Friday
means Friday’s Forgotten Books hosted by Patti Abbott here. Following up on his
review of Cover of Snow by Jenny Milchman yesterday, Barry is back today
taking a look at Too Late For Tears by Roy Huggins.
TOO LATE FOR TEARS (1947) by Roy Huggins
Reviewed by Barry Ergang
Although best known as a television writer and producer responsible for
such hit programs as “Maverick,” “77 Sunset Strip,” “Cheyenne,” “The Fugitive”
and “The Rockford Files,“ among many others, Roy Huggins
started out by writing novels. His first, The Double Take, is a
Chandleresque hardboiled private eye tale. Under consideration here is his
second, Too Late for Tears, a psychological crime/suspense novel very
much in the noir vein.
Call it what you will--destiny, chance, serendipity, or accident--noir fiction seems
to have its share. It's certainly the case in Too Late for Tears. Jane
Palmer, formerly Blanchard, nee Petry, is a study in discontent, a woman driven
by a longing for the dubious kind of respectability that is predicated on money
alone and the opulent lifestyle it affords one. When the story opens, she's
brooding over what she deems a mundane, middle-class lifestyle and yet another vacuous
visit to some of her husband Alan's friends. She tells him to turn the top-down
Buick convertible around and drive back to their apartment in Hollywood. He complies reluctantly, wanting to discuss matters, but discussion quickly
turns to argument. Alan begins driving wildly until another car, headed toward
them, appears suddenly, requiring him to pull over to the side of the road.
“The car was big and dark and it hurtled by and the Buick rocked with the
impact of the wind--and something
else. Jane saw it. She had thought it a shadow. But she had felt the jar behind
her.”
What they find in the back seat of the car is a leather traveling bag
full of money--a great deal of
it. When they hear another car approaching, they realize instinctively that
it’s the one for which the money was intended. They drive off and, after a
chase, eventually elude their pursuer.
Jane is ecstatic at the transformational prospect of having all this
money, but Alan is worried that it might be stolen and that he and his career
in banking would be ruined if it were discovered that he possesses it. He wants
to turn it into the police, but Jane badgers him about keeping it. He finally
compromises by checking the bag at Union Station so they can watch the news for
reports of stolen money before deciding what to ultimately do with it.
While Alan is at work one day, a man named Danny Fuller shows up at the
Chateau Michel, flashing a badge at Jane and wanting to look around her
apartment. It soon becomes apparent that he's not a cop but rather the man for
whom the money was intended, and he plans to collect it. Jane knows how to work
her wiles on men, and eventually persuades Fuller to share the loot with her--and to help her commit murder.
Do things go off as planned? This is noir fiction, remember, so some things do and others don't, to the
reader's surprise and delight, if not to all of the characters'. Jane finds
herself having to contend with Alan's sister Kathy, who lives in an apartment
across the hall from hers, and with a man named Don Blake--another of noir's "chancy" conveniences--who appears rather abruptly
and manages to ingratiate himself with Kathy but not as well with Jane. He maintains
that he's an old friend of Alan's, a fellow pilot who was stationed with Alan
in England
during the war.
I found Too Late
for Tears to be an absorbing and frequently suspenseful read, if not always
lacking in uneven, opportune, and stilted moments. Some of the dialogue,
although accurate in its description, doesn't come off as terribly realistic--e.g.: "When you're up
against Jane, you're faced with all the precision efficiency and built-in
contempt of a slot-machine." The novel contains some narrative passages
that are sheer schmaltzy melodrama and others that unduly attempt to be
perceived as "literary." If you don't take them seriously, you'll
have a fun ride.
Barry
Ergang © 2014
*****
Former Managing Editor of Futures Mystery Anthology
Magazine and First Senior Editor of Mysterical-E, Derringer winner
Barry Ergang's work has appeared in numerous publications, print and
electronic. His website is http://writetrack.yolasite.com/.
A postscript from Barry that came in this morning while I was away from home....
The film version of Too Late for Tears is available for streaming on YouTube: http://youtu.be/ZDZli2lw2jo. It's quite faithful to the novel except for a climactic moment that I suspect was added either because the director felt it added more impact, or because the Hays Code, operative in the film industry at that time, demanded it.
A postscript from Barry that came in this morning while I was away from home....
The film version of Too Late for Tears is available for streaming on YouTube: http://youtu.be/ZDZli2lw2jo. It's quite faithful to the novel except for a climactic moment that I suspect was added either because the director felt it added more impact, or because the Hays Code, operative in the film industry at that time, demanded it.
2 comments:
Never read the book but it's a damn fine movie! Lizabeth Scott's best performance in her short cinematic career, IMO.
I somehow missed this in my early noir reading. Must fix the oversight. OT and as an aside - when I saw the cover - it reminded me of the covers on the Nancy Drew books I grew up with. Not the first series with paper covers, but the second with the litho covers. (Is litho right? Someone will know).
Post a Comment