Ross Macdonald was the main pseudonym used by the American-Canadian writer of crime fiction Kenneth Millar (/ˈmɪlər/; December 13, 1915 – July 11, 1983). He is best known for his series of hardboiled novels set in Southern California and featuring private detective Lew Archer. Since the 1970s, Macdonald's works (particularly the Archer novels) have received attention in academic circles[1][2][3] for their psychological depth,[4][5] sense of place,[6][7][8] use of language,[9] sophisticated imagery[10] and integration of philosophy into genre fiction.[11] Brought up in the province of Ontario, Canada, Macdonald eventually settled in the state of California, where he died in 1983.
Ross Macdonald | |
---|---|
Born | Kenneth Millar December 13, 1915 Los Gatos, California, U.S. |
Died | July 11, 1983 Santa Barbara, California, U.S. | (aged 67)
Pen name | John Macdonald, John Ross Macdonald, Ross Macdonald |
Occupation | Novelist |
Alma mater | University of Western Ontario, University of Michigan |
Genre | Crime fiction |
Spouse | |
Children | 1 |
The Wall Street Journal wrote that:
... it is the sheer beauty of Macdonald’s laconic style—with its seductive rhythms and elegant plainness—that holds us spellbound. "Hard-boiled," "noir," "mystery," it doesn’t matter what you call it. Macdonald, with insolent grace, blows past the barrier constructed by Dorothy Sayers between "the literature of escape" and "the literature of expression." These novels, triumphs of his literary alchemy, dare to be both.[12]
Life
editMillar was born in Los Gatos, California, and raised in his Canadian parents' native Kitchener, Ontario. Millar was a Scots spelling of the surname Miller, and the author pronounced his name Miller rather than Millar.[13] When his father abandoned the family unexpectedly when Millar was four years old, he and his mother lived with various relatives, and he had moved several times by his 16th year. Back in Canada as a young adult, he returned to Kitchener, where he studied, and subsequently graduated from the University of Western Ontario with an Honors degree in History and English. He found work as a high school teacher.[14] Some years later, he attended the University of Michigan and received a PhD in 1952. He married Margaret Sturm in 1938, though they'd known each other earlier in high school. They had a daughter in 1939, Linda, who died in 1970.[15][16] The family moved from Kitchener to Santa Barbara in 1946.[17]
Millar began his career writing stories for pulp magazines and used his real name for his first four novels. Of these he completed the first, The Dark Tunnel, in 1944. After serving at sea as a naval communications officer from 1944 to 1946, Millar returned to Michigan, where he obtained his Ph.D. degree in literature.[18] For his doctorate, Millar studied under poet W. H. Auden, who (unusually for a prominent literary intellectual of the era) held mystery or detective fiction could rise to the level of literature and encouraged Millar's interest in the genre.[13]
For his fifth novel, in 1949, he wrote under the name John Macdonald (his father's first and middle names) in order to avoid confusion with his wife, who was achieving her own success writing as Margaret Millar. He then changed his pen name briefly to John Ross Macdonald, before settling on Ross Macdonald (Ross borrowed from a favorite cousin) in order to avoid being confused with fellow mystery writer John D. MacDonald, who was writing under his real name.[13] Millar would use the pseudonym Ross Macdonald on all his fiction from the mid '50s forward.[16]
Most of his books were set primarily in and around his adopted hometown of Santa Barbara. In these works, the city where Lew Archer is based goes under the fictional name of Santa Teresa.
In 1983 Macdonald died of Alzheimer's disease.[15]
Work
editMacdonald first introduced the tough but humane private eye Lew Archer in the 1946 short story "Find the Woman" (credited then to "Ken Millar"). A novel featuring him, The Moving Target, (1949) was the first in a series of eighteen. Macdonald mentions in the foreword to the Archer in Hollywood omnibus that his detective derives his name from Sam Spade's partner, Miles Archer, and from Lewis Wallace, author of Ben-Hur, though the character was patterned on Philip Marlowe. Macdonald also said the surname "Archer" was inspired by his own astrological sign of Sagittarius the archer.[13]
The novels were hailed by genre fans and literary critics alike.[19] He has been called the primary heir to Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler as the master of American hardboiled mysteries.[20]
Macdonald's writing built on the pithy style of his predecessors by adding psychological depth and insights into the motivations of his characters.[21] His plots, described as of "baroque splendor", were complicated and often turned on Archer's unearthing family secrets of upwardly mobile clients, sometimes going back over several generations.[22] Lost or wayward sons and daughters were a theme common to many of the novels.[23] Critics have commented favorably on Macdonald's deft combination of the two sides of the mystery genre, the "whodunit" and the psychological thriller.[24] Even his regular readers seldom saw a Macdonald denouement coming.
Tom Nolan, Macdonald's biographer, wrote,
"By any standard he was remarkable. His first books, patterned on Hammett and Chandler, were at once vivid chronicles of a postwar California and elaborate retellings of Greek and other classic myths. Gradually he swapped the hard-boiled trappings for more subjective themes: personal identity, the family secret, the family scapegoat, the childhood trauma; how men and women need and battle each other, how the buried past rises like a skeleton to confront the present. He brought the tragic drama of Freud and the psychology of Sophocles to detective stories, and his prose flashed with poetic imagery."[13]
Recognition
editThe Lew Archer novels are recognized as some of the most significant American mystery books of the mid 20th century, bringing a literary sophistication to the genre. The critic John Leonard declared that Macdonald had surpassed the limits of crime fiction to become "a major American novelist".[25] William Goldman, who adapted Macdonald's The Moving Target to film as Harper in 1966, called his works "the finest series of detective novels ever written by an American".[26] A later film adaptation was The Drowning Pool (1975), also starring Paul Newman as the detective "Lew Harper".[27] In addition, The Underground Man was adapted as a TV movie in 1974.[28]
Over his career, Macdonald was presented with several awards. In 1964, the Mystery Writers of America awarded him the Silver Dagger award for The Chill. Ten years later, he received the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America, and in 1982 he received "The Eye," the Lifetime Achievement Shamus Award from the Private Eye Writers of America. In 1982, he was awarded the Robert Kirsch Award by the Los Angeles Times for "an outstanding body of work by an author from the West or featuring the West."[29]
Bibliography
editWriting as Kenneth Millar
edit- The Dark Tunnel (a.k.a. I Die Slowly) – 1944
- Trouble Follows Me (a.k.a. Night Train) – 1946
- Blue City – 1947 (filmed with Judd Nelson as Blue City, 1986)
- The Three Roads – 1948 (filmed with Michael Sarrazin as Deadly Companion, 1980)
These first four novels, all non-series standalones, were initially published using Millar's real name, but have since been intermittently reissued using his literary pseudonym, Ross Macdonald.
Other non-series novels
editTwo later non-series novels were also published:
- Meet Me at the Morgue (aka Experience With Evil) – 1953, credited to John Ross Macdonald
- The Ferguson Affair – 1960, credited to Ross Macdonald
Lew Archer
editNovels
edit- The Moving Target – 1949 (credited to John Macdonald, filmed with Paul Newman as Harper, 1966)
- The Drowning Pool – 1950 (also filmed with Paul Newman as The Drowning Pool, 1975)
- The Way Some People Die – 1951
- The Ivory Grin (aka Marked for Murder) – 1952
- Find a Victim – 1954
- The Barbarous Coast – 1956
- The Doomsters – 1958
- The Galton Case – 1959
- The Wycherly Woman – 1961
- The Zebra-Striped Hearse – 1962
- The Chill – 1964
- The Far Side of the Dollar – 1965 (1965 CWA Gold Dagger Award winner)
- Black Money – 1966
- The Instant Enemy – 1968
- The Goodbye Look – 1969 (filmed as Tayna 1992)
- The Underground Man – 1971 (filmed as a television series pilot in 1974)
- Sleeping Beauty – 1973
- The Blue Hammer – 1976
Short story collections
edit- The Name Is Archer (paperback original containing seven stories) – 1955
- Lew Archer: Private Investigator (The Name Is Archer + two additional stories) – 1977
- Strangers in Town (unpublished drafts edited by Tom Nolan) - 2001
- The Archer Files, The Complete Short Stories of Lew Archer Private Investigator, Including Newly Discovered Case Notes, ed. Tom Nolan – 2007.
Omnibuses
edit- Archer in Hollywood – 1967 includes The Moving Target, The Way Some People Die, and The Barbarous Coast.
- Archer at Large – 1970 includes The Galton Case, The Chill, and Black Money.
- Archer in Jeopardy – 1979 includes The Doomsters, The Zebra-Striped Hearse, and The Instant Enemy.
- Archer, P.I.—includes The Ivory Grin, The Zebra-Striped Hearse and The Underground Man. Mystery Guild, 1990. Collects three Vintage Crime/Black Lizard printings.
- Ross MacDonald: Four Novels of the 1950s - May 2015, Library of America, includes The Way Some People Die, The Barbarous Coast, The Doomsters, and The Galton Case.
- Ross MacDonald: Three Novels of the Early 1960s - April 2016, Library of America, includes The Zebra-Striped Hearse, The Chill and The Far Side of the Dollar.
- Ross MacDonald: Four Later Novels - July 2017, Library of America, includes Black Money, The Instant Enemy, The Goodbye Look, and The Underground Man
British omnibuses
editAllison & Busby published three Archer omnibus editions in the 1990s.
- The Lew Archer Omnibus. Vol. 1. includes The Drowning Pool, The Chill and The Goodbye Look.
- The Lew Archer Omnibus. Vol. 2. includes The Moving Target, The Barbarous Coast, and The Far Side of the Dollar
- The Lew Archer Omnibus. Vol. 3. includes The Ivory Grin, The Galton Case, and The Blue Hammer.
Non-fiction
edit- On Crime Writing – 1973, Santa Barbara : Capra Press, Series title: Yes! Capra chapbook series; no. 11, The Library of Congress bibliographic information includes this note: "Writing The Galton case."
- Self-Portrait, Ceaselessly Into the Past – 1981, Santa Barbara : Capra Press, collection of book prefaces, magazine articles and interviews.
Notes
edit- ^ Grogg, Sam (June 1973). "Ross MacDonald: At the Edge". The Journal of Popular Culture. 7 (1): 213–224. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.1973.00213.x.
- ^ Browne, Ray B. (December 1990). "Ross Macdonald: Revolutionary Author and Critic; Or The Need for the Oath of Macdonald". The Journal of Popular Culture. 24 (3): 101–111. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.1990.2403_101.x. ProQuest 195365876.
- ^ Sacks, Sheldon (1979). "The Pursuit of Lew Archer". Critical Inquiry. 6 (2): 231–238. doi:10.1086/448044. JSTOR 1343244. S2CID 161660586.
- ^ Skenazy, Paul (1983). "Bringing It All Back Home: Ross Macdonald's Lost Father". The Threepenny Review (12): 9–11. JSTOR 4383163.
- ^ Fox, Terry Curtis (1984). "Psychological Guilt: Ross Macdonald". Film Comment. 20 (5): 34, 80. ProQuest 210243329.
- ^ Grogg, Samuel L. (1974). Between the Mountains and the Sea: Ross MacDonald's Lew Archer Novels (Thesis).
- ^ Michael Kreyling. “Lew Archer, House Whisperer.” South Central review. 27.1 (2010): 123–143. Web.
- ^ Bacevich, Andrew (2015). "A Not-So-Golden State: The detective stories of Ross Macdonald". The Baffler (29): 122–126. JSTOR 43959251.
- ^ Christianson, Scott R. (1989). "Tough Talk and Wisecracks: Language as Power in American Detective Fiction". The Journal of Popular Culture. 23 (2): 151–162. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.1989.00151.x.
- ^ Pry, Elmer R. (1974). "Ross Macdonald's Violent California: Imagery Patterns in The Underground Man". Western American Literature. 9 (3): 197–203. doi:10.1353/wal.1974.0006. S2CID 165787318.
- ^ Sharp, Michael D. (September 22, 2003). "Plotting Chandler's Demise: Ross Macdonald and the Neo-Aristotelian detective novel". Studies in the Novel. 35 (3): 405–428. JSTOR 29533588. Gale A109085457 ProQuest 212626987.
- ^ Mundow, Anna (November 23, 2017). "Review: Hard-Boiled in California". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved October 24, 2023.
- ^ a b c d e Tom Nolan, Ross Macdonald, A Biography, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1999 ISBN 0-684-81217-7
- ^ Flash From the Past: Raised in Kitchener, read around the world 23 October 2020
- ^ a b Flash From the Past: Kitchener writers’ family lives were like a bad plot 6 November 2020
- ^ a b Weinman, Sarah (November 24, 2020). "Linda, Interrupted". CrimeReads. Retrieved November 24, 2020.
- ^ Ross Macdonald Invented Modern Detective Lew Archer 13 October 2015
- ^ Flash From the Past: Famous 20th century private eye is rooted in Kitchener July 10, 2020
- ^ Baker, Robert Allen and Michael T. Nietzel (1985). Private Eyes: One Hundred and One Knights : a Survey of American Detective Fiction, 1922–1984. Bowling Green KY: Popular Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-0879723293.
- ^ Nickerson, Catherine Ross (2010). "The Detective Story", in A Companion to the American Short Story, edited by Alfred Bendixen & James Nagel. New York: John Wiley & Sons. p. 425. ISBN 978-1405115438.
- ^ Miller, Wilbur R. (2012). The Social History of Crime and Punishment in America: An Encyclopedia. Los Angeles: Sage. p. 1019. ISBN 978-1412988766.
- ^ Geoffrey O'Brien, Hardboiled America, Van Norstrand Reinhold, 1981, pp.125-8
- ^ Jones, Tobias (July 31, 2009). "A passion for mercy". The Guardian. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
- ^ Connolly, John and Declan Burke (2012). Books to Die For: The World's Greatest Mystery Writers on the World's Greatest Mystery Novels. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-1451696578.
- ^ J. Kingston Pierce, "50 Years with Lew Archer: An Anniversary Tribute to Ross Macdonald and his Heroic Yet Passionate Private Eye", January Magazine.
- ^ New York Times archive
- ^ "The Drowning Pool", Encyclopedia Britannica
- ^ Movietone News 32, June 1974
- ^ Mystery Writer Ross Macdonald, 67, Dies July 13, 1983
References
edit- Bruccoli, Matthew J. Ross Macdonald. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1984. ISBN 0-15-179009-4 | ISBN 0-15-679082-3
- "Ross Macdonald: Family Affairs" in S. T. Joshi, Varieties of Crime Fiction, pp. 97–106, (Wildside Press, 2019) ISBN 978-1-4794-4546-2
- Kreyling, Michael. "The Novels of Ross Macdonald" University of South Carolina Press, 2005. ISBN 1-57003-577-6
- Nolan, Tom. Ross Macdonald: A Biography. New York: Scribner, 1999. ISBN 0-684-81217-7
- Nolan, Tom. "The Archer Files". Crippen & Landru 2007
- Schopen, Bernard A., "Ross MacDonald", Twayne Publishers, Boston, 1990. ISBN 0-8057-7548-X
External links
edit- Marling, William, "Hard-Boiled Fiction", Case Western Reserve University
- J. Kingston Pierce, "50 Years with Lew Archer: An Anniversary Tribute to Ross Macdonald and His Heroic Yet Compassionate Private Eye, [1] by January Magazine, April 1999]
- Lew Archer oder: Der Detektiv als Statthalter konkreter Utopie An interview with Macdonald
- Leonard Cassuto, "The last testament of Ross Macdonald", The Boston Globe, 11/2/2003