The Little Sister (Philip Marlowe #5) 
"She was a small, neat, rather prissy-looking girl with primly smooth brown hair and rimless glasses. She had no make-up, no lipstick and no jewelry. The rimless glasses gave her that librarian's look." But, Marlowe, you surely must know what she would look like without the glasses, wearing her hair loose and a little make-up and jewelry. Beware! A femme fatale in hiding. This has always remained my very favorite Raymond Chandler novel. And as far as The Little Sister goes, there is more than

Raymond Chandler and Philip Marlowe , they are an iconic pair you cannot separate or wish to, the master writer and the fictional character more real than some bipeds. The flavor of Los Angeles in the 1940's you could almost taste, and bringing Hollywood into the mixture soaks the atmosphere in tinsel, cheap it may be yet L.A. wouldn't be the same without the glamour and the vulgar. Add a murder mystery and Chandler who knew the business that built the city, he worked in the studio system ( as a
Written in the late '40s when RC was sick of Hollywood and depressed about his wife's health (she was 17 years older),RC was fretful and feeling more insolent than usual. So he used Movieland as his setting. The titular sister, from the midwest, lands in SoCal looking for her missing brother as, we later learn, they both want to blackmail their Almost Famous Sis who's in Pix. From real life RC borrows a scandal involving mobster Bugsy Siegel who was allowed out of prison for a few days to visit
My, was Raymond in a foul mood when he wrote this. Fine by me as I was in one when I read it.I see this book's copped a bit on goodreads. Unfair. Totally unfair. If you get the drift, the guy's got the shits and he is looking at life from the wrong end of the telescope, he does such a good job of that.There are two types of people in the world. The ones for whom money is everything: they need to get as much of it as possible, take it willynilly from whereever they can, make sure nobody else gets
Another wonderful, twisting tale with language which flows like a torrent down a waterfall. Just class.I highlighted a good deal of this but will settle on just two here:'Her voice froze on the second word, like a feather taking off in a sudden draught. Then it cooed and hovered and soared and eddied and the silent invitation of a smile picked delicately at the corners of her lips, very slowly like a child trying to pick up a snowflake.'And...'She smelled the way the Taj Mahal looks by
Raymond Chandler
Paperback | Pages: 250 pages Rating: 4.02 | 12293 Users | 652 Reviews

Be Specific About Of Books The Little Sister (Philip Marlowe #5)
Title | : | The Little Sister (Philip Marlowe #5) |
Author | : | Raymond Chandler |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 250 pages |
Published | : | August 12th 1988 by Vintage Crime/Black Lizard (first published 1949) |
Categories | : | Mystery. Fiction. Crime. Noir. Detective. Classics. Hard Boiled |
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Raymond Chandler and Philip Marlowe , they are an iconic pair you cannot separate or wish to, the master writer and the fictional character more real than some bipeds. The flavor of Los Angeles in the 1940's you could almost taste, and bringing Hollywood into the mixture soaks the atmosphere in tinsel, cheap it may be yet L.A. wouldn't be the same without the glamour and the vulgar. Add a murder mystery and Chandler who knew the business that built the city, he worked in the studio system ( as a screenwriter) and disliked greatly. A young apparently innocent looking girl from Manhattan, Kansas Orfamay Quest has a job for Mr. Marlowe find her missing older brother Orrin involved in an illicit trade. Miss Quest is not what she appears to be, pretending runs in the family and she is the best one of them. Philip doesn't locate big brother in his seedy apartment but discovers dead bodies everywhere he looks and the Los Angeles police are not happy far from it, Lieutenant Christy French and partner Fred Beifus, they give the detective a rough reception at their downtown headquarters, ( the Bay City boys also hate him and participate in the festivities ) Orrin works for a criminal doctor Lagardie after losing his legitimate work in Bay City ( Santa Monica). The Hollywood actress and rising movie star Mavis Weld is the sister of both Orrin and Orfamay a very good friend of a gangster Steegrave trying to go strait but having difficulties, she is being blackmailed. Her studio has high hopes for her and will do anything to shield their investment. She is ambitious, has become corrupt in the system like many others and shows contempt for Marlowe which the gumshoe doesn't mind he likes the view . Minor star Dolores Gonzales also is in the plot and likes Mr. Marlowe a lot, she wants to protect Marvis, still the sleaze permeates all, the artificial climate takes a toll. Chandler gives this novel another jolt of entertainment, with a hard-boiled detective as only he could create, the words flow cynically, the killings abound yet this is his world which the writer knew intimately, drugs, prostitution, failures of the discarded actors that the film industry wishes to hide , however he lived in the muck and we benefit from his experiences.The fans will enjoy this and mystery aficionados too, there was only one Raymond Chandler and the public is grateful...Itemize Books In Pursuance Of The Little Sister (Philip Marlowe #5)
Original Title: | The Little Sister |
ISBN: | 039475767X (ISBN13: 9780394757674) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Philip Marlowe #5 |
Characters: | Lee Farrell, Philip Marlowe, Orfamay Quest, Dr. Vincent Lagardie, Dolores Gonzales, Kenny Haste, Mavis Weld, Lester B. Clausen, G. W. Hambleton, Christy French, Joseph P. Toad, Sherry Ballou, Moss Spink, Helen Grady, Jules Oppenheimer, Orrin Quest, Detective-Lieutenant Fred Beifus, Lieutenant Moses Maglashan, Steelgrave, Sewell Endicott |
Setting: | Los Angeles, California(United States) California(United States) |
Rating Of Books The Little Sister (Philip Marlowe #5)
Ratings: 4.02 From 12293 Users | 652 ReviewsColumn Of Books The Little Sister (Philip Marlowe #5)
Turn left; now go 3.15 miles south and make a U-turn back .34 miles; go right 5.34 miles; and on and on. That was how this hard-boiled noir classic read for me from about half way through to the end. When I thought I had everything in its right place, who did what to whom and why, everything got jumbled again and Im back to square one and not sure who did what in the last 20 pages I read. It was a very complex novel but an excellent example of my favorite genre from one of my favorite writers"She was a small, neat, rather prissy-looking girl with primly smooth brown hair and rimless glasses. She had no make-up, no lipstick and no jewelry. The rimless glasses gave her that librarian's look." But, Marlowe, you surely must know what she would look like without the glasses, wearing her hair loose and a little make-up and jewelry. Beware! A femme fatale in hiding. This has always remained my very favorite Raymond Chandler novel. And as far as The Little Sister goes, there is more than

Raymond Chandler and Philip Marlowe , they are an iconic pair you cannot separate or wish to, the master writer and the fictional character more real than some bipeds. The flavor of Los Angeles in the 1940's you could almost taste, and bringing Hollywood into the mixture soaks the atmosphere in tinsel, cheap it may be yet L.A. wouldn't be the same without the glamour and the vulgar. Add a murder mystery and Chandler who knew the business that built the city, he worked in the studio system ( as a
Written in the late '40s when RC was sick of Hollywood and depressed about his wife's health (she was 17 years older),RC was fretful and feeling more insolent than usual. So he used Movieland as his setting. The titular sister, from the midwest, lands in SoCal looking for her missing brother as, we later learn, they both want to blackmail their Almost Famous Sis who's in Pix. From real life RC borrows a scandal involving mobster Bugsy Siegel who was allowed out of prison for a few days to visit
My, was Raymond in a foul mood when he wrote this. Fine by me as I was in one when I read it.I see this book's copped a bit on goodreads. Unfair. Totally unfair. If you get the drift, the guy's got the shits and he is looking at life from the wrong end of the telescope, he does such a good job of that.There are two types of people in the world. The ones for whom money is everything: they need to get as much of it as possible, take it willynilly from whereever they can, make sure nobody else gets
Another wonderful, twisting tale with language which flows like a torrent down a waterfall. Just class.I highlighted a good deal of this but will settle on just two here:'Her voice froze on the second word, like a feather taking off in a sudden draught. Then it cooed and hovered and soared and eddied and the silent invitation of a smile picked delicately at the corners of her lips, very slowly like a child trying to pick up a snowflake.'And...'She smelled the way the Taj Mahal looks by
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