Hope you and yours had
a wonderful Thanksgiving. Barry is back with another excellent review for
Friday’s Forgotten Books hosted by Patti Abbott.
SHARKS NEVER SLEEP (1998) by William F. Nolan
The third book about "the Black Mask Boys" (Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, and Erle
Stanley Gardner), in what was originally planned as a series but wound up as a
trilogy, Sharks Never Sleep is
narrated by Gardner.
The year is 1937, by which time he has stopped practicing law, still writes for
the pulps, especially Black Mask, and has become hugely successful
because his Perry Mason novels have taken off with both readers and Warner
Brothers.
Gardner and his wife Natalie have been separated for some
time. They still care for one another, but realize that their marriage will
never work. Before giving up his law practice, Gardner had gotten deeply involved with Amy
Latimer, who worked as his partner's secretary. After Amy met film and radio
star Lloyd Hadley "Tink" Thompson and Thompson made a big play for
her, eventually asking her to marry him, Gardner, knowing he couldn't give her the lavish
lifestyle Thompson could and feeling too guilty to ask Natalie for a divorce, nobly
let her go.
He's shocked when he reads a newspaper article that says the
Thompsons' three-year-old son died after falling down a flight of stairs, and
sends a condolence card to them. A week later he receives a call from Amy, who asks
if they can meet at Gardner's
home that night. He readily agrees, and when she arrives, Amy tells him about
her married life. She maintains that Tink Thompson is a philanderer and monster
and not at all the virtuous family man he likes to portray himself as. She
insists that Thompson married her and fathered a child simply to project an
image, and further that he was directly responsible for their son's death. She
wants a divorce, and wants Gardner's
help in obtaining it. He doesn't hesitate to agree.
A day or so later, he reads that Amy Thompson is dead, that
Tink came home and found her lifeless body on the sofa in the living room.
Although there is no evidence of foul play, Gardner is certain Tink murdered her and is
determined to prove it. An autopsy subsequently reveals that Amy had been
poisoned with an oleander extract. Gardner
becomes the chief suspect, as a result of which he enlists the aid of friends
Hammett and Chandler
to nail the real killer. When yet another murder occurs, the frame gets tighter
and Gardner becomes
a man on the run. Readers familiar with his fiction shouldn't find it a
surprise or a spoiler to learn that the novel culminates in a courtroom
sequence worthy of a Perry Mason mystery.
Sharks Never Sleep,
like its predecessors, combines action and cerebration and appearances by famous
personalities of the period. As I mentioned in
my review of The Marble Orchard,
some of these "guest star" moments serve only to add color to the
narrative and to fix the story in time, but are not directly relevant to the mystery
plot. Thus, in Sharks, we have "cameos"
featuring Mae West, Gloria Swanson, Walter Winchell and John Barrymore. On the
other hand, legendary auto racer Barney Oldfield has an important role as the driver
who, to assist their murder investigation, takes Gardner and Hammett on a wild
event-filled trip to Mexico.
There are also a number of passages that should interest
anyone fascinated by the pulp magazine era in general and Black Mask in particular, as author Nolan provides historical
information and scenes about people who actually edited the magazine and their
different takes on writing for it.
Like The Black Mask
Murders and The Marble Orchard, Sharks Never Sleep is a briskly-paced
whodunit featuring a cast of colorful characters from a colorful era, brought
to life by a pro who knows his material and, most importantly, knows how to
tell a story. It's an easy one to recommend.
Barry Ergang ©2012
Sharks Never Sleep,
as well as the other two Black Mask Boys mysteries mentioned in the review, are
among the many titles Barry Ergang has for sale at http://www.barryergangbooksforsale.yolasite.com/. A Derringer Award winner, some of his work is
available at Smashwords and Amazon.com.
3 comments:
Great review, Barry. It's a shame Nolan did not continue the series beyond the first three books. All three are entertaining.
(And Nolan had written an earlier biography of Barney Oldfield, so he had the information about him on hand, just ripe to be included in a period mystery.)
Thanks, Jerry. I agree that they're all entertaining novels, and I can only surmise that they didn't sell well enough for St. Martin's or another publisher to keep the series going.
I was unaware that Nolan had written Oldfield's bio until I read your comment, but it probably explains why the man's fictionalized version had as big a role in the story as it did.
Thanks, Barry! I wasn't even aware of this novel, until you reviewed it. I'll have to read it before I finish up the Gardner bio.
Jeff
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