Book Review: Trouble Is My Business


Trouble is My Business collects four Philip Marlowe novellas written by Raymond Chandler. The stories were originally published in magazines such as the Black Mask with other detective heroes but were rewritten with Marlowe as the hero after the character became popular. However, other than that, the stories remained essentially the same. While Chandler thought he could improve on his Black Mask stories, he found that trying to do so destroyed them, so essentially we had the stories in their original form.

The titular story for the collection, “Trouble Is My Business” is pretty much a typical hard boiled private eye story and the one that felt most like several elements had already been incorporated in other Marlowe novels. A rich man hires Marlowe to prevent his son from marrying a designing woman and a series of violent incidents follow.

“Finger Man” is a much more intriguing story. Marlowe is the only witness against a mob boss’ henchman and at the same time, an old friend asks Marlowe to help watch him as he goes to do some high stakes gambling and before you know it Marlowe finds himself framed for murder.

“Goldfish” finds Marlowe following a clue from an old policewoman in search of missing pearls and a pardoned criminal who keeps Goldfish. This is a great story that takes Marlowe out of LA for once and with some great hard boiled characters thrown in.

“Red Wind” is a Marlowe story that’s been oft adapted to radio and television with both of the Golden Age Philip Marlowe radio series taking a turn at it, as well as for the 1980s Philip Marlowe TV series and the 1990s Series, “Fallen Angels.” While out at a bar, Marlowe stumbles on a murder and then finds a woman who, though innocent in the crime, has nonetheless been caught up in a web of blackmail and deceit through no fault of her own. This is nearly a perfect hard boiled story. More than any other story or even novel, it highlight Marlowe as the knight in tarnished armor with his sense of honor guiding his actions through a very sketchy situation. It also is a great hardboiled story with some great characters and solid action. Given that this is only a short story, Red Wind delivers a lot.

Overall, this is a great collection of hard boiled fiction that really stands the test of time with each short story topping itself in quality.

Rating: 4.25 out of 5.0

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  2 comments for “Book Review: Trouble Is My Business”

  1. Wes W
    November 10, 2014 at 12:02 pm

    Regarding “Red Wind,” have you heard the radio shop episode based on this story? As I understand it, it’s from an earlier series than the one you play, a series that starred Van Heflin. I’ve read that this series was bit too “artistic” (for lack of a better word) for most hard-boiled detective fans of the day, but this episode in particular is what made me a Philip Marlow radio show fan in the first place.

    https://archive.org/details/OTRR_Philip_Marlowe_Singles

  2. Yours Truly Johnny Blogger
    November 10, 2014 at 3:09 pm

    Yes, Wes, we played the Van Heflin series before the Gerald Mohr series.

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