The Zebra-Striped Hearse by Ross Macdonald

The Zebra-Striped Hearse by Ross Macdonald

published 1962

 




Continuing my wander through the works of Ross Macdonald - following on from my visit to Sergio Angelini's wonderful Tipping My Fedora podcast. He and I discussed all aspects of Macdonald at length – so if you want more you know where to go.

Tipping my Fedora – Ross Macdonald

(Visit it anyway - great back-catalogue!)

It’s said that the Coen brothers have written a screenplay based on this book, ready to make a film of it – and you can totally see that. The surprise is that it has never been adapted yet. There has been a radio play, apparently, but then you wouldn’t get the benefit of the hearse of the title, which surely would be a fantastic visual effect.

It has a great opening scene: Lew Archer PI has an appointment with a Colonel Mark Blackwell, to discuss his wayward daughter Harriet. Half an hour before the time of the appointment, the Colonel’s wife – the girl’s stepmother, Isobel – turns up to try to get her word in first.

Harriet, who is an heiress, wants to marry someone, and her father does not approve: he wants Archer to dig up some dirt on the young man. Burke Damis is an aspiring artist, with no money, and he is now living in a beach house owned by the family.

Archer heads off there.

A blonde girl wearing a white bathing suit and dark harlequin glasses came in. She failed to see me till she was in the room with me



She sounds like the original Barbie doll, introduced in 1959. (and for harlequin glasses, see this post

The Wife of Ronald Sheldon by Patrick Quentin)

She gets dressed in a plaid skirt and cashmere sweater, and tries to persuade Archer to drop the case:


far too cheerful for a Macdonald character, tbh

“I couldn’t do that, Miss Blackwell. Besides, it wouldn’t do you any good. He'd go and hire himself another detective. And if you think I’m trouble, you should take a look at some of my colleagues.”

He is ready to pass judgement on the young woman:

I had serious doubts that Harriet and her fine big body and her fine big wad of money were meant for Burke Damis.

Archer goes to a diner on the beach, and for the first time sees the hearse: ‘A zebra-striped hearse with a broken headlight came in off the highway’ and young men and girls, in sweatshirts and bathing suits get out – they are surfers.

The hearse is an interesting choice of title - it’s not a major part of the story, but it weaves its way through the book, the young people are briefly part of the investigation. The diner owner says ‘They got no respect for the living or the dead’.

Archer goes off to Mexico: Harriet had been visiting her mother there, and the bad-boy artist was there at the same time. In Guadalajara Archer meets all kinds of lost souls – mostly US ex-pats – and there is a strange dream-like atmosphere, very well done.

There was something cold and lost about the room and the people in it. They had roosted like migrant birds that had lost their homing instincts, caught in a dream of perpetual static flight. Or so it seemed through the bottom of my glass.

 

He interviews a drunken bar owner, who is suspicious: “I read a great deal of mystery fiction in the long night watches, and I recognize that look you have on your face. You have the look of a shamus who is about to put the arm on a grifter.”

And to the next stop: a woman with a shop selling native crafts.

Anne Castle was quite brilliant in her own way. She wore a multicolored Mexican skirt, an embroidered blouse, in her ears gold hoops that were big enough to swing on. Black hair cut short emphasized her petiteness and the individuality of her looks. Her eyes were brown and intelligent, and warmer than her voice had let me hope.



Even for an Archer/Macdonald book, this one has an exceptionally complex plot. You couldn’t ‘solve’ it, you just accompany Archer along the way as he talks to more people and uncovers extra details. It is not a cheerful or cheering story. But it is a great read, has a memorable picture of the beach-side California milieu, and also the small town in Mexico. I loved the minor character about whom Archers says: ‘She looked ready to be disappointed in me at any moment.’

There is a Harris tweed overcoat playing a big role in the plot:

 


And this for Harriet

The screen door slammed, and Harriet appeared behind the hanging red and purple fuchsias. She had changed to a light sharkskin suit and a hat with a little grey veil fluttering from it. The little veil bothered me, perhaps because it short-circuited the distance between brides and widows. She was carrying a blue hatbox and a heavy blue case.

Top pic shows the suit, and here's the veil....


The last view of the title vehicle is this:

The zebra-striped hearse was still parked by the roadside at Zuma. The sight of it did nothing for me at all.


Plaid skirt from The Vintage

Comments

  1. I really must read this one, Moira. I really like Ross Macdonald and very much like Lew Archer as a detective. I've read some of Macdonald's work, but not this one (well, not yet). One thing that I always appreciate about his books is the sense of place. He does a good job of describing that part of Southern California. You've made me want to go back to his work!

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    1. That's very encouraging that you think his California atmosphere is well done!
      I do recommend this one.

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  2. This sounds like a must-read. I am rarely bothered about plot/clues etc I just enjoy the journey and a Coen film of this would be a delight. Jess Walters gives the Coen Brothers as one of his inspirations and Citizen Vince would be a great film by them, too.

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    1. I'm glad you like the sound! When I was posting it I was trying to decide if it was similar to Citizen Vince or not, and I think you are right - that's a great line to draw...

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