In 2016 the great London agent Ed Victor, and the equally formidable
Graham C. Greene, a nephew of the novelist, asked me if I would consider
writing a sequel to the Philip Marlowe novels that have periodically
appeared since Raymond Chandler’s death in 1959. The offer, as you might
expect, was gentlemanly. Robert B. Parker and the novelist John
Banville would be my only predecessors, having between them published
three Marlowe novels between 1988 and the present. The sequels began
with Parker’s “Poodle Springs,” a completion of Chandler’s last novel,
then continued with the same author’s “Perchance to Dream,” in 1991, and
culminated with Banville’s “The Black Eyed Blonde,” published under his
pen name Benjamin Black in 2014. I was told that I could do more or
less whatever I wanted — within reason. But what was within reason?
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