Love
For Sale by A.J. Llewellyn
adj.
1. Of or relating to the film noir genre.
2. Of or relating to a genre of crime literature featuring tough,
cynical characters and bleak settings.
3. Suggestive of danger or violence.
I
have loved the genre of noir since I was a kid. My first encounter with it was
when my Greek-born grandma, who couldn't speak English but was helping my dad
to raise me and my two brothers, woke me on a school night and asked me to
translate an episode of Robert Taylor's
The Detectives for her.
I
fell in love with Robert Taylor then and there. Not one single member of my
family has ever let me live it down that I kissed the TV set whenever I saw him
Growing up in Australia, I was
fascinated by all things Hollywood. One of the detectives in the series had
been harvested from the Bunco Squad, a term that tickles me to this day.
As Australia caught up with the US
and we started to get American shows in a more timely fashion, I found myself
longing to kiss the TV whenever episodes of Mike
Hammer went to air. The notion of a hardboiled private eye who drank too
much, smoked too much, routinely consorted with the wrong men, the wrong women,
got beaten up and ripped off as he tackled cases on the seamier side of the
tracks ignited ideas in my mind that wouldn't go away.
When Amber Allure author Christiane
France suggested a Noir PAX anthology, the race was on to snap up the chance to
be one of the five contributing pieces to it. I knew the story I wanted to
tell. I knew the city I wanted to set it in. I wanted to write a contemporary
mystery about a gritty, down-on-his-luck Los Angeles private eye, Matt Killian.
Matt's first name is in honor of Robert
Taylor's The Detectives. Killian is in honor of my friend Adam Killian,
director, producer, gay porn icon etc. Adam even has a cameo in the story.
Love
For Sale is set in the often secretive world of gay porn. My hero
investigates the case of a missing gay porn director and ends up having to
masquerade as a go-go dancer at a leather ball. Embarrassed at first, he's
dazzled by the amazing tips he receives, not to mention the hot leads…
Noir is a concept writers have
adored for decades. Even the kids' movie Home
Alone tips its fedora to the genre. Little Macaulay Culkin is influenced by
Angels With Filthy Faces a 1950's
spoof of Angels With Dirty faces. Spoof or not, he uses dialogue to scare off
some determined burglars who become worried about fearsome criminally-inclined pizza delivery
apparently stepping on their turf.
"Snakes? Who the hell is
Snakes?" Joe Pesci muses.
To this day I find myself smiling at
this memory and wanting to quote its best line, "Keep the change ya filthy
animal."
Ah, noir, I love you. Thank you for
countless hours of fiction, high drama and fantasy.
How about you? What's your favorite
noir character/book/movie?
Please leave a comment to qualify
for the random draw to win a free ebook copy of Love For Sale.
Purchase Link:
http://www.amberquill.com/AmberAllure/LoveForSale.html
Aloha oe,
A.J.





2 Comments:
I became totally blocked in writing a Noir for this Pax, AJ. Wonderful to read your approach to it and the background of why you love it!
I'm a member of Sisters in Crime/Los Angeles, and there are many published, award winning noir writers in that group. We meet in a city where it became famous. Robert Crais refers to noir as reflecting the "underbelly" of L.A.
I'm not posting to win a free copy. I'll gladly buy it. I've always enjoyed your stories and was thrilled when one of mine once inched just above yours on the AQP Top Ten list.
Keep on writing. Your fans need your stories.
Carolina
This sounds absolutely fascinating! =}
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