Year 1942: Evening of the Nighthawks – Edward Hopper and Joyce Carol Oates

Nighthawks

by Joyce Carol Oates

The three men are fully clothed, long sleeves,
even hats, though it’s indoors, and brightly lit,
and there’s a woman.  The woman is wearing
a short-sleeved red dress cut to expose her arms,
a curve of her creamy chest; she’s contemplating
a cigarette in her right hand thinking
that her companion has finally left his wife but
can she trust him?  Her heavy-lidded eyes,
pouty lipsticked mouth, she has the redhead’s
true pallor like skim milk, damned good-looking
and she guesses she knows it but what exactly
has it gotten her so far, and where? – he’ll start
to feel guilty in a few days, she knows
the signs, and actual smell, sweaty, rancid, like
dirty socks; he’ll slip away to make telephone calls
and she swears she isn’t going to go through that
again, isn’t going to break down crying or begging
nor is she going to scream at him, she’s finished
with all that.  And he’s silent beside her,
not the kind to talk much but he’s thinking
thank God he made the right move at last,
he’s a little dazed like a man in a dream –
is this a dream?—so much that’s wide, still,
mute, horizontal, and the counterman in white,
stooped as he is and unmoving, and the man
on the other stool unmoving except to sip
his coffee; but he’s feeling pretty good,
it’s primarily relief, this time he’s sure
as hell going to make it work, he owes it to her
and to himself, Christ’s sake.  And she’s thinking
the light in this place is too bright, probably
not very flattering, she hates it when her lipstick
wears off and her makeup gets caked, she’d like
to use a ladies’ room but there isn’t one here
and Jesus how long before a gas station opens? –
it’s the middle of the night and she has a feeling
time is never going to budge.  This time
though she isn’t going to demean herself –
he starts in about his wife, his kids, how
he let them down, they trusted him and he let
them down, she’ll slam out of the goddamned room
and if he calls her SUGAR or BABY in that voice,
running his hands over her like he has the right,
she’ll slap his face hard, YOU KNOW I HATE THAT:  STOP.
And he’ll stop.  He’d better.  The angrier
she gets the stiller she is, hasn’t said a word
for the past ten minutes, not a strand
of her hair stirs, and it smells a little like ashes
or like the henna she uses to brighten it,
but the smell is faint or anyway, crazy for her
like he is, he doesn’t notice, or mind –
burying his hot face in her neck, between her cool
breasts, or her legs – wherever she’ll have him, and
whenever.  She’s still contemplating
the cigarette burning in her hand,
the counterman is still stooped gaping
at her, and he doesn’t mind that, why not,
as long as she doesn’t look back, in fact
he’s thinking he’s the luckiest man in the world
so why isn’t he happier? 
(Yale Review, Volume 78, Number 1, 1989)

My Gun Is Quick, by Mickey Spillane – May, 1953 (1950) [James S. Avati]

James S. Avati’s cover art for Signet Books’ 1953 edition of Mickey Spillane’s My Gun Is Quick combines elements of mystery, eroticism, danger, and anonymity (note that Mike Hammer’s face is turned away from the viewer, while the background is little more than shades of red) that are nicely representative of paperback art of this genre and period. 

I don’t know if this scene represents an event described in the novel, but, well, it’s effective.

Admittedly, unlike many of the books featured at this blog, I’ve not – just yet!- actually read this particular work.  However, even having only lightly skimmed the novel’s pages in search of an excerpt representing Spillane’s literary style (see below), the qualities of his writing emerge almost immediately:  Crispness of language; violence – both perpetrated and experienced by protagonist Mike Hammer; a sense of foreboding and mystery; a rapid-fire sense of action; steady continuity and focus, with no extraneous action or dialogue. 

The man was a hell of a writer.   

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You can view the full 1957 United Artists film version of “My Gun Is Quick” (directed by Victor Saville, with Robert Bray as Mike Hammer, and Whitney Blake as Nancy Williams), at the Internet Archive.

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(An excerpt from page 157 of this Signet paperback…  Though the text is actually a single paragraph with only two sentence breaks, for the purpose of this post, I’ve arranged it such that most lines are single phrases, as separated by commas.)

From the river the low cry of dark shapes and winking lights that were ships
echoed and re-echoed through the canyons of the avenues. 
Lola turned the radio on low, bringing in a selection of classical piano pieces,
and I sat there with my eyes closed, listening, thinking, picturing my redhead as a blackmailer. 
In a near sleep I thought it was Red at the piano fingering the keys
while I watched approvingly, my mind filled with thoughts. 
She read my mind and her face grew sad,
sadder than anything I had ever seen and she turned her eyes on me
and I could see clear through them into the goodness of her soul
and I knew she wasn’t a blackmailer and my first impression had been right;
she was a girl who had come face to face with fate and had lost,
but in losing hadn’t lost all,
for there was light of holiness in her face that time when I was her friend,
when I thought that a look like that belonged only in church
when you were praying or getting married or something,
a light that was there now for me to see
while she played a song that was there for me now to see
that told me I was her friend and she was mine,
a friendship that was more than that,
it was a trust and I believed it … knew it and wanted it,
for here was a devotion more than I expected or deserved and I wanted to be worthy of it,
but before I could tell her so Feeney Last’s face swirled up from the mist beside the keyboard,
smirking,
silently mouthing smutty remarks and leering threats
that took the holiness away from the scene and smashed it underfoot,
assailing her with words that replaced the hardness and terror
that had been forgiven before we met and I couldn’t do a thing about it
because my feet were powerless to move
and my hands were glued to my sides by some invisible force that Feeney controlled
and wouldn’t release until he had killed her
and was gone with his laugh ringing in the air and the smirk still on his face,
daring me to follow where I couldn’t answer him;
all I could do was stand there and look at my redhead’s lifeless body
until I focused on her hands
to see where he had scratched her when he took the ring off.

References

James S. Avati…

…at askArt

…at Wikipedia

…at invaluable – The World’s Premier Auctions and Galleries

Mickey Spillane…

…at Wikipedia

…talks Mike Hammer, his writing process, and wealth (1962), at CBC

…February 11, 2004, at Carolina People (Part I)

…February 11, 2004, at Carolina People (Part II)

RIP Mickey Spillane (Mickey Spillane on the Dick Cavett show), at consumerguide

My Gun Is Quick…

…at Wikipedia

…at IMDB

Walk the Dark Streets, by William Krasner – 1949 [Herman E. Bischoff]

Dating back to 2016, this is one of my earliest posts…

walk-the-dark-streets-william-krasner-1950-1The Marne Hotel

The yellow fog was already creeping up around the Marne Hotel,
mingling with the white breath from the sewers,
carrying the faint, sweet, rotting scent off the Ohio River. 
It was not thick yet,
only a gentle curdling in the atmosphere,
but it laid damp greasy fingers on the crumbling granite,
on the pavement,
and on the windshield of the coupe
that Detective Captain Sam Birge of the Homicide Squad
was pulling to the curb across the street.

walk-the-dark-streets-william-krasner-1950-2He looked at his watch.  It was late now.
It was time to be on his way home.
Time to go home, to Edna, and to his son.
He got up.
Nobody called to him as he went through the outer office,
or through the brightly lit corridor.
No one was at the doors as he passed through.
It seemed to him, outside, that it should have been lighter there,
now that it was time for dawn.
But the fog was all around, a moving, blinding sheet,
and he could not see in any direction.
He lifted his eyes toward the sky.
Perhaps it was becoming lighter somewhere,
far above,
but there was not way to be sure.
He turned his collar up and stepped out into the dark street.

A Reference or Two…

Herman E. Bischoff, at…

Grapefruit Moon Gallery (“Lovelorn Beauty Admires 2 WWII Soldiers”)

Live Auctioneers 

WorthPoint (Original Gouache Pulp Illustration)

Rog Peyton, at…

Wikipedia

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

Novacon

Fancyclopedia (Andromeda Bookshop)

October 6, 2016