Tag Archives: Dorothy B. Hughes

The So Blue Marble by Dorothy Hughes, 1940

Continuing my reading of Dorothy B. Hughes novels with her first, THE SO BLUE MARBLE, which features as many murders as IN A LONELY PLACE but in a much lighter vein. This one is as if Cole Porter or Astaire and Rogers became enmeshed in a series of murders in upper crust Manhattan on the eve of WWII. It focuses on Griselda Satterlee, a former film star turned fashion designer who goes to New York for a break, borrows her ex-husband’s apartment, only to find that she’s become prey to those who think she knows where an oh so blue and ever so valuable marble might be. Does she?Certainly, her ex once had it in his possession.  There are three beautiful sisters, a pair of very polite and very deadly European twins, one of them involved with the youngest sister, two top box office film stars, one Columbia Professor, an ex-husband who may not be an ex for long, and lots and lots of murders. They’re all searching for that shiny blue marble because, when opened, it reveals a map that will lead to untold wealth. Naturally, they all have their reasons for wanting it. Corpses pile up with a certain nonchalance: none is in itself sufficient to halt a trip to The Stork Club or El Morocco. An elegant, witty, mystery

 

José Arroyo

A note on IN A LONELY PLACE (1947) by Dorothy B. Hughes

Many thanks to Richard Layne and Sergio Angelini for recommending this, which I just finished and liked very much. I wish I’d gotten around to reading it earlier. It would have come in handy when I used to teach the film version. In the novel, the character of Dix (played by Bogart in the film film) is a serial killer, passing as a writer. The novel has a wonderful feel for mood. It’s all darkness, fog, deserted beaches, drive-in restaurants, late-night cinemas,  and the inside of a disturbed man’s head; a man who wants the easy life, has no intention of working if he can help it, and who has trouble finding meaning after the war; he and Laurel (the Gloria Grahame character in the film), recognise each other’s ambitions, incestuous siblings under the mink so to speak, but only one of them is willing to kill for it. There is a fascinating depiction of post-war Beverly Hills, a small town with a lurking darkness, here not attributable to the film industry. The Dix/Laurel coupling is the structural opposite of the Brub/Sylvia, the latter Dix’s old army friend, from the upper class but choosing to work as a cop, and his cool and intelligent wife. The denoument involves Sylvia disguised as Laurel and brings out all of Dix’ psychosis. I learned two words new to me, to have the megrims (to be depressed) and more interestingly, to be stoney, which in the lingo of the day, as per this novel at least, means to be broke. I want to read more Dorothy B. Hughes.