Content Warning: Suicide, SA, Murder, Domestic Abuse, Homophobia, Racism
Happy 2026, folks. I'm going to talk a little bit about the last book I read of 2025 - noir story called The Black Dahlia. Pay special attention to the content warnings. Without further ado:
I got really into audio books in graduate school. I was commuting back and forth between Bryan, TX and Huntsville on a daily basis - about an hour drive.
At this same time, I had become obsessed with film noir as a result of what I still consider the best entry into the Rockstar Games' catalogue: LA Noire. I read the classic Maltese Falcon and a few Philip Marlowe books. I had done a summer exploration of film noir through Turner Classic Movies.
But after clearing out some of the classics, I shifted to the sub-genre of neo noir. It was here I found the Black Dahlia by James Ellroy. Intrigued, I spent my audible credit for the month and downloaded it. I was driving up to Chicago that winter break, so I would need some long audio to keep me company. It was my introduction to the author.
I was hooked. I finished about half of it on the drive up and still had about an hour left on my drive back. It was two in the morning, so I remember parking in my university's parking garage with the windows rolled down, looking at the night sky as I finished it up.
The Black Dahlia is a book that sits shamefully in the gutter. It is steeped in sleaze and grime more than any other story I've read. Its highs are very high, and the lows make you feel dirty reading it. It follows the story of Dwight 'Bucky' Bleichert and his partner, Lee Blanchard. Both popular and promising cops and former boxers, whom have some nasty skeletons in their closets.
It is my favorite book to read. It's not my favorite story. It doesn't have my favorite characters. But the emotional struggle you go through is like ten rounds with and in-his-prime Lee Blanchard. And like Bucky's inability to escape the Dahlia, I am unable to escape this book.
I've done my most recent re-read in the past two or three weeks since I finished Shadow of the Fox. I can't recommend this book, but if the StoryGraph page intrigues you, go for it. The content warning should not be heeded lightly.
Spoilers below the royalty free image of a detective.