Like any genre fiction, crime fiction has quality output that,
depending on your perspective, floats upon or is buried by oceans of
hack-work. Said hack-work is churned out by the metric ton in order to
get sellable material in front of the fans, and a writer who spends more
than the bare minimum of effort on his or her output may get lucky and
have his or her work noted, highlighted and appreciated not only by fans
but also by people who appreciate that effort. Or he or she may see
their long hours of sweat forgotten by a publishing company that wants a
manuscript fast more than it wants it good. The first thing happened to
Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler. The second happened to Ralph
Dennis. Dennis's "Hardman" series, published in the first half of the
1970s, was slapped together between some lurid eyecatcher covers, tossed
out onto the shelves and promptly forgotten by his publisher, Popular
Books. It was left to modern crime-fiction authors like Joe Lansdale to
rediscover him and point out the top talent involved in the Hardman
series. Brash Books is reprinting the existing Dennis catalog, starting
with Hardman, and adding several unpublished manuscripts found after his
1988 passing. The left-hand cover is the original publication, the right-hand one is the Brash Books version.
The Charleston Knife Is Back in Town
is the second Hardman book and one I enjoy more than I do the series
opener. Dennis doesn't need to waste more than a paragraph or two
identifying the protagonists -- disgraced former Atlanta cop Jim Hardman
and his friend, former Cleveland Browns defender Hump Evans -- and
describing what they do -- everything from off-the-books investigating
and instigating on behalf of Hardman's friend on the force Art to some
straight-up illegal errands for various Atlanta criminal figures.
Dennis
dives right into the action. Hump is one of several people attending a
party who get robbed by a crew of sneaky but inexperienced thieves.
Several people at the party prefer extralegal means to reacquire their
property and have the resources to do so, which will be bad news for the
thieves when they are found out. Hardman wouldn't care, except that it
looks more and more like one of the thieves is a young man he's been
asked to find by someone from his past. Another figure, the
murder-for-hire thug called "the Charleston Knife," is hunting the
robbery crew as well in order to recover the stolen property and money
and leave the stealers dead. If he has to make other people dead in
order to get the job done that's no problem, except that one of the ones
he tried that on is Jim Hardman.
The best genre
fiction writers did not pretend they were writing literature. Instead
they wrote like they were. They crafted their sentences to supply
atmosphere and tone as well as information, and shaped a narrative that
could make a reader stop and think for a second about people and the way
they live and the way things are. Hardman initially tries to find the
young man without much desire to do so and even after figuring out he
could be connected to the theft in which Hump was involved is still only
interested in tracking him down for the fee. The involvement of the
Charleston Knife makes it personal because of the attack on him and the
bodies the assassin leaves in his wake, but we see that quest take on a
more poignant role for Hardman because of it.
Ralph
Dennis, like a lot of us, wonders if someone who starts out good but
loses his way can still have some good in him -- does a knight's heart
beat beneath tarnished armor still? He thinks it can and wrote a story
that showed what it might look like if so. Because it involves a little
hot sex and a lot of brutal violence and decidedly non-upstanding
members of society means it'll get filed with the gung-ho
bullets-and-babes paperbacks that get read today and tossed tomorrow --
and it works as one of those stories too -- but it still asks some
questions that, if you're inclined to consider them -- are worth
thinking about.
The Hardman books were written in the
mid-1970s and would cause the average woke book reviewer of today a
stroke by the end of the third paragraph. The racial and sexual
attitudes of the characters reflect that they were born in the 1920s and
30s and had yet to shed that upbringing. Hardman and Hump may
eventually shake out as good guys for the most part but they aren't
nice, so a reader looking for stories that end, "And then I decided to
leave this life of crime" had best keep searching. But Ralph Dennis
knows how to keep a page turning, how to hook eyeballs and how to leave
an interesting question or two in the wake of his butt-kicking
protagonists.
2 comments:
So looking forward to digging into the first one. (And in terms of lack of political correctness - or even basic acceptability - you haven't lived until you've had to cover up a chapter title in a James Bond book while riding the subway, because of his description of Harlem. Yeesh.)
So surprising; all of the things we hear about Fleming suggest he was such an ahead-of-his-time thinker on sex and race issues ;-)
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