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BIBLIOGRAPHY
ISBN: 1901982955 ABOUT THE AUTHOR
James Sallis is the author of two dozen volumes of fiction, poetry, biography, translations, essays, and criticism. His recent book, Chester Himes: A Life, was widely praised coast to coast and abroad, and his novels, particularly the Lew Griffin series, are among the most highly regarded works of crime fiction published in recent years. He writes a regular column for the Boston Globe's book review section. He lives in Phoenix, Arizona. |
Review The Boston Globe Making sense, and art, out of many kinds of mayhem "Drop by drop at the heart, the pain of the pain remembered comes again," wrote Aeschylus. In a story loosely based on "Agamemnon", James Sallis searches the streets of New Orleans as he brings his noir series about Lew Griffin, African-American, small-time private investigator in search of his identity, to a close in Ghost of a Flea, the sixth novel in a journey that began with The Long-Legged Fly in 1992. The books are set in just-historical time, beginning in 1964, and they move episodically, almost shambolic in their apparent lack of organization, with great cunning and remarkable imagery, to an ending: not a conclusion but a place to stop. Sallis has written a biography of the black American writer Chester Himes, short stories, poems, and much else, and reviewers have compared him to Raymond Chandler, James Lee Burke, and Paul Auster, though only the Auster comparison stands up...Sallis has found a way to do what many genre authors who have tied themselves to a series figure have been unable to do: bring it all to an end. The Irish News James sallis returns in style to conclude the long-running series exploring the mysterious life of Lew Griffin. In his previous five novels, Sallis has captivated and challenged readers with the story of the private detective, teacher, poet and writer - a black man living in a white man's world. The setting is New Orleans and Griffin's life is crumbling around him. His relationship with Deborah is falling apart and his son David has vanished, leaving only a note that chills with its finality. Don Walsh, a close friend and departing police officer, has been shot during work; while Griffin's attempts to track the source of threatening letters to another friend has added to the overall confusion. Griffin no longer teaches and hasn't lifted a pen in years. He is a man whose empty days stretch ahead in a directionless future. Here Sallis delivers a story more concerned with identity than crime as Griffin must discover exactly who he is in this tense finale to an acclaimed series. The Arizona-based author succeeds with a gripping narrative, and he closes the book on a character every bit as dark as the imagery etched into the mind. It is a fine climax and a fitting conclusion to a classic series. Guardian Online James Sallis brings to a close the New Orleans adventures of Lew Griffin. A story about identity as much as crime, this reveals the mystery of Lew himself, as his relationships fall into ruins: son disappeared, friend shot, lover estranged. The black detective in a white man's world is confronted with the riddle of his own life. Allusive and stylish, this stark metaphysical landscape will leave a resounding impression. Newsday.com I was three and a half books into James Sallis' extraordinary sextet of novels featuring African-American detective-novelist-scholar Lew Griffin before I found out that Sallis wasn't - as I'd assumed all along - Black Like Me. Apparently I wasn't alone in this misapprehension. Questions flew back and forth on the Internet about Sallis' racial background, with some replies asserting that he was at least partly African-American. It wasn't until the author disclosed in interviews that he was white - or, if one prefers, "nonblack" - that such speculation was put to rest. Some could use this disclosure to scold Sallis for indulging in literary minstrelsy. You won't hear any gripes from me. I wouldn't have misperceived Sallis' racial background in the first place if I hadn't found Lew Griffin such a persuasive rendering of an intellectually supple, physically tough and emotionally wounded black man struggling to negotiate security and self-respect for himself in late 20th century New Orleans. Throughout the series of books that began in 1992 with "The Long-Legged Fly," I recognized and often shared Griffin's resentments accumulated from a lifetime of being misjudged, ignored, abused or devalued because of his color. And color was only one of the things that separated Griffin from life's mainstream. There was also his propensity for hair-trigger violence, his inviolable generosity to life's losers, his cultivated enthusiasms for food, music and French literature. And, more than anything, there was his tendency to dive deep into a bottle of whiskey and not come up for air for months, even years. You don't necessarily have to be a person of color in America to create, much less empathize with, such an anomalous, desperately marginalized person as Griffin. And Sallis, who imposed his own Arkansas upbringing, eclectic tastes and academic credentials onto the grid of Griffin's background, is one of those people who burns brightly along the margins. His prodigious literary output includes science fiction, poetry, a translation of a Raymond Queneau novel, a history of jazz guitar and a biography of Chester Himes. He is a romantic pluralist whose prose style is a lyrical dreamscape. He thinks widely and deeply, perhaps too deeply for aficionados of genre fiction. And it won't matter to the status buffoons who patrol the nation's literary hierarchy that Sallis has so conscientiously worked to stretch the philosophical and linguistic capacities of genre fiction. As far as the mandarins are concerned, genres are ghettos, and if that's how you're being marketed, then, just as generations of black people have been told, you stay in your place and don't complain when your head whacks the glass ceiling. Besides, even minor confusion by readers over Sallis' identity is an appropriate by-product of novels in which the very nature of Identity is being scrutinized in a world where who and what you are can too often be taken for the same thing. From "Fly" through "Moth" (1993), "Black Hornet" (1996), "Eye of the Cricket" (1997) and "Bluebottle" (1999), the books make up an informal autobiography of Griffin, starting from his days as a skip tracer, bodyguard and freelance avenging angel in the 1960s through his failed love affairs with strong, sexy women, struggles with various forms of addiction and his self-reinvention as a cult writer and literary oracle. Murders, felonies and missing persons tumble through the books like loose items in a trunk. But these books weren't for fans of the well-made mystery novel. They were stalking bigger game, evoking more profound expressions of loss and recovery, implying that there were mysteries far more shattering and revealing than who did what to whom. With "Ghost of a Flea," the sixth and last Griffin novel, Sallis brings things to closure and, with a stunning flourish, transfigures everything that came before into an ingenious, resonant whole. This is a boon and a blessing for those who have read any or all of the previous books. But for those who haven't, it may be less than satisfying unless they're inspired to read all the novels from the start. Which wouldn't be a bad way to fill anyone's empty hours. "Flea" more or less picks things up from "Eye of the Cricket" (to my mind, the richest and darkest book in the cycle). Griffin, now in his 50s, has once again hit the wall, this time with a harsher thud. The good news is that Alouette, the drug-addicted daughter of a former love, has cleaned herself up and is working as a social worker. The bad news is that she's being stalked and threatened by someone she can't see in the shadows. And the news gets worse. Don Walsh, Griffin's best friend with the New Orleans police, has been shot while interrupting a robbery. And Griffin's son David, an elusive, almost phantom presence throughout the series, has disappeared again from Lew's life. Another girlfriend is drifting away. And, if all that weren't enough, Griffin has suffered a stroke that, while not entirely debilitating, makes Death seem close enough to breathe its chilly breath on Griffin's back. Some of these shattering events are resolved, not all of them neatly enough for readers wishing for the rigor of old-fashioned hard-boiled detective fiction. But as the climax proves, this isn't playing by the traditional rules. Think Paul Auster more than Elmore Leonard, Charles Johnson more than Walter Mosley, Don DeLillo more than Carl Hiassen. No more clues, no more hints, except that there's much to savor here, as with the other books, in the wiry, elliptical and stylishly allusive Sallis style, weaving references from Pascal, Joyce, Dylan, Himes, Whitman, Robert Johnson and other spirits into the sultry mix. The joys and sorrows of the examined life are present and accounted for. All right, one hint to send you on your way: an adage from Griffin that runs like a riff figure in all the books: "Memory is a poet, not a reporter." |
RELATED LINKS
James Sallis Interview
Profile of James Sallis
James Sallis On Patricia Highsmith
James Sallis On Gerald Kersh Review Review Review More on Sallis' work from tangents tangents.co.uk James Sallis- An Essay (Thoughts on James Sallis by Mark Thwaite - Crime Time Online) Profile of James Sallis (Woody Haut - Crime Time Online)
New York Times Article
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Review
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