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In Reply to: What's wrong with Black Dahlia? posted by sjb on September 15, 2006 at 08:40:07:
"James Ellroy talks the way he writes, the way his doomed characters tell the stories of their lives: monotoned, terse, poetic, brutal. Here’s what he says about the origins and the genesis of the film adaptation of his novel The Black Dahlia."-- Boston Phoenix
Follow Ups:
That's a matter of taste. Read one a ok book, tried Black Dahlia and couldn't get into...yawn.
The book starts out, imo, quite slow and then erupts into nightmare.
The main thing about it is that the Dahlia's murder is really the background for the story about the relationship between the cops and their respective obsessions and the prices they pay for them.
I am actually re-reading it now prior to the film opening here.
Ellroy's style has tightened over the years into a staccatto almost machine gun rattle of patois and invective.
His books are absolutely jam packed with dialogue and thought.
Until I recently learned of the changes to his life over the last couple of years, I seriously doubted he would write another book.
i might give the book a try. If you like nonfiction, true crime try "Excellent Cadavers." I think they made movie based on this book.
His portrayal or america in the 40/50s isn't a pretty one and he writes about a lot of white racists, but his contention is that both government and the police were like this.
His is a dark undebelly world just out of the view of your average person. It can be disturbing.
Good grief Clark, we both like Ellroy.
I don't know which of us should be more scared!
I seem to remember that at one time Ellroy thought his own father might have killed the Dahlia.
Have you read what is it... My Dark Places where Ellroy investigates his mother's murder?
Has anyone seen the film yet?
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