By Published: March 28, 2024

Remembering writer Raymond Chandler at the 65th anniversary of his death, a CU Ā鶹¹ŁĶų English scholar reflects on the hard-boiled investigator and why this character still appeals


Philip Marlowe was in a grubby waterfront hotel room ā€œwith a hard bed and a mattress slightly thicker than the cotton blanket that covered it.ā€

A neon light outside the window illuminated the room in red. He got up to splash cold water on his face, feeling ā€œa little better, but very little. I needed a drink, I needed a lot of life insurance, I needed a vacation, I needed a home in the country. What I had was a coat, a hat and a gun. I put them on and went out of the room.ā€

Call him hard-boiled or hard-bitten, call him jaded, call him a relicā€”heā€™s all those things, and one of the most alluring and enduring archetypes in fiction. As written by Raymond Chandler, who died 65 years ago this week and who is increasingly recognized for the artistry of his writing, Philip Marlowe is the private investigator whoā€™s seen it all and is surprised by little. He drinks too much, smokes too much, cracks wise, cracks the case and is, above all things, alone.

Mary Klages

Mary Klages, a CU Ā鶹¹ŁĶų associate professor of English, notes that part of the appeal of the hard-boiled investigator character is he's a "knight in soiled armor."

Many consider Marlowe the patron not-saint of all the hard-boiled and hard-edged private investigators who followed, the semi-heroes of literature and film who solve crime, yes, but generally by immersing themselves in the sordid world of itā€”at the expense of relationships, health, happiness and sometimes the law.

What is the continued appeal of the hard-boiled investigator character, whoā€™s brilliant and kind of a jerk, handy in a fight and charming when itā€™s convenient, all kinds of troubleā€”or troubledā€”and the ultimate cipher?

ā€œWhat Marlowe and other characters like him bring in is being more of the people,ā€ says Mary Klages, an associate professor of English who teaches a course called . ā€œ(Marlowe) doesnā€™t have a partner, never has anybody he works with, doesnā€™t need a Watson figure to explain how the great brain works. Heā€™s just a guy, and heā€™s not apart from the dirty world that he has to investigate. He doesnā€™t have this sensibility of, ā€˜Oh, bad guys and criminals, theyā€™re over there and Iā€™m something differentā€™ that you get with other detectives or investigators.ā€

A desire for story

Understanding the appeal of the jaded investigator whose native habitat seems to be dark and rainy city streets begins with understanding the basic human desire for story, Klages says.Ģż

ā€œHuman beings love narratives, we love telling stories, and with mysteries thereā€™s that added element of, ā€˜Can I figure out who the villain is?ā€™ Then we get the reward of a sense of justiceā€”somebody out there is fighting crime and that makes us feel a little bit better about living in a dangerous real world. As a reader, I can go to mystery novel and say, ā€˜Oh, if only there were a Sherlock Holmes or a V.I. Warshawski in the real world solving crimes and making us safer.ā€™

ā€œAlso, storiesā€”especially mysteriesā€”give us all that in nice container. Anything can happen, but itā€™s not going to happen. Reading words on a page lets us empathize with characters and have a vicarious experience that we donā€™t want to have happen in real life. We experience it in a way that makes it vivid, and that has shape and that wraps up in the end with a nice, neat bow. Thatā€™s the convention in most mystery stories.ā€

And while there are as many types of mystery solvers in fiction as there are audiences for themā€”from elderly knitting enthusiasts and roadster-driving teens to insufferable British geniuses with superhuman powers of observationā€”the hard-boiled private eye character brought a new and interesting layer to the mystery genre.

Covers of Black Mask magazine

Both Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett honed the literary hard-boiled investigator writing for Black Mask magazine.

A knight in soiled armor

The character really came into his ownā€”and in the beginning, it was always a ā€œheā€ā€”when the pulp magazine was launched in April 1920 by H.L. Mencken and George Jean Nathan. One of the first iterations of the hard-boiled investigator slouched through its pages in December 1922, embodied in Carroll John Dalyā€™s novella ā€œThe False Burton Combs.ā€

The titular false Burton Combs memorably introduces himself in the story's fourth paragraph: ā€œI ainā€™t a crook; just a gentleman adventurer and make my living working against the law breakers. Not that work with the policeā€”no, not me. Iā€™m no knight errant either. It just came to me that the simplest people in the world are crooks.ā€

His progeny includes Philip Marlowe and Sam Spade, Mike Hammer, V.I. Warshawski, Harry Hole, the Continental Op, Kurt Wallander and further generations of fictional investigators who often exist as shadow opposites to the upstanding police detectives, the crime-solving priests, the kooky Southern bookstore owners who happen upon murder, the otherwise decent people in whom readers like to think they see themselves.

Both Chandler and Dashiell Hammett, who wrote hard-boiled investigator Sam Spade, published in Black Mask and brought dimension to an essentially unknowableā€”and sometimes unlikableā€”but always compellingĢżarchetype.

ā€œIn Philip Marlowe, Chandler gives us guy whoā€™s educated, whoā€™s been to college, who quotes Shakespeare, but works with lowlifes,ā€ Klages explains. ā€œHe gives us a portrait of a very dirty underworld where you canā€™t trust anybody, the police are corrupt, rich people are corrupt, and he looks for a kind of moral compass to guide him. I think of Marlowe as a knight in soiled armor, and Chandler makes that image at the very beginning of ā€˜The Big Sleep.ā€™ He has Marlowe go into the house of a very rich client and heā€™s looking at this stained-glass window that shows a knight trying to free a woman from being chained up around a tree. Marlowe says something like, ā€˜I wanted to go up and help the guy, but then I realized he was never going to get that woman free.ā€™

ā€œMarloweā€™s attitude is, ā€˜I know thereā€™s supposed to be nobility and self-sacrifice in world, but I donā€™t see them, and I donā€™tā€™ believe in them. But I still want there to be some kind of morality, some kind of code,ā€™ so he makes his own. He doesnā€™t follow anything traditional, heā€™s not religious, not spiritual, not a law and order and justice guy, so he makes his own code, and thatā€™s part of the ongoing appeal of this character, this knight in soiled armor.ā€

Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall in 'The Big Sleep'

Humphrey Bogart (left) starred as Philip Marlowe in "The Big Sleep" with Lauren Bacall. (Photo:ĢżNational Motion Picture Council)

Trench coats for a modern audience

Philip Marlowe was notably embodied on film by Humphrey Bogart, as was Dashiell Hammettā€™s Sam Spade, and heā€™s the image many people bring to mind when they think of the hard-boiled investigator, Klages saysā€”trench coat, cigarette and, by todayā€™s standards, appalling attitudes toward women.

In fact, some might claim that the hard-bitten investigator is a relic of the past, but Klages argues that this character and what heĢż(and not as often, she) represents and embodies remains relevant for modern audiences.

ā€œItā€™s this idea of, ā€˜Why should we believe in anything when weā€™ve had time after time the proof that the politicians are corrupt, the police are corrupt, itā€™s all over the place,ā€™ā€ Klages says. ā€œI think the question is, from a hard-boiled perspective, why would anybody give a damn about anybody else? You have to be in it for yourself, and I think the genius of Chandlerā€™s portrait of Marlowe is that you have to be in it for yourself, yes, but it has to be something bigger that you stand for rather than just your own selfishness and your own greed and desires.ā€

She notes that Marlowe sees the world with very clear eyes, without delusion or traditional notions of hope, yet he still crafts his own kind of hope and his own code of morality, which resonates with readers and viewers today.

ā€œI just watched first season of ā€˜True Detectiveā€™ and thatā€™s a perfect example,ā€ Klages says. ā€œYouā€™ve got two guys with torn up, terrible lives and part of the plot is, letā€™s find out how these guys with messed up lives can pursue justice. How do you take somebody who is flawed as a character and make them be the vehicle for something as elevated as truth, justice and the American way? As people who love stories, we like that complication.ā€

Top image: Humphrey Bogart (center) as Philip Marlowe in "The Big Sleep." (Photo: Warner Bros.)


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