Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Only to Sleep

A Philip Marlowe Novel

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Lawrence Osborne brings one of literature’s most enduring detectives back to life—as Private Investigator Philip Marlowe returns for one last adventure.
 
NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW AND NPR • NOMINATED FOR THE EDGAR AND SHAMUS AWARDS

The year is 1988. The place, Baja California. And Philip Marlowe—now in his seventy-second year—is living out his retirement in the terrace bar of the La Fonda hotel. Sipping margaritas, playing cards, his silver-tipped cane at the ready. When in saunter two men dressed like undertakers, with a case that has his name written all over it.   
For Marlowe, this is his last roll of the dice, his swan song. His mission is to investigate the death of Donald Zinn—supposedly drowned off his yacht, and leaving behind a much younger and now very rich wife. But is Zinn actually alive? Are the pair living off the spoils? 
Set between the border and badlands of Mexico and California, Lawrence Osborne’s resurrection of the iconic Marlowe is an unforgettable addition to the Raymond Chandler canon.
 
Praise for Only to Sleep
 
“A new case for Philip Marlowe and—have a smell from the barrel, all you gunsels and able grables —it crackles.”The New York Times Book Review (Editors’ Choice)
 
“Brilliant. Osborne and Chandler are a perfect match.”—William Boyd, author of Any Human Heart
 
“A Marlowe we at once know, but have never met before. As much a meditation on aging and memory as it is a crime thriller.”Los Angeles Times
 
“It’s the kind of book where, when you read it, it turns the world to black and white for a half-hour afterward. It leaves you with the taste of rum and blood in your mouth. It hangs with you like a scar.”—NPR
  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 21, 2018
      Set in 1988, this successful attempt to channel the spirit of Raymond Chandler from Osborne (Beautiful Animals) finds 72-year-old Philip Marlowe living a quiet life in Baja California “after a low near-decade of sloth and decay and Ronald Reagan.” One day, two representatives of the Pacific Mutual insurance company call on Marlowe. Donald Zinn, a developer and a Pacific Mutual client, has drowned, apparently accidentally, off the coast of the Mexican state of Michoacán. The company is hoping that it can reduce its financial exposure if Marlowe finds evidence that Zinn, who was heavily in debt, took his own life or was involved in criminal activities. The PI agrees to look into the matter, starting with a visit to the resort that Zinn and his widow had been running. While the plot follows familiar paths, Osborne has mastered Chandler’s gift for metaphor (the Pacific Life reps “bared the teeth of friendly hyenas who have done their killing for the day”) and deepens Marlowe’s psyche as he responds to “a sad summons from the depths of own wasted past.” This is the perfect companion volume to The Annotated Big Sleep (reviewed on p. 46). Agent: Adam Eaglin, Cheney Agency.

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2018
      Philip Marlowe returns, albeit in a rather superannuated hard-boiled form, in this novel commissioned by the Raymond Chandler estate.Osborne sets his novel in the late 1980s, when Marlowe is 72 and living in retirement in Mexico. He has one last case to solve, however, one that calls him "to a last effort, a final heroic statement." Pacific Mutual has recently paid $2 million on a policy for Donald Zinn, recently deceased, but the firm suspects it's being scammed and that Zinn and his "widow" are planning to live the high life in Mexico. Marlowe arranges to meet Dolores Zinn, and as one might expect, she's a generation younger than her husband and fatally attractive. Marlowe soon establishes that Zinn is indeed alive and has assumed the identity of one Paul Linder, who recently died under suspicious circumstances. Zinn is a vicious bully whose first impulse is to want to murder Marlowe to get him out of the way of his happy "retirement," but his wife instead tries to persuade the detective to accept a generous payment and forget about their scheme, for, after all, everyone wins if Marlowe simply reports to Pacific Mutual that he was unable to locate Zinn. Osborne is generally successful at ventriloquizing Chandler. The book features intriguing and shady characters, a convoluted and murky plot, and Marlowe's attempts to remain untainted in a world pervaded by violence and corruption. Adapting to the times, the detective now has "a small radio transmitter with bugging devices, a pair of opera glasses, and a subminiature Minox camera," but perhaps most startling is that he's traded in his .38 for a shikomizue, a razor-sharp sword hidden in his cane.While there are obvious perils in what Osborne attempts to do here, for the most part he succeeds in re-creating both a beloved character and a decadent ambience.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2018
      Osborne is the third writer to have resurrected Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe (following Robert B. Parker and Benjamin Black), and his effort may be the best of the lot. Wisely electing not to re-create Chandler's iconic PI in his salad days, nor to imitate the author's simile-strewn style, Osborne gives us a retired Marlowe, 72 years old and living in Baja California ( a good place for an old man ) in the late 1980s; things change when two life-insurance agents turn up looking to hire Marlowe to investigate whether one Donald Zinn really drowned in Mexico as reported. Why Marlowe? Someone told the agents that, retired or no, he was the best man money couldn't buy. So Marlowe, like Tennyson's Ulysses, thinks he might have a go at one more round of striving and seeking. Naturally, what he finds in Mexico is a muddle (a true Chandlerian plot, beguiling in its absurd inexplicability) yet offering the detective plenty of opportunity to muse on the bitter pill of aging. Osborne's real triumph here is to create a new style for the septuagenarian Marlowe that seems absolutely right, less florid but even more driven by mordant wit.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading