The Barbarous Coast is a 1956 detective novel by Canadian-American author Ross Macdonald, the sixth to feature private investigator Lew Archer and his eleventh novel overall. It was published by Alfred A. Knopf in hardcover, and by Bantam Books as a paperback. The plot follows Archer's attempt to locate a missing young woman who is associated with an upscale country club. The novel takes an acid view of Southern California society that foreshadows Macdonald's later treatment of cross-generational deterministic themes.
Lew Archer is summoned to the Channel Club on Malibu Beach and stops to talk to the gateman, Tony Torres. Just then a hot-headed Canadian named George Wall tries to barge into the private grounds with the plea that he is looking for his wife, but is turned away. Once inside, Archer discovers from Clarence Bassett, the club manager, that the job being offered is to protect him from Wall's threats. His wife Hester had once been an exhibition diver at the club and the middle-aged Bassett has taken a fatherly interest in her welfare. In his office is an old photograph of three divers in action who are identified as Hester Campbell, as she was then known, Gabrielle Torres (Tony's daughter) and her cousin Manuel (who now calls himself Lance). Since the three were photoed together, Gabrielle had been found shot dead on the beach, Hester had run away from Malibu and married Wall in Toronto, while Lance had started working for the gangster Carl Stern.
In order to keep him out of trouble, Archer allows Wall to tag along as he tries to locate Hester. As he does so, he discovers that Stern has been trying to establish a casino in Las Vegas. Unable to gain a gaming licence because of his Syndicate connections, Stern has brought in Simon Graff as his front man. Graff, a partner in Helio-Graff Studios in Hollywood, is a member of the Channel Club and has married the unstable daughter of his partner. Manuel Torres, now going by the name of Lance Leonard, is to have a part in the studio's next film.
Another lead takes Archer to Hester's former home in Beverly Hills, into which she has moved again, having suddenly become affluent. There he is beaten up by one of Stern's thugs and taken to be interrogated by Leroy Frost, head of security at Helio-Graff; after receiving a further beating when he resists, he finally manages to escape. Archer believes that Hester has been murdered and checks Lance's home, only to find him murdered there. However, on returning to the Beverly Hills house he discovers Hester packing to leave in a state of terror.
Later Wall rings Archer from a hospital in Las Vegas, where he has been taken after a beating in Stern's office. Hester has also rung Archer from the town and he flies to Las Vegas to locate her. When he does so, he discovers the woman is really Rina Campbell, Hester's sister, who resembles her closely. Carl Stern had persuaded Rina to lay a false trail in order to allow Hester to escape abroad. But as they talk, Frost appears together with Stern's thugs in order to kill Rina, having already disposed of Hester, as Archer suspected. This time Archer overcomes the thugs and disables Frost by shooting him in the arm; then he forces Frost to show them where Hester's corpse has been hidden.
After returning to Los Angeles, Archer interviews Dr Frey, Rina's employer, about his schizophrenic patient Isobel Graff, whom Archer had met the evening before at a party in the Channel Club. Her husband Simon had once had an affair with Gabrielle Torres and Isobel may have been the girl's killer and later complicit in Hester's death too. In fact Isobel had shot Gabrielle with a gun belonging to Graff, but only wounded her. Bassett had engineered the confrontation and used the gun himself to complete the killing. Later he blackmailed Graff, making him believe that it was his wife's shot that was fatal. It also emerges that Bassett was responsible for the killing of Hester, Lance and Stern, who had also been blackmailing Graff. Graff incites Tony Torres to kill Bassett in revenge for the death of his daughter Isobel and Archer turns Graff over to the police.
Ross Macdonald’s first nine novels had been published under various pen names, and also under the author's legal name of Kenneth Millar. The Barbarous Coast was the first in which he used the Ross Macdonald name, under which all his earlier works were eventually re-published. His working title for the novel had been The Dying Animal, the one given the condensed version of the narrative published in Cosmopolitan . That title had been rejected by Knopf, who offered such alternatives inspired by fellow crime writer Mickey Spillane, such as "Cut the Throat Slowly" and "My Gun Is Me". [1] Macdonald’s counter suggestion of The Barbarous Coast has been conjectured as a parody of 'Barbary Coast', the red-light district in 19th-century San Francisco. [2] Two years before he had given the similarly punning title "The Guilt-Edged Blonde" to one of his Lew Archer short stories. [3]
There may also be a connection between this title and Archer's Chandleresque denunciation of the relationship between Hollywood culture and its links with organized crime, which is one of the novel's themes. [4] As he is flying back to Los Angeles from Las Vegas with Rina Campbell, she comments that the pressure of fear which she had been under had made her feel "like a whore – as though I wasn’t worth anything to myself". Archer's reply is "That’s the way the jerks want you to feel…And the jerks would get away with the things jerks want to get away with. They're not, though. Jerkiness isn't as respectable as it used to be, not even in L. A. Which is why they had to build Vegas." Archer's judgment is echoed in the words of a contemporary review that appeared in The Detroit News : "Not since the novels of Nathanael West has the theme of American innocence grinding to a stop at the polluted waters of the Pacific so consistently reverberated through a body of writing". [5]
In a later introduction to his novel, Macdonald noted that "it was my largest book so far, in both social range and moral complexity". [6] But there is a definite pessimism about the avenues to social mobility displayed there. Joseph Tobias, having served as a black soldier, chooses the way of education and seems trapped in the role of life guard at the socially exclusive Channel Club. Tony Torres had chosen boxing as his avenue away from Anti-Mexican sentiment and afterwards serves grudgingly as the Channel Club's security guard. His daughter Gabrielle makes up to a film magnate there as a way of escape and is murdered. His nephew changes his name to Lance and graduates from boxer to well-heeled criminal, with the possibility of a film career before he is shot. The Campbells had been victims of the Wall Street Crash of 1929. One daughter attempts to escape poverty by marrying money and is murdered while trying to undo the mess she has got herself into; her sister chooses the nursing profession and only narrowly escapes murder herself. Bennett is another Stock Market casualty who, from being an original co-founder of the Channel Club is reduced to club servant, having to defer to its corrupt membership. When ill-feeling takes him down the path of blackmail and murder, he becomes a murder victim himself at the hands of one of his employees.
Macdonald was aged forty by the time The Barbarous Coast was published, and the novel's sense of disenchantment has an autobiographical basis. Having known poverty also in his Canadian boyhood, he had returned to California to make a career as a writer - perhaps even as a serious or academic author. He had a Ph.D and "was one of the most brilliant graduate students in the history of the University of Michigan". [7] Yet with the approach of middle age he had achieved a place no higher than as a genre writer of crime fiction. His family life was troubled as well. 1956 was the year in which his daughter Linda was responsible for a hit and run incident while she was driving. [8] The novel marks the initiation of Macdonald's interest in treating cross-generational themes that was to be such of feature of his later books, even as he turned at the same time to the task of facing up to his own personal devils. [9] [10]
Ross Macdonald was the main pseudonym used by the American-Canadian writer of crime fiction Kenneth Millar. He is best known for his series of hardboiled novels set in Southern California and featuring private detective Lew Archer. Since the 1970s, Macdonald's works have received attention in academic circles for their psychological depth, sense of place, use of language, sophisticated imagery and integration of philosophy into genre fiction. Brought up in the province of Ontario, Canada, Macdonald eventually settled in the state of California, where he died in 1983.
Lew Archer is a fictional character created by American-Canadian writer Ross Macdonald. Archer is a private detective working in Southern California. Between the late 1940s and the early '70s, the character appeared in 18 novels and a handful of shorter works as well as several film and television adaptations. Macdonald's Archer novels have been praised for building on the foundations of hardboiled fiction by introducing more literary themes and psychological depth to the genre. Critic John Leonard declared that Macdonald had surpassed the limits of crime fiction to become "a major American novelist" while author Eudora Welty was a fan of the series and carried on a lengthy correspondence with Macdonald. The editors of Thrilling Detective wrote: "The greatest P.I. series ever written? Probably."
The Moving Target is a detective novel by writer Ross Macdonald, first published by Alfred A. Knopf in April 1949.
The Drowning Pool is a 1950 mystery novel by American writer Ross Macdonald, then writing under the name John Ross Macdonald. It is his second book in the series revolving around the cases of private detective Lew Archer and was published by Alfred A. Knopf in the US and in 1952 by Cassell in the UK.
Blue City is a thriller written in 1947 by Ross Macdonald. The novel was originally released under his real name, Kenneth Millar, by Alfred A. Knopf, while a condensed version was serialized in the August and September 1950 issues of Esquire.
The Way Some People Die is a detective mystery published, under the author's then pseudonym of John Ross Macdonald, by Alfred A. Knopf in 1951. It is Ross Macdonald's third book to feature his private eye Lew Archer. The plot centres on the activities of heroin-traffickers, a form of criminality which Macdonald particularly despised.
Cherchez la femme is a French phrase which literally means 'look for the woman'. It is a cliche in detective fiction, used to suggest that a mystery can be resolved by identifying a femme fatale or female love interest.
The Drowning Pool is a 1975 American mystery thriller film directed by Stuart Rosenberg, and based upon Ross Macdonald's novel of the same name. The film stars Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, and Anthony Franciosa, and is a loose sequel to Harper. The setting is shifted from California to Louisiana.
Harper is a 1966 American mystery thriller film directed by Jack Smight from a screenplay by William Goldman, based on the 1949 novel The Moving Target by Ross Macdonald. The film stars Paul Newman as Lew Harper, with a cast that includes Lauren Bacall, Julie Harris, Arthur Hill, Janet Leigh, Pamela Tiffin, Robert Wagner, and Shelley Winters.
The Galton Case is the eighth novel in the Lew Archer series by Ross Macdonald. It was published in the US in 1959 by Knopf and in 1960 by Cassel & Co in the UK. The book has been widely translated, although the title has been changed in some cases to highlight other aspects of the story. In French it appeared as Un Mortel Air De Famille ; in Turkish as Ölmek Yasak ; in Finnish as Rouva Galtonin perillinen ; and in Italian as Il ragazzo senza storia. Macdonald thought that with this novel he found his own voice as a writer.
The Doomsters is a 1958 mystery novel by American writer Ross Macdonald, the seventh book in his Lew Archer series.
Black Money is a novel by US American mystery writer Ross Macdonald. Published in 1966, it is among the most powerful of all Ross Macdonald's novels and was his own personal choice as his best book.
The Zebra-Striped Hearse is a detective mystery written in 1962 by American author Ross Macdonald, the tenth book featuring his private eye, Lew Archer. The Coen Brothers wrote an as-yet-unproduced screenplay based on the novel for Joel Silver.
Find a Victim is a novel by Canadian-American author Ross Macdonald, the fifth in a series featuring detective Lew Archer. It was published as a Borzoi Book by Alfred A. Knopf in 1954 and mass marketed by Bantam Books in the following year. The first British hardback was published in Cassell & Company's Crime Connoisseur series in 1955, the same year that a French translation appeared as Vous qui entrez ici. At this period the author was writing under the name John Ross Macdonald and was also identified as Kenneth Millar on the Knopf dust jacket.
The Ivory Grin is Ross Macdonald's fourth Lew Archer detective novel, published in April 1952. Like most of Macdonald's, the plot is complicated and takes place mostly in out of the way Californian locations.
The Name Is Archer is a collection of short stories written by Ross Macdonald and featuring his detective hero, Lew Archer. Originally compiled in 1955 and published under the name John Ross Macdonald, more stories were added in later collections under different titles.
Meet Me at the Morgue is the ninth novel completed by Ross Macdonald. Credited at the time to John Ross Macdonald, it was published in 1953 by A. A. Knopf and released as a paperback by Pocket Books the following year. In that year too the book was published by Cassell & Co in the UK under the title Experience with Evil. There had been disagreement over the novel's original title. Knopf turned down Macdonald's suggestion of Message from Hell and Macdonald turned down the suggestion of The Convenient Corpse from Pocket Books.
The Chill is Ross Macdonald's eleventh Lew Archer novel, published by Alfred A. Knopf in their Borzoi series in 1964. Macdonald's reputation was now growing and the front cover bore the announcement "a new novel by the author of The Zebra Striped Hearse", which had been well received. After the book was published by Collins Publishers in the UK that year, it went on to gain the Silver Dagger award for 1964 from the British Crime Writers Association. A French translation also appeared in 1964, followed by a Danish translation the following year and an Italian translation in 1967.
The Wycherly Woman is a detective novel by Ross Macdonald. The ninth to feature Lew Archer, it was published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1961. Earlier that year a condensed version had appeared in Cosmopolitan under the title "Take My Daughter Home". The novel was nominated for the 1962 Edgar Awards, and earlier included in Anthony Boucher’s best crime fiction list of 1961.
The Far Side of the Dollar is the 12th detective novel by Ross Macdonald to feature his private eye, Lew Archer. A condensed version was published by Cosmopolitan in 1964; in 1965 the full version appeared in the US from Alfred A. Knopf and in the UK from Collins Publishers.