The 1947 Dorothy Hughes novel In a Lonely Place is considered a hallmark of the noir genre, and also something of a feminist reimagining of those genre's tropes. We're joined by Isaac Butler (author of The Method: How the 20th Century Learned to Act) to talk about some of the book's narrative tricks, including an unreliable third-person narrator, and how it subverts the genre's "femme fatale" trope, among others. Plus: What made Dorothy Hughes think that 'Brub' was a good name for a character?
In the second half of the show, we learn about Isaac's relationship to Halloween costumes, which Muppet could play a hardboiled cop, and why Isaac thinks he's too old to read Slaughterhoue Five for the first time.
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Find Isaac on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theisaacbutler/
Or on Blue Sky: https://bsky.app/profile/isaacbutler.bsky.social
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Anc check out the newly revamped Barrelhouse newsletter, which now features an original monthly essay (writers writing about their non-writing obsessions): https://www.barrelhousemag.com/ (scroll down to the bottom of the page)
Thanks, as always, for listening!
Note: This is the second episode in our Noir season. But there's no reason you have to listen to the episodes in order.
Information
- Show
- FrequencyUpdated weekly
- Published28 October 2024 at 10:00 UTC
- Length1h 16m
- RatingClean