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« #42 - The Recognitions, by William Gaddis | Main | #44 - Wildlife, by Richard Ford » #43 - Homicide, by David Simon
David Simon's book is different. For starters, he avoids all the obvious routes for creating dramatic tension, the mysteries inherent in much of the casework. It would be easy to build an exciting book around the cases, but that's really not the heart of what's going in the BPD homicide unit, and Simon is smart enough to see that. He also avoids using blunt, artificial methods to create suspense. In fact there's almost no suspense at all in the book. Simon will at times present us with a killer before we are presented with a victim. The reader also isn't left chasing a hook through the whole book. There is no hook, in that sense. Homicide is arranged chronologically, and with a few exceptions (mostly made, it seems, to keep the book from being bogged down by too much happening at once), events are presented in the order that they occur. The simple fact is that this book isn't about the glory and drama of police work. It's not about the heartbreak or the crime or even the social pressures that create such an enormous and ever-increasing murder rate for such a small city. All of those things are in the book to one degree or another, but ultimately Homicide is about the job, and the people who do it. This is actually why I prefer NBC's Homicide: Life on the Street to HBO's The Wire. The latter is certainly more real. There's cursing and nudity and the crimes are seen more fully in the context of the city. Even the board, that wonderful administrative tool/bludgeon, looks more like the one the BPD homicide unit actually uses. But it also has more action and suspense, more gunfights and car chases. It's about the city and the various ways that institutions can fail and betray those they were established to serve. It is an epic work of social commentary. NBC's Homicide, despite playing fast and loose with the reality of Baltimore, is still about the job. The detectives begin as thinly-veiled stand-ins for the ones in David Simon's book, but gradually they grow and shift to become not only fine examples of what television can do with strong characters, but also various philosophical lenses through which to examine the nature of the job. The decontextualizing of the murders from the harshest aspects of the city itself serves as a reflection of the distance the detectives themselves have from the particulars of their daily grind. Just as only one or two cases ever truly touch a detective emotionally, only a handful of the cases in the show actually matter in its grand dramatic scheme. There is a difference, after all, between a murder and a killing. David Simon manages to get the prose right as well. His writing is direct, uncomplicated without being simple-minded, and full of wit. This book, despite all the horror and outrage that it can elicit at times, can also be damned funny it its own slightly bent way. Just like the job. There is a magnificent section midway through the book on the role Miranda plays in interrogation. I won't quote from it, because it must be read in full to be truly appreciated, and it is quite long. I will quote (extensively) from the author's note near the end of the book, in which Simon discusses some of the ethical dilemmas he faced while researching the book. Finally, a note on one last ethical dilemma. Over a period of time, familiarity and even friendship can sometimes tangle the relationship between a journalist and his subjects. Knowing that, I began my tenure in the homicide unit committed to a policy of complete nonintervention. If the phone in the main office rang and there was no one but me to answer, then it was not meant to be answered. But the detectives themselves helped to corrupt me. It began with phone messages, then grew to spelling corrections and proofreading. ("You're a writer. Take a look at this affidavit.") And I shared with the detectives a year's worth of fast-food runs, bar arguments and station house humor: Even for a trained observer, it was hard to remain aloof. This is typical of Simon's style, although he never has this much presence, or any presence at all, actually, outside of the afterword and the author's note. He's so removed from the narrative, in fact, that until he explains some of his techniques in the author's note, it's difficult to imagine just how a human being can be so completely removed from what he witnesses. This book truly is about the job, and the people who do it. Homicide is a triumph, one of the finest and most interesting books I have ever read, and certainly the finest and most interesting non-fiction I have ever encountered. I feel close to this world now, in some way in sync with these men. It's an illusion created by Simon's exception skill as a journalist, of course, but all the same I feel sad that it's over. Next is Wildlife, by Richard Ford. Posted by August on 06.30.08 at 2:36 AM | Comments (0) CommentsPost a comment
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