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"I was rereading The Maltese Falcon for a community college class I was about to teach, and noticed the copyright -- 1929 -- and had the thought, 'Huh, that's the year of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre. That means Sam Spade and Al Capone were contemporaries.' That started me thinking that instead of Phillip Marlowe meeting an Al Capone type, Al Capone could meet a Phillip Marlowe type."
Collins drew a little heat when he first lay claim to having invented the historical private eye novel (he seemed to have conveniently forgotten previous retro eyes such as Toby Peters and Andrew Bergman's Jack Levine), but he pointed out that "I deal with real crimes, real people; the closest thing to what I do that existed before me was Chinatown, which changed names, dates, etc., and certain episodes of the greatest of all P.I. series, City of Angels. Stu and the rest do period mysteries -- using the setting, the nostalgia, some real people but not real events. That's the diff." Regardless, Collins deserves credit for the skill he brings to his well-researched true crime/fictional PI masterpieces that not only humanize old stories, but force us to look at them again as he digs up old theories, and comes up with new ones. Who REALLY kidnapped the Lindbergh baby? Who REALLY bumped off Bugsy Siegal? Was the St. Valentine's Day Massacre a mistake? Who REALLY shot John Dillinger? What REALLY happened to Amelia Earhart? For any fan of classic true crimes and other unsolved mysteries of 20th century America, or anyone who just enjoys a great PI yarn, you could do a lot worse than this entertaining, and often, enlightening series. And Nate is an intriguing appealingly-less-than-perfect, character. Half-Jewish, half-Irish, he's greedy, horny, morally amivalent, if not downright ambiguous. He can be bought off, but only on his terms. Probably the key to his character is the death of his father: Nate's old man was a dedicated leftist, an old union guy, who shot himself after Nate lied on the witness stand, in order to join the police department (and therefore make his way to the trough). Nate carries the nine-millimeter with which his father did the deed, and he calls it "the closest thing to a conscience I've got." Besides creating Heller, he's also responsible for continuing the comic strip adventures of Dick Tracy, as well as his own Mike Danger, Mike Mist, the rebirth of Johnny Dynamite, and possibly his greatest coup-the creation of Ms. Tree, the private eye heroine of the longest-running private eye comic book in history. He's also written novels featuring professional thief Quarry and amateur sleuth/mystery writer Mallory, and several novelisations of various crime films and televsion shows. He's also penned, along with James L. Traylor, One Lonely Knight, a spirited critical defense of his idol, Mickey Spillane; a project that lead to a not just a life-long friendship with the creator of Mike Hammer, but a string of co-edited anthologies of original stories, all of which are recommended, especially 1998's Private Eyes. In 2001, he's released what might be stand as his non-fiction magnum opus, The History of Mystery, a personal and passionate stab at the entire crime fiction genre that revealed Collins, once and for all, as not just one of the genre's most talented contributors, but also one of it's greatest fans. FROM THE PEANUT GALLERY
NOVELS
COLLECTIONS
SHORT STORIES
OTHER APPEARANCES
RELATED LINKS
Report respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith. Thanks to Bluefox808, and Max Allan Collins himself, for their help here. | Home | Detectives A-L M-Z | Film | Radio | Television | Web Comics | Comics | FAQs | Got a comment on this site? Drop me a line, and we'll talk. |