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
- "Two years ago and a little more. October still, but
a day like today, blue and clear and crisp. Rita opened my door
and said, "Mrs. Nash."
I was already on my feet, buttoning my jacket. Most of them have
no comparisons to go on -- it's their first time. It must feel
like coming to a doctor. They expected something shabbier, seedier,
more shaming. The tidy atmosphere, Rita's doing, surprises and
reassures them. And the vase of flowers.
White chrysanthemums, I recall.
"Mrs. Nash, please have a seat."
I could be some high-street solicitor. A fountain-pen in my fingers.
Doctor, solicitor -- marriage guidance counsellor. You have to
be a bit of all three.
The usual look of plucked-up courage, swallowed-back hesitation,
of being somewhere they'd rather not be.
"My husband is seeing another woman."
.
- "In recent years... I'd learnt to cook, discovered, in fact, a bit of a flair. I take trouble. I chop and mix. I look up recipes, I'm choosy about ingredients. I stop at the Fine Foods section, even when I'm shopping for basics.
.
And food counts, I'll bear that out. In times of trouble, eat well, don't skimp. Look after yourself. don't live out of the microwave. Use love and care. Just because you're on your own.
.
I'll vouch for it, I've been there..."
.
- "Peace? Excitement? What's civilization for? Matrimonial
work: that's my game. It's not always nice but I'm not the Red
Cross. and in my time of doing matrimonial work I've seen quite
a few couples who've come to grief, who've gone to war, for no
other reason, so far as I can see, than that over the years of
being safe and steady and settled, something's got lost, something's
gone missing, they've got bored."
.
- "And anyway (trust a detective) people don't always
look like they look."
UNDER OATH
- "... a luminous and gripping tale of love, murder and
redemption.... Intimate and intricate in its evocation of daily
existence, The Light of Day achieves a singular intensity
and almost unbearable suspense. Tender and humorous in its depiction
of life's surface, Swift explores the depths and extremities
of what lies within us and how, for better or worse, it's never
too late to discover what they are."
(Theblurb)
.
- "The novel's strength is indeed its structure: it is
based not on chronology but as if on a sort of emotional resonance,
with Webb's thoughts and preoccupations providing the novel with
a depth not normally found in traditional detective novels."
(Michael Ferch, Amazon.com)
.
- "The Light of Day is as close to seeming spoken
as any novel I have read. It dares the ordinariness of flat,
repetitious, unliterate narration. (...) Swift's dare is worth
the risks, however. The book's pleasures, slowly coddled, take
time to mature, but in the process they teach you the art of
reading slowly and carefully, of maturing with the story."
(James Wood, London Review of Books)
NOVELS
Report respectfully submitted by Kevin
Burton Smith. (December 2003)
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