Okay, it really is, but only by way of
Homicide: A Year On The Killing Streets, which I finished last night. David Simon spent a year "embedded" with the Baltimore Police Homicide Department and writes it up as a noir-ish march through a year of crack war murders. If you ever watched the TV show
Homicide, you recognize plots almost verbatim in the book. How does
Homicide (the book) compare to
The Wire? The way almost all of Don Delillo's novels presaged
Underworld. I happen to think The Wire is tighter than
Underworld, and better written, and more. . .
I can't find the right word here.
Underworld, despite traveling to former Soviet republics and back in time, seems a little
provincial in its themes, compared to The Wire.
Anyway, the reason I started this post was to extol
The Wire, and David Simon, for a different reason, which is, the ways in which
The Wire pays homage to real people who might otherwise be lost to history. In
Homicide, near the end, one of the detectives oversees the autopsy of a two-year old boy who was beaten to death by his mother's boyfriend. It's apparent from the autopsy that there was sexual abuse as well. I won't get more graphic than that. The boy's name is Michael.
Simon's memory is so long, and his imagination is so broad, that that fact leapt off the page and smacked me. Unromantically, Simon imagines, in
The Wire, who that boy might have become, if he'd lived. Similarly, there is mention, in
Homicide, of a soldier/killer named
Dennis Wise. In
The Wire, Simon imagines who Wise might have become after his incarceration, with more hope than Simon is usually credited with having about human nature.
Homicide was the methadone for my
Wire-withdrawal I had hoped it would be. I might need to go back and re-read
The Night Gardener. One influence I think Pelecanos had on
The Wire was to reel in the personal drama of
Kima and
McNulty. I think these characters were brought down to earth to reflect Pelecanos' idea that not all cops are hard-drinking, hard-fighting assholes. In
The Night Gardener, Gus Ramone is a good detective with a loving home life who tries to be a good father. It's that simple. But he's still a compelling character. I don't think McNulty is going to become McNutty again next season. I think Simon realizes you can have great characters who don't have monstrous problems.
Anyway, sorry to those of you who don't care about this show. I just gotta get it off my chest every now and again. Check back later for more non-
Wire frivolity.