John Shannon (novelist)

Last updated
John Shannon
John-shannon.jpg
(2000)
Born (1943-11-29) November 29, 1943 (age 80)
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
Occupation Novelist, Mystery Writer
Education Pomona College (BA)
University of California, Los Angeles (MFA)
Genre Fiction, Crime Fiction
Website
www.jackliffey.com

John Shannon (born November 29, 1943) is a contemporary American author, lately of detective fiction. He began his career with four well-reviewed novels in the 1970s and 1980s, then in 1996 launched the Jack Liffey mystery series. He cites as his literary influences Raymond Chandler, Ross Macdonald, Graham Greene, Robert Stone and Jim Harrison.

Contents

Biography

Born in Detroit, Michigan, Shannon moved with his family to San Pedro, the gritty harbor district of Los Angeles, California, when he was five. There he grew up among the children of longshoremen and commercial fishermen. He went to Pomona College where he received a B.A. in literature and then to UCLA where he received an MFA degree in film.

After completing his film degree, Shannon wrote one episode of I Spy , a popular television series, then made the decision to leave Hollywood for the Peace Corps. Malawi, the African country to which he was assigned had been, earlier, the site for the Peace Corps service of writer Paul Theroux. When he returned to the United States following his two-year teaching stint in a remote town at the foot of Lake Malawi, he soon became active in the movement against the Vietnam War.

Over the next decades he worked at a newspaper, as a technical writer and video producer. He began his publishing career in 1972 with a bildungsroman, or coming-of-age novel called The Orphan set in the counterculture of the 1960s.

The Jack Liffey Novels

The hero of Shannon's highly praised mystery series is Jack Liffey, introduced in the first book, The Concrete River (1996), as a laid-off aerospace worker. Depressed by his situation and self-medicating, the introspective, sensitive and quirkily humored Liffey pays for his downward spiral when his wife leaves him, taking with her Maeve, the daughter he adores.

What pulls Jack Liffey back together is a startling discovery: called upon for a favor, he finds he possesses a talent for locating missing children. Thus he embarks on a new, if self-invented, profession. Not quite a private eye, he is instead a modern-day paladin exploring the dark corners of human nature while effecting his own version of damage control. Each of the eleven Jack Liffey novels involves a perilous quest to recover a client's son or daughter and remove them from harm's way; each plunges Liffey deep into a new ethnic community or subculture of Los Angeles where the familiar quickly morphs into the strange.

In interviews John Shannon has expressed his belief that the Jack Liffey books are as much novels of redemption as they are mysteries. He could be speaking of his own character when he says, as he has of writer Kent Anderson, that: "Our surrogate adventurers have to face the ugly and cruel every day, and every day they have to reinvent human decency, out of nothing." [1]

It is a statement that offers clear echoes of Raymond Chandler's famed description of the private eye: "Down these mean streets a man must go who is not himself mean, who is neither tarnished nor afraid. The detective must be a complete man and a common man and yet an unusual man. He must be, to use a rather weathered phrase, a man of honor. He talks as the man of his age talks, that is, with rude wit, a lively sense of the grotesque, a disgust for sham, and a contempt for pettiness." [2]

The Shannon-Chandler connection is one that has been frequently noted by critics. For example, in the Los Angeles Times mystery writer Dick Lochte has written that "Shannon has done a remarkable update on the Chandler knight-errant" [3] and Chicago Tribune reviewer Dick Adler called Shannon "the hands-down winner in the long-running 'Where is the Next Raymond Chandler Coming From?' sweepstakes." [4]

Moreover, in the Jack Liffey novels, the city of Los Angeles itself maintains an ongoing starring role. Said Crime Time magazine in 2008: [5] "Shannon's entertaining and well-written books, with their investigations of crime, corruption, shady deals, disaster capitalism and fundamentalist culture constitute nothing short of a social history of modern day Los Angeles. About City of Strangers, the Los Angeles Times pronounced: "Shannon dishes out L.A. local color dipped deep in moral sauce." [6] Reviewing The Dark Streets, Publishers Weekly commented: "Shannon once again skillfully dissects the sociocultural landscape of Los Angeles." [7] While the late James Crumley had this to say: “The landscape of Los Angeles, both actually and metaphorically, has been deconstructed by writers from West to Chandler to Didion, but never quite as artfully as John Shannon does it.”

John Shannon has also contributed short stories to the anthologies Murder on the Ropes, Ed. Otto Penzler, New Millennium Press, 2001 and Politics Noir, ed. Gary Phillips, Verso, 2008, and FourStory Magazine.

Bibliography

The Jack Liffey Novels

1. The Concrete River, 1996

2. The Cracked Earth, 1999

3. The Poison Sky, 2000

4. The Orange Curtain, 2001

5. Streets on Fire, 2002

6. City of Strangers, 2003

7. Terminal Island, 2004

8. Dangerous Games, 2005

9. The Dark Streets, 2007

10. The Devils of Bakersfield, 2008

11. Palos Verdes Blue, 2009

12. On the Nickel, 2010

13. A Little Too Much, 2011

14. The Chinese Beverly Hills, 2013

Other Novels

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References

  1. The Rap Sheet, April 24, 2009
  2. "The Simple Art of Murder", essay in Raymond Chandler, Murder
  3. Los Angeles Times, April 1, 2001
  4. Chicago Tribune, March 17, 1999
  5. Crime Time magazine, May 2008
  6. Los Angeles Times, June 15, 2003
  7. Publishers Weekly, December 18, 2006>
  8. Los Angeles Times, June 2, 1996
  9. Chicago Tribune, Dick Adler, March 17, 1999.
  10. The Poisoned Pen, March 2000
  11. Publishers Weekly, May 26, 2001
  12. Chicago Tribune, December 9, 2001
  13. Los Angeles Times Book Review, December 2, 2001
  14. Los Angeles Times Book Review, April 15 and 22, 2001
  15. Booklist, May 15, 2002
  16. New York Times, May 18, 2003
  17. Booklist, May 1, 2003
  18. Wall Street Journal, May 4, 2004
  19. Boston Globe, June 30, 2005
  20. Denver Post, February 4, 2007
  21. Crime Time magazine, May 25, 2008
  22. Publishers Weekly, March 23, 2009