Descriptions of La in Chandler's "the Long Goodbye"
Essay by review • December 24, 2010 • Study Guide • 948 Words (4 Pages) • 1,787 Views
Raymond Chandler, The long Goodbye
There are not very many direct descriptions of L.A.
Direct description of L.A.:
Expensive taste: p.9 ÐŽothe stores along Hollywood Boulevard were already beginning to fill up with overpriced Christmas junk ÐŽÐŽ±
Near Mexico: p.28 ÐŽoseven hours to Mexico CityÐŽ±
p.31 ÐŽoborder peopleÐŽ±
p.33 ÐŽoitЎЇs a long drag from Tijuana and one of the dullest drives in the state. Tijuana is nothing; all they want there is the buck. ÐŽ Tijuana is not Mexico. No border town is anything but a border town ÐŽÐŽ±
Criminal actions: p.38 ÐŽodriven most probably to El Paso, fitted with new keys and forged papers, and put on the market eventually in Mexico City. The procedure is routine. Mostly the money comes back in the form of heroin.ÐŽ±
p.51 ÐŽoa guy can get hisself in a lot of trouble in this town.ÐŽ±
Corruption: p.56 ÐŽothere are some angles weЎЇd rather not go into. After all, the family is pretty influential.ÐŽ±
Casualty: p.78 ÐŽoHe wore a flashy double-breasted vest, the sort of thing you hardly ever see in California except perhaps on a visiting Bostonian.ÐŽ±
City in general: p.273 ÐŽoTwenty-four hours a day somebody is running, somebody else is trying to catch him. Out there in the night of a thousand crimes people were dying, being maimed, cut by flying glass, crushed against steering wheels or under heavy tires. People were beaten, robbed, strangled, raped, and murdered. People were hungry, sick, bored, desperate with loneliness or remorse of fear, angry, cruel, feverish, shaken by sobs. A city no worse than others, a city rich and vigorous and full of pride, a city lost and beaten and full of emptiness.ÐŽ±
The story takes place in L.A. so we can see everything that happens around Marlowe as a mirror of L.A. lifestyle, fashion and living.
People
The people Marlowe meets in this novel are of different kinds of classes. He meets working people, people who have a lot of money and donЎЇt need to work, some that live on the money of others and some that do not have any money at all:
Police officers:
- corrupt
- aggressive
- violent
- do everything to achieve their goals
- not going with the law
- donЎЇt believe in law
- no conscience
- donЎЇt mind to be unjust
- not respectful
- example for violence: p.55 ÐŽoA detective named Dayton slugged me. A homicide Captain named Gregorius threw a cup at coffee at me, hit me in the neck hard enough to bust an artery ÐC you can see itЎЇs still swollen, and when a call from Police Commissioner Allbright kept him from turning me over to the wrecking crew, he spat in my face. YouЎЇre quite right, Mr Endicott. The law boys can always do what they want to do.ÐŽ±
- example for not believing in law: p.49 ÐŽothe law isnЎЇt justice. ItЎЇs a very imperfect mechanism. If you press exactly the right buttons and are also lucky, justice may show up in the answer.ÐŽ±
Morgan (Journal):
- works with the rich, gets told what to print
- knows a lot and gives hints to the truth
- is familiar with corruption
- example: p.60 ÐŽoJust because I canЎЇt print it down donЎЇt mean I didnЎЇt know it, chum.ÐŽ±
The Carne Organization:
- know a lot about people
- have their own web of information
- cover peopleЎЇs activities
- use their information for own purposes
Potter:
- hates the system and doesnЎЇt care about society
- is rich and can buy a lot with his money, even opinion and justice or injustice
- tries to control everything
- uses even mechanisms he hates (newspaper) ÐŽÑŠ part of system but for his own sake
- has no hope for change of society and has lost view for positive things
- undermines privacy of other people to have his own ÐŽÑŠ unscrupulous
Criminals:
- try to scare people to make them work the way they want them to
- criminal
- act from behind or through an organization
- vindictive
People who want his help:
- superficial
- limited in their scope
- a
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