James Thane's Reviews > The Black Dahlia

The Black Dahlia by James Ellroy
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it was amazing
bookshelves: crime-fiction, james-ellroy
Read 2 times. Last read July 25, 2023.

Everyman's Library has just published a new hardback volume containing all four of the novels that comprise James Ellroy's first L.A. Quartet. Ellroy was at my local bookstore a few weeks ago promoting this book and his new novel, This Storm, which is the second novel in his new L. A. Quartet. With signed copies of both books in hand, it seemed like a good time to return to The Black Dahlia, the first novel in the original series.

Set in booming and corrupt post-World War II Los Angeles, it takes as its starting point one of the most famous unsolved murders in the history of L.A., or of the rest of the country for that matter. The victim was a promiscuous young woman named Betty Short, who seemed to captivate everyone who fell into her orbit, at least as Ellroy imagines it. Short was tortured over several days before her body was cut in half, disemboweled, and abandoned in a vacant lot.

Short was only one of a number of young women who came to Hollywood at this time, dreaming of success, only to come to bad end. But the press dubs Short The Black Dahlia, and the discovery of her brutalized body turns into a sensational murder case that captures the city's attention--a case that can make or break reputations. Spearheaded by an ambitious deputy D.A., the police devote thousands of man hours interviewing witnesses, potential subjects, and tracking down leads.

Caught up in the maelstrom are two young cops, Lee Blanchard and Bucky Bleichert. Former boxers, the two men bond over the murder case. They become partners and ultimately fall in love with the same woman. They also fall in love with the Black Dahlia, and the case consumes both of them with irrevocable consequences for them and for the woman, Kay, with whom they are involved.

This novel is in many respects a coming of age story for Bucky Bleichert, who is at the center of the novel. Beginning as an idealistic young patrolman, Bleichert will be tested and corrupted by the Dahlia case in ways he never could have imagined, and the reader watches in awe and horror as he descends into the hell of his obsession with Betty Short.

Mixing fictional characters with real ones, The Black Dahlia is also a stunning portrait of postwar Los Angeles and of the people and the forces that were shaping the city at that time. James Ellroy's own mother was raped and murdered a decade or so after Betty Short, when Ellroy was still a young boy. As in the case of Betty Short, the killer was never found, and this may explain Ellroy's fascination with the Black Dahlia. Blunt, brutal and beautifully written, this is a riveting story and a true classic in the field of crime fiction.
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Reading Progress

March 23, 2010 – Shelved
Started Reading
July 28, 2019 – Shelved as: crime-fiction
July 28, 2019 – Shelved as: james-ellroy
July 28, 2019 – Finished Reading
Started Reading
July 25, 2023 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-21 of 21 (21 new)

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message 1: by Jill (new)

Jill Hutchinson Read it, liked it.......this is an unsolved murder that continues to linger.


Alison Hardtmann I really liked this novel, but Ellroy is a fantastically uneven writer, in my opinion. I look forward to your thoughts about his new book, as I'll need a lot of positive reviews to pick it up. (My Dark Places, a sort of memoir, was his strongest and most problematic book).


James Thane Hi Alison, I don't know My Dark Places; I'll have to look at it at some point. It will probably be a while before I get to the new book since I'm first going to slowly work my way back through the original quartet.


message 4: by Jill (new)

Jill Hutchinson I would agree, Alison. Ellroy is very inconsistent but when he is good, he is good.


message 5: by Kathy (new)

Kathy I read this year's ago, long before I heard about Ellroy's mother. Good story but had no desire to read the other books


message 6: by Cheryl (new)

Cheryl Enjoyed your review, James.


message 7: by L (new) - added it

L I might have to try this, despite your note that it is blunt and brutal. That "beautifully written" is a hook, as it the fact that this is a classic in the genre.


Mary Ha! I just started reading Black Dahlia yesterday! Picked up an old paperback at a library sale. Loving it so far, although I’ve had to look up some of the words, lol! Smokers, laudanum, Zoot suit wars...a bit before my time!


message 9: by Tyler (new)

Tyler I read this a few time many years ago and always considered it to be one of the most over the top books I've read. Reread this year and it has lost none bludgeoning power. It's kind of exhausting to read by the end but a classic.


message 10: by Pat (new)

Pat Fantastic review James. I haven't been game to read this after first learning of this story through Pierre LeMaitre's book Irene which referenced some of the old classic detective books. It all sounded really gruesome. But LeMaitre's story wasn't un-gruesome - dark and brooding it was.


message 11: by Kaceey (new)

Kaceey Excellent review James!


James Thane Kaceey wrote: "Excellent review James!"

Thanks, Kaceey.


message 13: by K (new) - rated it 5 stars

K Your review is even better the second time around. Hope you’re staying cool.


James Thane K wrote: "Your review is even better the second time around. Hope you’re staying cool."

Thanks Kevan, and yes I am. A beautiful, sunny day in the mid-70s here in Montana.


message 15: by Carol (new)

Carol A fascinating back story and revised review, James. I've never read this author, but this sounds excellent.


James Thane Carol wrote: "A fascinating back story and revised review, James. I've never read this author, but this sounds excellent."

Thanks, Carol.


message 17: by Glen (new)

Glen Have you read Max Allan Collins's book on this mystery?


James Thane Glen wrote: "Have you read Max Allan Collins's book on this mystery?"

No, I don't know that one.


message 19: by Glen (new)

Glen It's book 11 in the Nathan Heller series, Angel in Black. Sometimes it's interesting to see what two different authors do with the same subject.


message 20: by HBalikov (new)

HBalikov Glen wrote: "It's book 11 in the Nathan Heller series, Angel in Black. Sometimes it's interesting to see what two different authors do with the same subject."

Collins version is a tough but interesting read https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 21: by HBalikov (new)

HBalikov How different is Ellroy's L.A. from that we find in Chandler's The Big Sleep?


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