By Suzanne Lummis on October 21, 2020
They Write by Night, Invisibility Noir
Invisibility – Pre-code Halloween Noir
The not-to-be-missed Halloween episode which mixes dark goings-on in the fantasy world of early “scary” cinema and in the troubling real world, and in which Lummis admits she lied. She lied when she said, several episodes earlier, that this series would be “all noir all the time.” Oh, it is that but So much more. This one, for example, includes the opening of Ralph Ellison’s immortal Invisible Man and a fragment of feminist thought.
Now that I’ve owned up, I challenge the failing, fumbling kingpin of liars to admit to his own falsehoods and mendacities, his low, dishonorable defamations, his deceit, his manifold crimes. It will take a long time. If he starts now, he can finish before doomsday.
Also, Pandemic They Write by Night Invisibility Noir features a poem by Lawrence Raab, which re-visits and re-imagines the Invisible Man.
Don’t Forget to Vote.
– Suzanne Lummis
Top image credit to www.Poetry.LA
Author
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Suzanne Lummis, noted practitioner and exponent of NOIR POETRY, unpacks a genre infused with the ethos of mid-20th Century hard-boiled fiction and crime movies, presenting examples from poets both living and “quite dead.” An influential teacher through the UCLA Extension Writers' Program and co-founder of the Los Angeles Poetry Festival, Lummis produced a 2011 city-wide, 25-event series, “Night in the City: L.A. Noir Poetry, Fiction and Film.” Her 2012 essay “The Poem Noir — Too Dark to Be Depressed” (Malpais Review, Vol. 3, No. 3) is essential reading on the subject. Lummis was awarded a 2018/19 C.O.L.A. (City of Los Angeles) fellowship to create a series of new poems. Her most recent collection is Open 24 Hours (Lynx House Press). Her poems have appeared in three Knopf "Everyman's Poetry" anthologies, including Killer Verse: Poems of Murder and Mayhem, and in The Antioch Review, New Ohio Review, Plume, The American Journal of Poetry and The New Yorker. She edited the anthology "Wide Awake: Poets of Los Angeles and Beyond" (Pacific Coast Poetry Series/Beyond Baroque Books) named one of the Ten Best Books of 2015 in the Los Angeles Times. (Photo by Alexis Rhone Fancher)
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