Nick and Nora Charles lively topic at library

SHARON — About a dozen readers turned out for the final 2013 book group meeting at the Hotchkiss Library of Sharon. What was the draw? Perhaps the comfortable reading room where the group convened, with its tiled fireplace and overstuffed chairs. Perhaps it was the book, Dashiell Hammet’s witty crime thriller, “The Thin Man.”Definitely a large part of the appeal was discussion leader Mark Scarbrough, who is also a bestselling cookbook author and a former literature teacher. “I think he could read the newspaper aloud and people would come to hear it,” confided Children’s Librarian (who will become head librarian on Jan. 1) Emily Bartram as she set out some folding chairs to augment the upholstered seats. “People just love him.”Scarbrough also leads book groups at the libraries in Norfolk and Salisbury. The book discussion began at 7 p.m. and lasted for about two hours. It was the last in a series of discussions led by Scarbrough on novels set in New York City. The talk series was titled Cry the Beloved New York City and featured four works written between 1800 and, in the case of “The Thin Man,” 1934.Scarbrough described the book as a noir novel.“We think in general of noir as a Los Angeles genre and a film genre,” he said. “But this book is where the roots are, and it was the inspiration for the work of Raymond Chandler five or 10 years later. Noir begins in novels.” Of course, much of the discussion also centered around the Thin Man films that starred William Powell and Myrna Loy (Hammett wrote the scripts for the original film and several of its sequels). And Scarbrough mentioned that a new Thin Man movie is being made now, with Johnny Depp as the suave detective Nick Charles. All who had seen the movies and read the book agreed that the novel is much grittier and more gruesome. Much of the plot revolves around the actions of a cannibal who buries his victims’ bodies in lime.The consensus was that much of this book was hard on the eyes but deceptively so, since so much of the dialogue is exceedingly effervescent. “You have horrendous crimes and then, strung up over it is this chatter,” Scarbrough observed. Also helping to make this a wonderful book to read: The most horrifying details happen “offstage,” away from the reader’s eyes. It was noted by all in the group that Hammett’s female characters are also shielded from the most unsavory events and people — especially Nick Charles’ high society wife, Nora. Scarbrough contrasted Nora’s role and methodology to that of her husband. “What was intriguing to me is the number of times Nick says, ‘I don’t know, I don’t know,’” Scarbrough said. And how much Nick works on instinct and hunches. Nora is the logical one, who makes lists and tries to use rational thinking to solve the crime. Nick’s process is to “solve crimes with hunches, not logic. Detective fiction is a genre that’s all about logic and rationality” but Charles works more along the lines of throwing out an idea and seeing how it plays out. The group also discussed whether this novel could conceivably be set somewhere other than New York City; and whether the action could take place in modern times. Scarbrough’s next discussion group will begin in late January at the Scoville Memorial Library in Salisbury. The group will talk about and analyze the work of poet Emily Dickinson.

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