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Re: [bomp] the thirties were a hard one to deal with?
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Michael Baker/Mindy Weisberger
380 Mountain Rd #1213
Union City, New Jersey 07087
Tel/Fax: 201 867 0198
Email: roky@optonline.net
----- Original Message -----
From: "Michael Snider" <lasciviumdei@yahoo.com>
To: <bomp@xnet2.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 07, 2005 3:19 AM
Subject: Re: [bomp] the thirties were a hard one to deal with?
>
> --- jumpinginthenight <jumpinginthenight@yahoo.com>
> wrote:
>>
>> Chandler & Hammett, yes. Also Carroll John Daly,
>
> Daly was the Mickey Spillane of the 20s/30s. More
> historically important than readable IMO.
>
>> Kenneth Robeson,
>
> Never heard of him.
>
> Sax Rohmer, John P. Marquand,
>> Seabury Quinn, Walter B. Gibson, Grant Stockbridge,
>> Leslie Charteris, Edgar Rice Burroughs.
>>
> James M. Cain and Horace McCoy should be on that list
> too, although I don't know if you've read their stuff.
> And farther removed from the pulp universe, Orwell,
> Celine, Henry Miller, Faulkner, Camus (although "The
> Stranger" is IMO a hard boiled novel)
>
well the 30's were dominated by WPA/watered down naturalism--steinbeck,
henry roth, farrell, richard wright, mccoy, and yes camus: btw celine has
the greatest novel of that decade not counting faulkner who was the babe
ruth of the 20s/30s: one immortal feat after another (absalom is my fave
novel).
edagr rice is a great choice (ithought he was more 1910-1930, hence johnny
w' films) and marquand is also underrated. charteris and stockbridge i have
no taste for. remrmber the 1930's as crowning achievemets in wallace stevens
and auden's poetry, for diff reasons. speaking of brits: woolf was
ending/graham greene was beginning, and i'm a big fan of jean rhys, firbank,
isherwood--mannered, brittle upper class twits.
and no list is complete without flann o'brien, the funniest writer since
wilde.
btw
becket's novels begin somewhere here --37? 38?--and if you want noir, and
genius, they are the beginning and the ending of modernism.
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