
"To police is to maintain law and order, but the word derives from polis - the Greek for 'city' or 'polity' -- by way of politia, the latin for 'citizenship,' and it entered English from the Middle French police, which meant not constables but government." Jill Lepore. "The Long Blue Line" in The New Yorker (July 20,2020)

If you write well, you should not be writing a mystery. Mysteries should only be written by people who can't write. I regard this as vicious propaganda from the Edmond Wilson crowd. Obviously you can't expect detective fiction to be anything but sub-literary, to use Edmund Wilson's word, if you insist on weeding out from the field anyone who shows any pretensions to skill or imagination. . Raymond Chandler, in a letter to Somerset Maugham Gardner (4 May 1951). The Raymond Chandler Papers, edited by Tom Hiney and Frank MacShane (New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2000) ** WHAT SHOULD A MYSTERY WRITER LOOK LIKE?
In 1944, H. Allen Smith published his best-selling Humor book
Lost in The Horse Latitudes and in one of the chapters he describes
meeting Raymond Chandler when they were writing screenplays for
Paramount. Here is Mr, Allen’s description of Chandler:
I wanted to meet Mr. Chandler right off. I expected to find a hulking guy with a flat nose and football-shaped biceps. He turned out to be the last man in the world I would have picked as the author of his books. He is a mild mannered guy of medium size with black wavy hair, horn-rimmed glasses, and a sensitive face. He looks like a poet is supposed to look. ** GRACIE ALLEN & S.S. VAN DINE "..in 1938 mystery writer S.S. Van Dine had published The Gracie Allen Murder Case, featuring his famed detective Philo Vance, as well as Gracie and me. Gracie publicly claimed that she could never understand why a man would spend a year writing a novel when he could buy one for only two dollars, but privately she was very pleased by the compliment.When Paramount decided to turn the book into a movie. I suggested they eliminate my character. Nobody argued." George Burns.Gracie: A Love Story. (New York: G.P.Putnam's Sons, 1988). *** A PARADOX IN MYSTERY TITLES PAPERBACK THRILLER is the title of a mystery by Lynn Meyer. The book, published in the mid-1970’s by Random House, was issued in hardcover. ** HOMAGE TO WILLIE SUTTON It is beautiful to be In a bank at night –all alone, Thus spoke Willie Sutton. When he uttered those thoughtful words He hit it right on the button. O you can have your Irving Berlin As sung by Betty Hutton. I’d rather be in a bank at night, Alone with Willie Sutton. The rich may dine on crepes Suzette, The poor may munch on mutton, But, as for me, I’d rather dine In a vault with Willie Sutton. O novelists, keep your publishers, Your Random House or Dutton. I’d rather be in a bank at night, Alone with Willie Sutton. There are stacks of gilt-edged bonds Stacked away in vaults. The fact that money rules so many lives Is not poor Willie’s fault. Louis Phillips **
Loved it
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Excellent, Louis.
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Good stuff here. Liked the Willie Sutton piece especially.
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Thanks for once again hitting it on the button!
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Well done, Lou. Found this quote about Willie Sutton: “I was more alive when I was inside a bank, robbing it, than at any other time in my life.” So I think you hit the nail on the head.
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