A Crime Novel Lover’s Guide to Los Angeles
Where to walk in the shadows of L.A. Noir.
-
CategoryArts + Culture, Hidden Gems, Sights + Stays, Time Capsule
The City of Angeles provides a backdrop to many popular Noir tomes, some pure fiction and others inspired by actual events. The New York Times put together a map of a few infamous scenes from these smoldering works. Check out a few highlights:
MICHAEL CONNELLY, “THE BLACK ECHO” (1992)
“In his stilt house in the Hollywood Hills, Detective Harry Bosch broods, listens to jazz records and attempts to solve the murder of a fellow Vietnam vet whose body was discovered in a drainpipe at Mulholland dam.”
RAYMOND CHANDLER, “THE LONG GOODBYE” (1953)
“Philip Marlowe investigates the murder of a wealthy woman while living in Laurel Canyon, in ‘a small hillside house on a dead-end street with a long flight of redwood steps to the front door and a grove of eucalyptus trees across the way.’”
JAMES ELLROY, “BLACK DAHLIA” (1987)
“The mutilated body of Elizabeth Short is discovered in an empty residential lot in Leimert Park, kicking off the case that will take over Officer Dwight ‘Bucky’ Bleichert’s life.”
Uncover more dark secrets here.
LA Songstress Claude Fontaine Gives a Nod to the Past with New Video
Her self-titled full-length was released last year via Innovative Leisure.
Remembering Beloved California Chef Sally Schmitt
The woman who founded the French Laundry traces Californian cuisine and documents a lifetime of recipes in her recent cookbook.
Heading to a Monterey Racetrack to Test Out High Performance Vehicles
During what many car enthusiasts call the glory days of Formula One motor racing, I worked alongside the sport’s British mastermind, Bernie Ecclestone, for numerous years while teams globetrotted across time zones and oceans vying for coveted championship points. The late legendary Brazilian race car driver Ayrton Senna and other notable competitors of that era […]



