The publication of The Big Sleep" by Raymond Chandler, John Fante's Ask The Dust," and The Day of the Locust" by Nathanael West (the latter just reissued in a new edition, along with Miss Lonelyhearts," by New Directions, $11.95), three books that distilled distinctly and in very different ways the city that was being written about, and have continued to dictate how Los Angeles is perceived today.
Chandler reconfigured the noir map in a style still to be bettered and Fante's bildungsroman showed a young man struggling in a dark, sunlit world that he nonetheless contrived to possess, but West's book is the most merciless of the three, reflecting the anger, disappointment and violence that bubble and simmer beneath the city's welcoming and glassy surface. The idea of Los Angeles as a site for apocalypse was already prevalent in the 1930s (Myron Brinig's forgotten The Flutter of an Eyelid" concludes with the city shearing away from the coastal shelf and cascading into the Pacific,) but West crystallized it.
The protagonist of The Day of the Locust" is Tod Hackett, a young graduate of the Yale School of Fine Arts who gets spotted by a talent scout and brought out to Hollywood to learn set and costume design. By day Tod toils at the studio and plans The Burning of Los Angeles," the vast canvas he aspires to paint. By night and on weekends he lives in a shabby apartment house and lusts after his neighbor Faye Greener, an aspiring young actress of little talent and astounding beauty, though her looks are an invitation not to pleasure, but to struggle, hard and sharp, closer to murder than to love." Tod knows that he has little to offer Faye, neither money nor looks," and knows too that Faye's yearning for stardom is a pipe dream. In her sole movie role, as a dancing girl in a harem, she had only one line to speak, 'Oh, Mr Smith!,' and spoke it badly."
Faye is the hot stuff, the sexually radioactive yet already decayed core around which this almost eerily dispassionate novel weaves itself. Yet West in no way condemns her; her dreams and her looks are so powerful that she turns her own life into the movie in which she already fears she'll never star. She's a desperate one-woman reality show.
Through Faye, Tod meets her father, Harry Greener, a vaudeville clown turned con man, and Earle Shoop, the inarticulate cowboy who comes on like Gary Cooper but whose job consists of posing outside a saddlery store on Sunset Boulevard. Faye knows that Earle is a dull fool, but then said that he was 'criminally handsome,' an expression she had picked up in the chatter column of a trade paper." Earle is Tod's chief rival for Faye's attention, along with Homer Simpson (!), a former bookkeeper from Des Moines who blows his modest savings to become Faye's patron.
Homer is like one of those Midwesterners described in the late 1920s and early 1930s by Louis Adamic, a writer West admired. Homer has come to Los Angeles, not to succeed, but to warm his skin and get ready to die: When not keeping house, he sat in the back yard, called the patio by the real estate agent, in an old broken deck chair. He went out to it immediately after breakfast to bake himself in the sun. In one of the closets he had found a tattered book and he held it in his lap without looking at it." Homer spends a lot of time watching a lizard try to catch flies. But whether he was happy or not it is hard to say. Probably he was neither, just as a plant is neither. He had memories to disturb him, and a plant hasn't, but after the first bad night his memories were quiet."
One of West's subjects is how Los Angeles erases memory, replacing it with sensations that inscribe themselves on the mind like vivid nightmares, only to be immediately forgotten. In his discovery and exploration of this trope, West prefigures the nonfiction writing of Mike Davis and Norman Klein. The Day of the Locust" is more journalistic than its searing surrealism might at first suggest. West (born Nathan Wallenstein Weinstein in New York in 1903) came to Hollywood in 1933, after Darryl Zanuck bought the rights to his novel Miss Lonelyhearts." For years he toiled, writing treatments and B-movie scripts, living, like Tod Hackett, in rundown digs. He met con men and cops, prostitutes and failed vaudevillians. He hung out at the Hollywood police precincts and went to cockfights at Pismo Beach. He explored brothels, upscale and otherwise. He became a flneur of the city's underbelly, holding court at Musso and Frank's restaurant or the Stanley Rose Bookstore, and beginning to feed all these characters and experiences into a novel he planned at first (according to his biographer Jay Martin) to call The Cheated."
Yet The Day of the Locust" doesn't read like displaced autobiography. It unspools in a series of tableaux (a night out with Faye and Earl, a grotesque funeral, a shambolic cast-of-thousands disaster at the studio, a ghastly party and an even ghastlier cockfight, the movie premiere riot with which the tale shatteringly concludes) that reflect a gathering sense of physical, spiritual and political extremity. West etches a desolate vision that magically leaves the reader feeling exhilarated.