George Webb
Created by Graham Swift

"The things people ask you to do..."

Who'd a think it?

Remember, at the end of The Maltese Falcon, when Sam Spade tells Brigid O'Shaughnessy, as she's being carted off to prison, that he would wait for her? Well, with that concept in mind, Booker Prize-winning author Graham Swift takes a swing at the private eye genre with the widely acclaimed The Light of Day (2003) and whacks one out of the park.

GEORGE WEBB, the narrator of The Light of Day (2003), is a middle-aged divorced ex-cop (his wife left him after he was fired for poor judgment and ensuing scandal) turned London private investigator with an office over a tanning salon. specializing in "matrimonial work." When we meet him, Webb is stewing over his relationship with Sarah Nash, a former client who was ultimately sent to prison for the murder of her husband. Webb's got it bad for the dame, and so he's biding his time, cooling his heels, waiting -- in true noir fashion -- for her to be released.

Worse, he's still haunted by his part in the whole messy business -- he had been hired originally to tail her husband and merely confirm that his lover was actually leaving town.

Not much action here -- the murder is the only real violence, in fact, and that happened (offstage) a couple of years ago, but this slow burn masterpiece gets under your skin anyway. It's an oddly-affecting whirl of stream-of-consciousness prose, the whole book taking place entirely within the course of a single day, as Webb broods, reminisces and obsesses over the case, while looking forward to the day that Sarah is released. Instead of collapsing under such pretensions, however, the novel actually works, and amazingly well, and several critics have praised its rather warm, conversational tone, somewhat akin to a good kitchen chat. The echoes of Hammett's The Maltese Falcon are undeniable (and just about have to be intentional), but merely the icing on the cake for P.I. buffs. It's the rare book that really lifts the lid and gives you a real view of the works, but this is one of them.

Swift is the author of such modern -- but quite popular -- literary classics as Waterland, Out of This World and the Booker Prize-winning Last Orders.

THE EVIDENCE

UNDER OATH

NOVELS

Report respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith. (December 2003)


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