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Perfidia by James Ellroy, book review: The 'Finnegans Wake' of crime novels

 

Barry Forshaw
Thursday 11 September 2014 15:05 BST
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Rich rewards: The crime writer James Ellroy
Rich rewards: The crime writer James Ellroy (Kalpesh Lathigra)

Demons have pursued James Ellroy since his mother was brutally murdered in 1958. In My Dark Places, the crime writer recounted his attempts to reopen the unsolved investigation with the help of a retired detective.

That book was a searing account of self-discovery which many felt would end his creative career. That wasn't the case, though Ellroy was quoted as saying that he was through with genre fiction; his new book, Perfidia, gives the lie to that statement. But is genre fiction through with him?

The best American crime writing has always addressed key issues affecting society – class, politics and race – its sleuths moving between the various strata of US society, from the dispossessed underclass to the homes of the rich. In 1990, LA Confidential was acclaimed as the most extraordinary crime novel produced in the US in decades. The complex narrative showcased a massive panoply of Los Angeles in the Fifties, the picture-postcard vision of the city undercut by Ellroy's anatomising of its darker side.

American Tabloid was also much praised, but Ellroy's winning streak was about to run dry: one of the reasons, in fact, that each new novel is received with some trepidation, even by his admirers. The Cold Six Thousand (2001) was found by many to be mannered, even unreadable. So has Ellroy got his mojo back with the 700-page Perfidia?

The new book is a prequel (beginning on the day of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor) to the original LA Quartet, featuring several of the same characters and a host of real-life personalities. As before, we are presented with a richly flavoured goulash in which corrupt cops, psychopathic gangsters, Hollywood types with unorthodox sexual tastes, racists and junkies violently mix. Police chemist Hideo Ashida is called to a gruesome ritual suicide, but he suspects mass murder. As Japanese "subversives" are corralled by US authorities, an orgy of bloodshed connected to Hideo's case is unleashed.

Ellroy's customary command of language is overwhelming, but his recent staccato style is hiked up to cosmic levels; this is the Finnegans Wake of crime novels, and if you can take sentences so packed with cross-references that basic comprehension is a challenge (though other sentences are only four words long), you'll find rich rewards.

It has to be said that this is for diehard enthusiasts only and the casual reader will melt away. But at least Ellroy is still trying to expand the parameters of the crime novel – and perhaps we must pay him the compliment of cracking the prismatic but exhilarating prose that is his speciality.

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