Kemper's Reviews > The Black Dahlia

The Black Dahlia by James Ellroy
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really liked it
bookshelves: 2016-reread, 5-0, crime-mystery, historical-fiction, whodunit, hooray-for-hollywood, noir, la-quartet-1-2

Ah, the post-war years. America’s golden age when things were so much better than they are today. When no injustice ever occurred, and no one was unfairly treated. Every pay check was a fortune, every meal a banquet, and the worst crime was the odd rapscallion stealing a pie off a window sill. Or maybe sometimes the bisected body of a woman who had been brutally tortured would be left in an empty lot which would put a wildly corrupt police force in a frenzied media spotlight as the cops fruitlessly tried to solve the murder.

It really was a simpler time…

This was the book where James Ellroy stepped his game up from promising mystery writer to a creator of epic historical fiction by mixing a famous unsolved murder with seedy LA history via flawed fictional characters. Our narrator is Dwight ‘Bucky’ Bleichart, a former boxer turned LAPD officer just after World War II. Bucky agrees to fight another cop named Lee Blanchard as part of a departmental publicity stunt. The boxing match makes them partners, but it’s Lee’s girlfriend Kay who unites all three of them into a family. It’s a dead woman that eventually starts to tear them all to pieces.

In reality Elizabeth Short was just another young woman who came to LA with stars in her eyes, but her unsolved murder became one of those crimes that stuck in the public consciousness. Ellroy has talked and written a great deal about how he poured a lot of his unresolved feelings about his mother’s unsolved murder into the Dahlia case, and if there’s one thing you’re sure of by the time you’re done reading it’s that he knows what it’s like to be obsessed and haunted by dead women.

Ellroy is also fascinated by the shady history of LA and its police department, and he uses that knowledge to craft a fantastically violent and corrupt world where the cops are often worse than the criminals they’re arresting. Almost everyone involved the investigation has their own agendas, and the methods used to get what they want are brutal. Nobody gets out clean when it comes to the Dahlia, least of all those who give the most while trying to learn who killed her.

This is a great crime story with a hard boiled edge that was one of the books that made me a huge fan of James Ellroy.
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Reading Progress

August 10, 2016 – Started Reading
August 10, 2016 – Shelved
August 17, 2016 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-17 of 17 (17 new)

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message 1: by Dan (new) - rated it 5 stars

Dan Schwent I snagged this on the kindle on the cheap. Maybe I should reread it soon too


Kemper Dan wrote: "I snagged this on the kindle on the cheap. Maybe I should reread it soon too"

I'd recommend doing it.


message 3: by Dan (new) - rated it 5 stars

Dan Schwent Fine. I'll put Michael Koryta back on deck.


message 4: by Kemper (last edited Aug 12, 2016 09:07AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kemper Dan wrote: "Fine. I'll put Michael Koryta back on deck."

I've been meaning to get back to him too. I think you're good either way.


message 5: by Dan (new) - rated it 5 stars

Dan Schwent I read the first 10% at lunch. I forgot how good it is.


Lauren Perfect opening paragraph. :-)


Kemper Lauren wrote: "Perfect opening paragraph. :-)"

Thanks!


message 8: by Sue (new)

Sue Smith Wow - your opening is just like the entire Perfidia book by Ellroy! Caught me off guard initially. There are definite differences as the Perfidia book progresses, but your initial paragraph is spot on! Great review!


message 9: by Kemper (last edited Aug 17, 2016 02:01PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Kemper Sue wrote: "Wow - your opening is just like the entire Perfidia book by Ellroy! Caught me off guard initially. There are definite differences as the Perfidia book progresses, but your initial paragraph is spot..."

Thanks! If you like that then you should check out my Perfidia review where I did my best attempt at an Ellroy imitation.


message 10: by Dan (new) - rated it 5 stars

Dan Schwent Could you distill this review down to two vague yet emotional sentences, preferably mostly capital letters?


Kemper Dan wrote: "Could you distill this review down to two vague yet emotional sentences, preferably mostly capital letters?"

OMG I'M JUST CRYING!!! CRYING AND LAUGHING AND VOMITING AND I THINK CLUMPS OF MY HAIR ARE FALLING OUT!!


message 12: by Dan (new) - rated it 5 stars

Dan Schwent Bravo, sir! Bravo!


message 13: by Captain (new)

Captain Love, Love, Love this book review!


Kemper Sara wrote: "Love, Love, Love this book review!"

Thanks!


message 15: by Chuck (new) - added it

Chuck White Another great book review, thanks, Kemper. I have always been fascinated with the Black Dahlia case and early Hollywood history in particular, so this book is right up my alley and now in my Amazon cart.


Kemper Chuck wrote: "Another great book review, thanks, Kemper. I have always been fascinated with the Black Dahlia case and early Hollywood history in particular, so this book is right up my alley and now in my Amazon..."

Thanks! I hope you enjoy it.


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