“When
Jacob Asch takes a job investigating the gruesome murders of socialite Sheila
Warren and her boyfriend, film producer Randy Folsom, all clues point to Sheila's
distraught husband as the obvious killer. At least until Asch discovers that
Sheila had been attending séances and dabbling in witchcraft prior to her
death. Using information coerced from Sheila's associates in the California
black magic scene, Asch learns of a porno film starring Sheila, now in the
possession of an arcane sect of Satanists, whose uncanny rites suggest a
completely different motive for the crime.”
1970’s
noir doesn’t get any creepier than this debut novel by Arthur Lyons. The Dead Are Discreet –the first of
eleven books- introduced readers to 34-year-old Jacob Asch, an embittered but
nonetheless witty and compassionate, half-Jewish former investigative reporter
for the (fictional) Los Angeles
Chronicle. After being jailed for six months because he refused to rat
out a story source, Asch drifted reluctantly into a gumshoeing career, and
found that it fit him.
Arthur
Lyons was born January 5, 1946, in Los Angeles. His family moved to Palm
Springs at age 11. He graduated from the University of California, Santa
Barbara in 1967 and worked in his family’s restaurant business in the town
before becoming a writer. Lyons published a nonfiction work in 1970, a study of
Satanism and cult development in America called The Second Coming. However, it was this novel which would
mark the course of his writing for the next 20 years.
The Dead Are Discreet is seemly an outgrowth from the authors research on
cults, as it leads Jacob “through the underground of Los Angeles of the 1970s,
from its arcane religious sects of Satanists and Jesus freaks to the kinky
sexual pleasures of the wealthy who could callously destroy the life of a
teenage girl for the sake of a roll of bizarre movie films.”
Lyons was one
among a cadre of talented young American detective novelists of that era and into
the early ’80s, all vying to wear the crowns once sported by earlier stars of
the genre such as Chandler, Dashiell Hammett and Ross Macdonald. The New York Times called Jacob
Asch “one of the more convincing private eyes in the business, thanks to Mr. Lyons’s
skill at characterization.” Dorothy B. Hughes of the Los Angeles Times complimented
Lyons on his “true ear for everyday dialogue.” And no less a critic than fellow
author Charles Willeford commended Lyons as a “master of plotting.” Asch found himself involved in a wide
range of criminal settings, and Lyons researched all of them so thoroughly that
he alternated his crime novels with nonfiction studies of cults, devil worship,
pornography, and other nefarious activities.
After
1994’s False Pretenses, Lyons turned his attention to noir motion
pictures, an interest that led him to produce one last book, a nonfiction work
titled Death on the Cheap: The Lost B Movies of Film Noir, as well
help co-create the annual Palm Springs noir film festival, which celebrated its
25th Anniversary this past spring (and which is now named for him).
All of those books are currently out of print, and thanks to Tony, who runs @SideshowBooks
here in Los Angeles, and who is a noir fan, I’m going to start reading some. Sadly,
In March 2008, after suffering head injuries from a fall, followed by a stroke
and then pneumonia, he passed away at 62.