Nostalgia City Mysteries

Mark S. Bacon

Tag Archives: David Goodis

Will a change of face brighten the dark passage?

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Book Review

Dark Passage (1946)
David Goodis
Library of America 2012
247 pages
Kindle, Apple Books  $5.99

Vincent Parry’s wife was an ungrateful, unloving bitch.  But he didn’t kill her.

A jury said he did, and the judge gave him life in San Quentin.

This seemed like it would be the last chapter in Parry’s unremarkable life. An only child and orphan in central Arizona he stole food when he was hungry and found himself in a reformatory being punched in the face by a guard. During World War II his draft board labeled him 4-F due to sinus and kidney problems. The 145-lb, five-foot-seven-inch Parry found work as a clerk in a San Francisco securities investment house, a position he took because it would permit him to smoke at work.  He earned $35 a week and smoked three packs a day.

Early in their marriage, at her insistence, Parry bought his wife Gert a ring with a flame opal, her favorite stone.  She told him it was flawed, that he paid too much and she threw it at his face.  Less than a year and a half after they were married, she started seeing other men.

One day he came home to find police cars parked in front of his apartment building.  Gert had been murdered, her skull smashed by a heavy glass ashtray.  A witness told police the wife’s dying words were that Parry had killed her.

Parry’s attorney asserted that Mrs. Gert Parry simply tripped and hit her head, but no one was buying it.

Dark Passage is a story of lonely, sad, miserable people. The book envelopes the reader in an atmosphere as cheery as a rainy night in a graveyard.

In San Quentin Parry worried about the guards, remembering his experience in the reformatory. But he thought this might be different.

He had an idea that he might be able to extract some ounce of happiness out of prison life. He had always wanted happiness, the simple and ordinary kind. He had never wanted trouble.

Eventually,  however,  he again met up with a brutal guard.  During the ensuing pummeling, Parry sobbed, a reaction that would revisit him more than once in the coming weeks.

When he was placed in solitary confinement temporarily, and permanently removed from his prison accounting job, he decided to escape.

He made it, and once outside the prison grounds a young woman in a new Pontiac convertible offered him a ride, telling him she heard of his escape on the radio and came to help him.  “You’ll stay at my place,” she tells him.

Vincent Parry’s life was about to turn around. And around.

Once safe in the expensively furnished San Francisco apartment Parry learns his blonde savior’s name, Irene Janney. 

The way her lips were set told him she didn’t get much out of life.  One thing, she had money. That grey-violet [her clothes] was money. The Pontiac was money.

She tells him she attended his trial and that Madge Rapf, the woman who found Gert’s body and heard her dying words, is an acquaintance of hers.

Parry knows Rapf, a friend of his wife’s who visited them frequently. Too frequently.

She was miserable and the only thing that eased her misery was to see other people miserable. If they weren’t miserable she pestered them until they became miserable.   Parry had a feeling that one of the happiest moments in Madge Rapf’s life was when the foreman stood up and said that he was guilty.

Parry’s fate begins to look promising when Janney buys him new clothes and gives him $1,000 in cash for the road.

He leaves her, hales a cab and is identified as a fugitive by the driver. But instead of turning him in, the driver tells Parry about a doctor friend of his, a plastic surgeon, who could give him a new face—no questions asked. Continue Reading →

Avoid the shadows when night falls

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Nightfall
David Goodis
170 pages
Black Curtain Press  1947
$8.49 paperback    Kindle $  .99

James Vanning is lonely, depressed, afraid and plagued by insomnia.  In other words he’s a classic protagonist in a noir novel.

The commercial artist and World War II vet is on the run from the police and a gang of bank robbers.  He’s holed up in a small New York City apartment selling his work to ad agencies to get by and feeling sorry for himself.  As an average guy entangled in a seemingly unexplainable criminal morass, he could be a character in a Cornell Woolrich novel.  Instead he’s the creation of another respected noir author, David Goodis, noted for his mystery, Dark Passage, that became a Bogart and Bacall movie.

In Nightfall, published in 1947, Goodis imperils Vanning without letting the reader know too many details.  Except for one thing: he’s killed someone, or is convinced he did. And, he’s scared.

 “He wanted to go out.  He was afraid to go out.  And he realized that.  The realization brought on more fright.”

A few sentences later a Woolrich-style premonition: “…something was going to happen tonight.”

Vanning knows that the story of the killing, as he remembers it, is so preposterous no cop or DA would believe him. We learn bits and pieces: A Seattle bank was robbed of $300,000.  One of the gang responsible for the robbery was murdered. The money disappeared.

The story unfolds through chapters of alternating points of view, that of Vanning and of Fraser, the NYC police detective following him.  Married with three children, Fraser (we never learn his first name) has been shadowing Vanning for months and thinks he knows nearly all aspects of the artist’s solitary life.  But he worries the case may be his undoing.  His superiors are calling for an arrest and return of the money.  And Fraser has doubts.

Despite overwhelming evidence against Vanning, Fraser thinks he might be innocent.  “With what they have on him already,” Fraser tells his wife, “they can put him on trial and it’s a hundred to one he’d get a death sentence.

“They’ve got witnesses, they’ve got fingerprints,” Fraser says, “they’ve got a ton of logical deduction that puts him dead center.  And what I’ve got is a mental block.”

Vanning’s faring no better.  His memory is full of holes.  He knows Continue Reading →