This alliterative title covers three episodes concerning Andrew Marr’s Paperback Heroes on BBC4. Last week we had Sleuths, this week we had Sorcerers (which is repeated tonight on the same channel), and next week it will be Spies.
Within the limited time of an hour, Andrew Marr attempts to
deconstruct these popular genres; you know those books that never seem to win
prizes, that the literary snobs decry and dismiss, those books that sell in
their millions.
Sleuths was patchy, giving over many minutes to the genius
of Agatha Christie, leaving less time for other practitioners. We had the John
Dickson Carr’s locked room mysteries, Ian Rankins’ Rebus, Chandler’s Marlowe, Dashiell
Hammett’s The Continental Op and Sam Spade to name a few. Interviewees
comprised Val McDermid, Ian Rankin, and Anthony Horowitz, among others.
The psychology of the sleuths was examined, and the times
they lived in obviously affected them. A long time ago, a reviewer of John D.
McDonald said the author didn’t need to write The Great American Novel (a holy
grail for American authors at one time), since he was doing that in his
installments of Travis McGee and his other crime novels. That’s more or less the
conclusion Marr makes concerning the crime writers, whether of the past or the
present: they reflect the society from which they sprang, a rich trove to delve
into for future archaeologists and historians.
Logically, Spies should have been next but for some reason
Sorcerers followed. Here we entered the realms of fantasy. While fantasy has been around throughout the
ages, in many cultures, Marr suggests that its modern popularity probably
stemmed from the publication of The Lord
of the Rings books. One of the prime attractions of fantasy is the
world-building that is required; that means multifarious aspects of life in the
fictional world, all logically fitting.
Besides Tolkien, Marr touched upon George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire sequence of novels, now filmed as Game of Thrones. Apparently, Martin was inspired to write the
series when visiting Hadrian’s Wall and studying medieval English history and
also the Wars of the Roses. The books contain ambivalent characters, people who
are not wholly good or completely bad, as in life, perhaps, with conflict
caused by ideology, greed, lust and a thirst for power. Other fantasists
mentioned include Ursula K. Le Guin (Earthsea series), C.S. Lewis (Chronicles of Narnia), J.K. Rowling (the
Harry Potter phenomenon) Alan Garner (The
Weirdstone of Brisingamen), Philip Pullman (His Dark Materials trilogy), Neil Gaiman (American Gods), and of course Terry Pratchett (Discworld novels et
al).
This episode seemed more coherent and covered a wide range
within the genre.
As with Sleuths, however, there are bound to be many
favourite authors omitted from this genre. It is now impossible to read all
books within any single genre (nor would that be a good literary diet anyway),
because there is so much choice.
Next, Spies. I can guess that certain names will crop up,
among them Deighton, Le Carré, and Fleming, but who else? I’ll be tuning in to
find out.
Besides being about books and authors, this series touches
upon several genres I enjoy to read and write: Spanish Eye (Sleuths), Wings of the Overlord (Sorcerers), and ThePrague Papers (Spies).
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