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It's interesting to speculate on why writers choose the nominal cover of an acknowledged alias. Some are producing work they see as substantially different from their previous, established image: Ruth Rendell writing as Barbara Vine, for example. It's as much a branding tool as anything else. Sometimes a writer with a 'mainstream' literary reputation wants to keep what he or she feels are genre books separate from their recognised oeuvre; though I'd argue that it's much harder to draw a clear line separating John Banville as Benjamin Black or Joyce Carol Oates as Rosamund Smith than either writer might want to accept. Then there are starnger cases. The apotheosis of the false dichotomy came when Guardian journalist Jonathan Freedland published his first novel, an unthrilling 'thriller', using a deliberately public pseudonym, Sam Bourne, presumably chosen carefully for its Ludlum associations. Because of his media stature under his own name, this ensured maximum publicity, favourable reviews, and yet no slur upon his previously existing journalistic brand.
But Max Allan Collins, as a brand, covers so much and such varied ground I wondered why he needed to use the Patrick Culhane pseudonym for Black Hats, in which he brings Wyatt Earp (and Bat Masterson) face to face with Al Capone in the New York City of the prohibition era. Max is so prolific, and selling so well under his own name, that I suspect he did it so the Culhane books would not be subsumed in his Collins work. Bec
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It is, however, affectionate speculation, because it's one thing to write, as Collins does in the Heller books, about crimes that remain unsolved, or less than satisfactorily solved, where Heller can come up with his own solution, and quite another thing indeed to write a book where the audience is aware (or should be) not only that both Earp and Capone will survive their showdown, but that Capone will also move to Chicago, and achieve his notoriety. In fact, Collins solves this problem quite cleverly, though it becomes pretty obvious what is going on, and the scenario is, in the end a familiar one, not least from other period pieces from the same era, like The Sting. Nor is using the aging Earp that much of an innovation; for example Matt Braun wrote about Bill Tilghman, who was still a lawman in Oklahoma in his 70s. But what makes Collins' book a success is its set-up, the way he contrives the conflict, and especially the conceit of giving Doc Holliday a son, and putting him on one side of the battle, and making him Earp's primary motivation.
Much of the novel tells another story in flashback,
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Collins' Heller books are always filtered through the detective's perceptions, here, Culhane is free to speculate, not about history, but about character, and motivation, and this is what Collins does very well indeed. The Earp story is one I've studied over the years, and what Collins has to say at no point jars what I understand from it, and adds some very subtle shading. It's also a story that has enjoyed, encouraged, and justified constant retelling, and this one is a first-rate addition to the canon—and as usual one with a useful bibliography if you wish to pursue the Earp story further. A diverting and enjoyable book.
Black Hats
Max Allan Collins writing as Patrick Culhane
Harper Collins (2008) £6.99 ISBN 9780060892548
5 comments :
Thank you for this splendid review.
Two things: first, using a penname was foisted upon me as a marketing strategy that was, in my view, unproductive. I doubt I'll use "Culhane" again.
Second, I am at work on a new Heller novel (first of at least two) -- first in almost ten years.
I suspected the answer would be something like that: but it seems like a waste of time given that they need to use the 'real' you to get any benefit from it. Twenty years ago, if you were jumping genres, it would be worth a shot...
Good news re Heller: out of retirement in Miami all the way to Dealy Plaza?
You may be onto something about where I'm headed with Heller...but he's not retired in the early 1960s, he's only in his own early fifties....
check this out:
http://irresistibletargets.blogspot.com/2008/12/jfk-and-unspeakable-my-essay-in-lobster.html
Mike, don't know if you keep track of these comments when added to old posts, but I have no other way to contact you. I want to make sure a copy of the second Spillane/Collins Mike Hammer, THE BIG BANG, has found its way to you. If not, I want to send one. Contact me at macphilms@hotmail.com.
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