About the Author
Raymond Chandler was born in Chicago in 1888. After his parents divorced when he was a child, he returned to Britain with his mother. There Chandler worked as a civil servant and later a journalist, also attempting unsuccessfully to establish himself as a poet and reviewer. Chandler returned to the United States in 1912, where he worked blue collar jobs until joining the Canadian Expeditionary Force in 1917 and serving in France in the First World War. Returning to the U.S. again after the war, he married “Sissy” Pascal and worked his way up to a management position in an oil company, a job he subsequently lost due to his alcoholism and the onset of the Great Depression. Unemployed and impoverished, Chandler set about learning the trade of fiction writing, publishing in pulp magazines such as Black Mask. Chandler was noted for taking far longer than most other pulp writers to produce his fiction, but earned great critical acclaim. He was credited with helping to create the hard-boiled crime fiction genre. Protagonist Philip Marlowe appears in all of Chandler’s full-length seven novels, many of which became Hollywood hits. Chandler also turned his hand to screenwriting, contributing to Double Indemnity, The Blue Dahlia, and Strangers on a Train. Sissy died in 1954, and Chandler, distraught, turned to alcohol more than ever before. He died of pneumonia in 1959.
LitCharts guides for works by Raymond Chandler
Explore LitCharts literature guides for works by Raymond Chandler. Each guide includes a full summary, detailed analysis, and helpful resources for studying Raymond Chandler's writing.
Private detective Philip Marlowe arrives at the wealthy Sternwood family’s mansion. As Marlowe stands in the impressive hallway, Carmen Sternwood approaches him and begins to flirt. The straight-f...
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