Forgotten Books: THE GODWULF MANUSCRIPT by Robert B. Parker (1974)
I’ve
read The Godwulf Manuscript many more times than I can
remember, certainly more times than any other book (and listened to the audio
book many times too) and I never get tired of it. The reason for that
repetition is that I keep reading and listening to the “complete” Spenser saga
every few years. Each time I take that journey there are more books in the
series, but I always start with the first, and this is it.
What
struck me this time is how strongly the style of this book was influenced by
The Continental Op. As it says on the dust jacket, Parker did his dissertation
on the works of Chandler and Hammett. I had always seen the influence of both
writers in his work, but over the past year I‘ve been studying the Op style
very closely for projects of my own (the first of those, a story called “The
Continental Opposite“ recently sold to AHMM) and it’s gotten into
my blood. I was pleased to see it in Parker’s blood too.
Though
Spenser has his Marlowe moments, his overall tone and attitude is much more
Oppish, and Parker steered clear of the Chandleresque similes that other
writers turned into parody.
Parker
also borrowed a major plot element from the second Op novel, The Dain
Curse. Like the Op, Spenser must rescue a young woman from a wacko cult
bent on performing abominations on their initiates. In The Dain Curse it
was The Temple of the Holy Grail. In this book it’s called The Temple of
Moloch.
The
most obvious hat tip to Chandler is Spenser’s first love interest, a woman
named Brenda Loring. She’s clearly a literary descendant of Linda Loring, the
woman Marlowe met in The Long Goodbye, and married sometime
between Playback and the unfinished “Poodle Springs” story.
Parker, of course, later finished Chandler's story, and it was published as the
novel Poodle Springs in 1989.
for
the rest go here:
http://davycrockettsalmanack.blogspot.com/
1 comment:
Parker's first six or eight novels really knocked me out. His voice was one I hadn't heard before. And although he overdid it later, I liked the idea of a steady girlfriend, and the cooking. And the cool friend.
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