The Literature Book

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237
See also: Bleak House 14 6 – 49 ■ The Moonstone 198–99 ■ The Hound of the Baskervilles 208 ■
The New York Trilogy 336

BREAKING WITH TRADITION


chessboard and sees that he has
made a mistake with a knight
move. “Knights,” he says, “have no
meaning in this game.” But they
do: Marlowe, for all his faults, is a
modern knight, among the kings
and queens of crime and their
pawns. He is loyal to clients, hates
liars, cheats, and thugs, and fights
back with wit and courage.

New uses for pulp
Part of Chandler’s achievement
was to apply literary sophistication
to pulp-fiction subjects. The Big

Sleep is told by Marlowe in the first
person, and the language is sharply
idiomatic—colloquial not only in
the dialogue but also the narration.
But the prose has a jewel-like
precision, with terse, beautifully
crafted sentences. There are witty
or amusingly exaggerated similes,
such as doors “which would have
let in a troop of Indian elephants,”
but they are not overdone.
The story has a tight plot, with
one situation flowing naturally into
the next. Two-thirds of the way in,
Marlowe has solved the mystery for

his client; however, he spends the
rest of the book tying up a loose
end, and putting himself in more
danger to discover how deep into
evil an arch-villain has fallen.
Throughout, Marlowe remains
one step ahead of everybody else,
and able, like the chess knight, to
outwit his enemies by unexpected
moves. The big sleep of the title
is death, and is the subject of a
poignant coda in which Marlowe,
showing self-understanding far
beyond Sherlock Holmes, implicates
himself as “part of the nastiness.” ■

Arthur Geiger

Carol Lundgren

Carmen
Sternwood

General
Sternwood

Agnes Lozelle

Harry Jones

Owen Taylor

Lash Canino

Both plots Blackmail plot Disappearance plot

Joe Brody

Eddie Mars

Vivian Sternwood
Regan

“Rusty” Regan

Mona Mars

Philip Marlowe

Employed by

Employed by

Partners with

Lover of Partners with

Blackmails

Employed by

Father of Father of

Employed by

In love with Blackmails

Tries to seduce Tries to seduce

Married to

Runs away with?

Married to

Tries to
seduce

Two intertwined plots linked by
sexual attraction provide The Big Sleep
with its story line, revolving around an
elderly ex-general’s two wayward
daughters, missing persons, blackmail,
murder, and double crosses. The result
is a complex but well-controlled tale.

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