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The Long-Legged Fly
The Long-Legged Fly | James Sallis
3 posts | 3 read | 3 to read
Take a little James Lee Burke, a touch of Ross Macdonald, and a dash of Raymond Chandler, the conventions of the classic American detective story and the fine, thoughtful writing of an original new talent - and you still don't quite have The Long-Legged Fly. This is a smart, tough novel teeming with life and always on the verge of igniting from its own energy. In steamy modern-day New Orleans, black private detective Lew Griffin has once again taken on a seemingly hopeless missing persons case. The trail takes him through the underbelly of the French Quarter with its bar girls, pimps, and tourist attractions. As his search leads to one violent dead end, and then another, Griffin is confronted with the prospect that his own life has come to resemble those he is attempting to find; he is becoming as lost as the frail identities he tries to recover. Waking in a hospital after an alcoholic binge, Griffin finds another chance in a nurse who comes to love him, but again he reverts to his old life in the mean streets among the predators and their prey. When his son vanishes, Griffin searches back through the tangles and tatters of his life, knowing that he must solve his personal mysteries before he can venture after the whereabouts of others. The Long-Legged Fly is exciting, visceral entertainment that takes the reader into a corner of society where life is fought for as much as it is lived. James Sallis has written a compelling novel that succeeds both as detective fiction and worthy literature.
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Tonton
The Long-Legged Fly | James Sallis
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Pickpick

The book I read is Black Hornet, but it is not up on Litsy. James Sallis is a wonderful writer, who brings a simple seeming subtlety, world weary regret, and an evocative yearning atmosphere very economically and with great clarity to his work. A white newspaper columnist is shot in a night time random shooting after a drink with a black Ray Donovan fixer type in New Orleans in the late ‘60‘s. And the hunt for the sniper begins. Excellent!

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CaseyMoore
The Long-Legged Fly | James Sallis
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Pickpick

Great read. Sad that I am only discovering it now. Not your ordinary crime/private eye book. One I am going to reflect on for awhile.

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GuiltyFeat
The Long-Legged Fly | James Sallis
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Mehso-so

This was an odd one. I didn't know before I started that Lew Griffin was a black PI. I didn't know until after I finished that James Sallis was a white author. I wish these things weren't relevant, but in a world where Walter Mosley and Attica Locke, among others, are writing so powerfully, much of this felt inauthentic.

Add to that the narrative peculiarities and this has left me perplexed and unsure about reading another.