Hello. My first experience of Chester Himes was with If He Hollers Let Him Go, a strong book, a decent read, but one which I felt suffered due to a twist ending. That ending would have been provocative when first written but to my 21st Century mind it felt a little tacked on. However, I liked the style, the setting, the characters, and the general atmosphere and tone Himes created and I had always been interested in reading more. Within the first few pages of A Rage In Harlem I knew that I would enjoy it more- it is fast paced in a pulp fiction manner and there is violence and bloodshoot ultra-reality in those opening pages. Himes doesn't let the pace slacken once and even with the introduction of a wide cast of characters, we speed through the NY setting and the story like a taxi on a pick up from hell, and we get the near sensation that Himes may have written this in one inspired sitting. That doesn't mean the story is not well written or thoughtless, far from it, but that you will be as breathless as our hero by the end of it.
Himes does have a gift for creating sympathetic anti-heros; Jackson is just a normal guy, albeit a bit of a screw-up, whose charming naivety and misguided affections lead him into a series of mishaps, near-misses, chases, shoot-outs, punch-ups, and absurdist scenes to create a one of a kind adventure. Along the way we meet everyone's favourite buddy cop due Coffin Ed and Grave Digger whose shoot first, lob a grenade, smoke a cigarette, then ask questions attitude inspired many a movie detective in the decades to come. There are hard boiled characters, shocking carnage, and plenty of moments of darkness, but thanks to Himes's style and his wonderful creation in Jackson, the whole sorry affair feels quite 'light'. 'Light' is a weak word to describe the tone, but it is the humour which punctuates the dialogue and the characters when mixed with the ridiculous nature of their lives and actions which makes the read most memorable. This never becomes a slog, we are never challenged, and all of the subtext simply drips into our minds seemlessly without needless metaphor or tiresome device.
To give a brief summary of the plot would be giving up much of the surprise and delight of your first read, but to keep it spoiler free we follow a day in the life of a foolish boy man involved in a petty get rich quick scheme gone wrong, and after a number of deaths ensue our hero is chased through NY by cops and gangsters and has to keep his questionable wits about him as he tries to find the woman he loves, prove his innocence, and possibly keep his job.
A Rage In Harlem crackles with wit as much as its main character lacks it; there is a vibrancy throughout and a noticable lack of stereotype or genre convention. Himes was a gifted writer who could turn his pen to any style and although this is at its hard a crime caper, there is enough humour, horror, action, pity, and invention that this leaps off the genre shelf and sits on a stand all of its own.