Friday means Friday’s Forgotten Books hosted by Patti
Abbott here. Barry is here today
with his review of Not Sleeping, Just
Dead by Charles Alverson. As
always, comments are welcome…..
NOT SLEEPING, JUST
DEAD (1977) by Charles Alverson
Reviewed by Barry Ergang
Accident, suicide, or murder?
Did Katie Pierce slip from the rooftop terrace and fall to her death on the
rocks below, did she deliberately jump, or was she pushed? The police are
reasonably sure it was option one or two. Katie’s grandfather, Frederick
Crenshaw, is certain it was option three. After asking his friend Ralph Lehman,
recently retired chief of detectives of the San Francisco Police Department,
for a recommendation, he hires Joe Goodey to prove it.
Goodey, a former San
Francisco police detective who now operates as a private investigator, learns
that Katie was a member of The Institute, a cult-like organization created and
run by one Hugo Fischer, a former merchant seaman with a checkered past that
included prison time “for such eccentricities as bad checks, assault and no
visible means of support.” A psychedelic substance induced an epiphany of
sorts, and Fischer “could visualize in broad
outline the creation of a great social movement.” It took him several years,
but his charismatic personality ultimately developed a following that included
“neurotics, psychotics, alcoholics, workaholics, nymphomaniacs, blocked
writers, pillheads, middle-class dropouts, homosexuals, just plain crooks and
hoodlums and even a few hard-drug addicts whom nobody else had been able to get
off the needle. And from this rabble emerged The Institute of Mankind, later
shortened to just The Institute.”
Goodey’s problem would seem
to be gaining admittance to The Institute for investigative purposes until
Lehman tells him that Rachel Schute, a woman with whom he, Goodey, had a brief
relationship, is now deeply involved with both the organization and with one of
Fischer’s top associates, Dr. James Carey. Thus, via Rachel and Carey, he’s
granted permission to visit The Institute in Monterey, where he’s expected to conclude, as
have the police and a large private detective firm Crenshaw hired previously,
that Katie Pierce’s death was a tragedy but not a murder.
At The Institute, Goodey
meets the narcissistic authoritarian Hugo Fischer, his upper-echelon
associates, all of whom defer to him as if he is a god, and various
lower-echelon disciples. Among them are the aforementioned James Carey;
Institute vice-president Don Moffitt; Fischer’s wife Lenore; press officer Mark
Kinsey; a newly married sexagenarian groom and his forty-year-younger
seductress-wannabe bride; a local police lieutenant, the degree of whose
loyalty to his job versus the interests of The Institute is indeterminate; the
mentally and emotionally unstable Tommy Carter and his philanthropic mother
Emma; artist Rudolph Verrein; and writer Hank Willis. Many of them treat Goodey
with unmitigated animosity as he probes for information about Katie, her
relationships with other Institute members, and her death. When another death
occurs, he has two mysteries to try to clear up while observing and being drawn
into some of The Institute’s peculiar rituals.
Although classified as a
hardboiled detective story, Not Sleeping, Just Dead is atypical in that
it doesn’t really contain any of the kind of slam-bang action sequences
normally associated with the genre. Its implicit theme is that with authority
comes responsibility, and its emphasis is on the characters and their
relationships. Charles Alverson does an exceptional job of delineating them
while maintaining a pace that keeps the reader turning pages.
A blurb from The New
Yorker on the cover of the paperback edition I read compares the novel to
Raymond Chandler’s work. Despite some Chandleresque similes sprinkled
throughout, and despite Joe Goodey’s wry approach to matters, I never felt I
was reading the work of a Chandler
imitator. Alverson’s voice and worldview are his own.
My sole complaint is with
Playboy Press, which published the paperback edition. They really could have
used a competent proofreader. There are misplaced punctuation marks here and
there. Fischer’s name is often misspelled as Fisher. Another misspelling ruins
a punch line because by the time the reader figures out what the author really
meant, the humor is attenuated. On one page, Hank Willis is referred to as Jack
Willis three times.
With the caveat that it
contains instances of raw language that some readers might find offensive, Not
Sleeping, Just Dead is recommended.
© 2014 by Barry Ergang
Derringer Award-winning
author Barry Ergang’s work (including the mystery novelette “The Play of Light
and Shadow”) can be found at Amazon, Smashwords,
Barnes
& Noble and Scribd. His
website is http://www.writetrack.yolasite.com/
I read this book when it first came out in the Playboy edition. I don't remember the typos at all, but I do remember that I liked the book.
ReplyDeleteNever have read it. My elders continue to educate me.
ReplyDeleteBill, if you still have your paperback copy, have a look at page 91 for the misspelling that ruins a punch line, and at pages 144 and 145 for the references to Jack (who should be Hank) Willis.
ReplyDeleteThere is a character in the novel named Jack, but his last name is Gillette.