Archer: The Galton Case

Ten years or so ago I did a review of a book called What We See When We Read by Peter Mendelsund, which is all about what the title indicates. Mendelsund makes the case that reading only provides fragments that our imaginations have to fill in. If I recall correctly one example he uses is what Anna Karenina looks like. You might say Greta Garbo, Vivien Leigh, or Keira Knightley, but that’s allowing for the influence of a more visual medium. When reading any text our response as readers is to create a “readerly vision” more grounded in personal associations and what we find significant. It’s a bit like reading a sentence with all the vowels left out and still having no trouble reconstructing what all the words say because our brains just automatically fill in the blanks. We don’t see what’s missing.

I think this is a profound idea. All reading involves a kind of skimming, and if we can’t say after we’re finished reading the book anything about Anna Karenina’s appearance, that’s because our brains have inserted a filler into that place in the text, or else we skip over it as not being that important.

What made me think of this while re-reading The Galton Case after many years was that there were a number of places in the opening pages where I caught myself doing this same skimming. Detective Lew Archer enters a lawyer’s office where a secretary sits behind a desk that has “a bowl full of floating begonias” on it. Normally I’d just pass over this bit of detail but for some reason I stopped and asked myself if knew what a begonia actually looks like. I realized I did not. So I went online and found out that there are many different kinds of begonias, varying widely in their appearance. This is not a flower I would have any confidence I’d be able to identify.

Later in the same paragraph Archer takes a seat in a “Harvard chair.” Again I paused. Was this a particular kind of chair? Apparently it is, being a style of armchair with a deep seat and railed back and arms. An official Harvard chair would also have the university’s seal. They were used in Harvard’s dining hall back in the day.

A couple of pages later we find Archer proceeding along a “black-and-white terrazzo corridor.” I just assumed a black-and-white pattern of tiling, but then stopped myself as I had with the begonias. What does terrazzo look like? So I looked this up as well and it wasn’t what I had thought at all. Terrazzo is a kind of flooring with chips of marble, quartz, granite or glass floating in a polished cement, polymer, or concrete binding.

Now I’m sure many readers, and indeed many people reading this, will know all of these, or at least two out of the three. But if I’d just been in my normal reading mode I would have only registered that Archer saw a flower on a desk, sat in a chair, and then walked down a corridor with some kind of black-and-white pattern in the flooring. I would have been skimming. And if you’d asked me what I saw when I was reading, the answer would have been far less than the information given.

On to the book. By which I mean not these details, but the story. Which itself displays a bias toward plot and against décor.

Macdonald himself considered The Galton Case to be his first complete Archer novel, figuring it had taken him a dozen years to get to this point. Which sounds about right, but also says something, and by that I mean nothing good, about how today we expect artists’ careers to be front-loaded. If you don’t have a hit with your first or second album, novel, or movie then it’s pretty much not going to happen for you. This is not the way it works, at least in most cases. It takes a while for someone to hit their stride. Faulkner, for example, didn’t give up after Soldier’s Pay and Mosquitos. I don’t think our current acceleration of the process does anyone any favours, but there you have it.

Anyway, Macdonald may have been more comfortable but he also wasn’t breaking much new ground here. Once again we start with Archer making a visit to some stately Californian mansion where the Grande Dame hires him to find a missing person. Money is no object, as “the Galton household had hot and cold running money piped in from an inexhaustible reservoir.” Meaning oil money, I believe. His investigation involves Archer wading through some tortured family history (“Nothing is lost in the universe”), fighting in a mostly friendly way with the law, and getting the crap beaten out of him by some bad guys who aren’t that important to what’s really going on. All of which was par for the course in an Archer novel by this point.

Stylistically there are the usual purple flourishes that rarely feel out of place. OK, the tires of a car that “shuddered and screeched like lost souls under punishment” is too much, but that’s an example of one that stood out. Better is the desk clerk at a seedy hotel who “had large sorrowful eyes and a very flexible manner, as if he had been run through all the wringers of circumstance.” I miss those desk clerks. But then, I’m not often in those sorts of hotels anymore.

I’m not sure I buy all the coincidences in the plot that leave young John Galton right where he’s supposed to be in the end. More than that though, I didn’t care for the moral lens that Archer brings to the case. In the first place we get the harsh treatment of Gordon Sable. “You surprise me, Lew,” Sable tells him at the end. “I didn’t expect you to bear down so hard. You have a reputation for tempering the wind to the shorn lamb.” Now to be sure Sable is no angel. He’s one of those compromised older men with a young wife/lover, like Graves in The Moving Target. But in his defence, the guy has been through a lot, and the people he was dealing with were worse.

I just wrote “defence,” which is the Canadian spelling. This makes for the big giveaway clue here, as Galton Junior is revealed to be Canadian by his spelling of “labour.” I got a smile out of that. Macdonald himself was born in the U.S. but raised in Canada and his wife was Canadian. This is one reason people have seen a connection between Macdonald and Galton, and in fact he did admit to some autobiographical elements being present. Which leads me to the second part of the moral judging I mentioned. If Archer bears down hard on Sable he seems to let Galton off the hook a little too easily for my liking. Whatever the facts of the case at the end, Galton is a nasty little schemer, a violent drunk and guilty of at least manslaughter (and probably worse). But he ends up winning the lottery, getting both the money and the girl. Will he “take good care of her,” as Archer wishes? I don’t see any reason to be hopeful. This is a young man on the make. If there’s any justice it’s in the hints dropped earlier about how “money was never free” and the walls of a big estate can be like a prison. I don’t think that bothers John at all though.

Archer index

Middle of the road

Luckily there wasn’t a lot of traffic to stop this guy from crossing the road. There never is when I go for a walk. I like to be out and about before anyone else. So it’s just me and the skunks and the foxes and the geese.

To infinity, and beyond

Reading A Dark Knight in Aurora I came across this description of the “Ultraception symbol” that mass murderer James Holmes invented. The Ultraception takes the form of “a circle enclosing an infinity symbol (called a lemniscate) that touches both sides, with a seriffed numeral ‘1’ through the middle.”

The word lemniscate (which, I note in passing, WordPress spellcheck does not recognize) comes from the Latin for a ribbon, or decorated with ribbons, and it derives from a Greek word meaning the same. Now if you’re a mathematician, which I am not, you’ll know that lemniscate has a more technical meaning, referring to a figure-eight shaped curve whose equation in polar coordinates is ρ2=a2 cos 2θ or ρ2=a2 sin 2θ. I gather from the Internet that there are different kinds of lemniscates named after different mathematicians. But I don’t know anything about that. I just thought it interesting that there’s a word for the infinity symbol, which is basically a figure eight turned on its side. That’s something I didn’t know.

Words, words, words

There goes the neighbourhood III

They weren’t messing around this week! Here are some daily snaps taken from the other side of the project from the previous updates (see here and here).

Tuesday.

 

Wednesday.

Thursday.

Friday.

And here’s what things looked like after work on Friday from the other side of the street. (You can click on the pics to make them bigger.)

American Vampire Book One

American Vampire Book One

This is a comic that really impressed me. Writer Scott Snyder (with some help from Stephen King) and artist Rafael Albuquerque actually took the tired vampire trope and made something that felt fresh and interesting out of it. This is a challenge that comic writers and artists are always being tasked with – how can you tell a “new” Batman or Spider-Man story? – and it’s something they probably don’t get enough credit for.

So the idea here is that vampires are a species of predator that has arrived in the New World (that would be America), not just to feed on people (“Americans are only food, like the great slabs of cow they shovel down their throats!”) but to get rich. These vampires are nasty, rich, decadent types hailing from Britain, France, Russia, and other parts of the continent. Because they live forever they can invest for the long term and basically they form a cabal of hypercapitalists in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.

A run in with a deadly gunslinger named Skinner Sweet sends the vampire bloodline off on a tangent though. Sweet is infected by one of the European vampires just as he’s being killed, which means he comes back from the dead as a vampire himself. But not just any vampire but a new-and-improved American vampire. Which means, among other things, that he has a greater tolerance for sunlight. Then Sweet brings Pearl Jones, a young woman hoping to make her way in Hollywood, back as a vampire after she’s killed by the same crew of Eurotrash in the 1920s. After she “rises” Sweet explains what’s happened to her as a kind of evolution: European vampires are, “in automotive terms . . . like old, broken-down European clunkers” while Skinner and Pearl are “like shiny new 1926 Fords. Top of the line, just rolled out onto the showroom floor. See sometimes, when the blood hits someone new, from somewhere new . . . it makes something new. With a whole new bag of tricks.”

These bloodlines keep branching off (it’s surprisingly easy to get infected by vampire blood and so turn into one), but Skinner Sweet, Pearl Jones, and Jones’s (former) BFF Hattie Hargrove are the main recurring American vampires. Only they don’t work together unless they’re forced to since they all hate each other. And there are other people/vampires involved as well, and they in turn have descendants as the story proceeds to work its way through several decades of American history.

To be honest, at times I did feel a little lost keeping up with who was who and when we were. Part of the problem might have been that I was reading a collection of issues #1-11 in one of DC’s “compact comics” editions. These are at least more reasonably priced (comics and graphic novels have become very expensive) but you do lose something in the smaller format. But I also think the story jerked around a bit too much and was hard to follow in places. Not enough to stop me having a great time with it though.

Graphicalex

Wimsey: The Fantastic Horror of the Cat in the Bag

Feline lovers relax, there is no cat in a bag. It’s just a woman’s head.

This was a very silly story, full of coincidences and not much actual detective work. It even kicks off with a motorcycle race, and Lord Peter in his roadster is bringing up the rear. The first man in the motorcycle is looking to get away from the bag with a head in it. The second motorcyclist is trying to return the bag with the head in it. And Lord Peter thinks the bag contains some of his mother’s stolen jewels and not a head.

I assume Sayers meant it all as a joke, and taken in that spirit it works pretty well. Plus it made me look up what a charabanc is, as I’d forgotten. I swear I once knew, but that was a while ago and the word isn’t used much anymore. Apparently it’s pronounced “sharra-bang” in England and called a “charra” in Wales.

Wimsey index

Running with the Hound

Over at Alex on Film I’ve just posted my notes on another adaptation of the Sherlock Holmes story The Hound of the Baskervilles. There have been many adaptations of The Hound over the years so I thought I’d provide this page as an index to some of them.

First off, here’s a link to my thoughts on Conan Doyle’s book.

Then here’s a link to a graphic novel adaptation, and here’s one to a pop-up version.

Now on to the movies:

Der Hund von Baskerville (1914)
Der Hund von Baskerville (1929)
Der Hund von Baskerville (1937)
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939)
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1959)
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1978)
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1983)
The Hound of the Baskervilles (2000)

As always, you can find my index to reviews of the Holmes canon here, and Holmes on film here.

Window wisdom

I pass this bit of signage every time I walk downtown. It’s been up in the same window for years and seems to express some firmly held beliefs. Beliefs about what, I’m not sure.

So, starting from the top left and working clockwise:

(1) OK, it is a Stephen King quote. I looked it up, though the exact line reads “Any game looks straight if everyone is being cheated at once.” It comes from his novel The Long Walk, which he wrote under his Richard Bachman pseudonym. I haven’t read the book or seen the recent movie.

(2) “That old serpent” is a reference to Satan from the Book of Revelation. I don’t know what the connection to NASA is though. The T-minus is countdown to apocalypse?

(3) Your guess is as good as mine. Is that a cross or a swastika? There’s a Star of David in the middle of what seem to be an arrangement of binaries (wet and dry, material and spiritual) as well as some alchemical symbols thrown in for good measure.

(4) Some sketchy etymology. The word “scientific” comes from Latin and has the meaning of pertaining to knowledge (in Latin scientia). The suffix -fic doesn’t denote fiction but comes from the Latin facere, to make or to do.

I get the impression, taking all of this together, that the person behind the window doesn’t trust science (represented by NASA), or perhaps any kind of received knowledge or wisdom, seeing it as a crooked game. True gnosis only comes through some kind of mystical revelation.

Anyway, there’s also a letter posted on another window that goes into a bit of explanation that I might post a picture of later. I couldn’t make much sense out of it either.

You can click on the pic to make it bigger. Just try not to read too much into the reflection of the handsome fellow in the window.

What happened to YouTube? Part 5

For those of you who have been keeping score, I initially had a post back a couple of years ago complaining about YouTube ads that were 3 or even 8 minutes long. Then I was hit with a 17-minute ad and had to post about that. Then I was served one that was 28 minutes long and only a few days later 31- and 40-minute ads dropped in.

Well, yesterday I was watching a documentary on Frank Lloyd Wright that was 59 minutes long and about ten minutes from the end I was interrupted by an “ad” (“alternative programming” might be a better way of putting it) that apparently would have run 1:15:48 if I’d let the whole thing play. I honestly thought I’d clicked on the “play next video” link by accident. Of course I hit the skip button after the obligatory six seconds so I never even figured out what this ad was for. They were just starting to run the opening credits and music!

Wow. An hour and fifteen minutes. And again I ask: what’s the point? Verily, verily I say unto you that ain’t nobody got time for that. Something has gone haywire.

Anyway, I’ll just keep tracking these things as the enshittification process continues apace. Though I have to think an hour and fifteen minutes will be hard to beat.