on Psycho
set in Thirties and the storytelling is spellbinding. The voice is worth of
Fredric Brown at his best.
I
was thinking of Neely last night because I was finishing up his novel The
Plastic Nightmare, which became an incomprehensible movie called Shattered.
Neely loved tricks as much as Woolrich did and Plastic is a field of
land mines. He even manages to spin some fresh variations on the amnesia theme.
It’s as noir as noir can be but mysteriously, I’ve never seen Neely referred to
on any noir list. My theory is that his books, for the most part, were
presented in such tony packages, they were bypassed by mystery fans.
The
Damned Innocents
became a fair French flick. What it missed was the sorrow. Neely always caught
the sorrow of sexual betrayal with a kind of suicidal wisdom. While his books
aren’t kinky by today’s measure, they’re dark in the way only sexual themes can
be. Love kills, baby.
Not
that he didn’t have a sudsy side. He wrote a couple of big sexy workplace
novels that I could never plow through but he also wrote The Ridgeway Women
which was SUPPOSED to
be a big sexy workplace book that was undermined in a good way by the riveting
neuroses and desperation of all his best books.
A
Madness of the Heart
suffers from a style Neely seemed to have invented from scratch for this
particular novel. It’s another dazzler—a really convincing story about a rapist
and the human debris he leaves in his wake—but the cadence of the prose gets in
my way every once in awhile. It isn’t that it’s fancy-schmancy, it’s just that
it gets in the way sometimes and seems to fall short of its purpose.
I
liked Neely, man and writer, and I liked his books, too. Somebody should bring
him back. He’s my kind of noir writer—down and out in the dark underbelly of
the success-driven American middle class, like non-Trav John D. MacDonald only
doomed without hope of salvation.
Stark House Press has recently released The
Plastic Nightmare, in a collection with Neely’s While Love Lay Sleeping.
Click here to see Stark House’s Richard Neely collection on Amazon, or click
here to see it at Stark House’s website.
This article
originally appeared on Ed Gorman’s blog, Ed Gorman Rambles, Nov.
10, 2005. It is reprinted here by permission. Ed wrote dozens of novels in a
variety of genres, but his most popular work (and my favorite of his work)
was in the crime and western genres. His ten Sam McCain mysteries—set in the
fictional Iowa town of Black River Falls during the 1950s, ’60, and ’70s—are
suspenseful, mysterious, and often funny excursions into small town America. The
New York Times called Sam McCain, “The kind of hero any small town could
take to its heart” and The Seattle Times called McCain “an intriguing
mix of knight errant and realist…” But
Ed was also a tireless reader and promoter of other writers’ work. His
blogs—there were three, none of them operating at the same time—are treasure
troves for readers of crime, horror, and western fiction both old and new. Ed
died Oct. 14, 2016. Click here to
check out Ed Gorman’s Sam McCain novels on Amazon. |
2 comments:
It's cool that you're reposting posts from Ed Gorman's blog. He was amazing.
Ed was a great writer and a great guy.
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