trancejeremy
Adventurer
I would agree that HPL was both. He wrote some really good stories, plus a lot of crap (his "collaborations", mostly). But he was definitely influential, as nearly every modern horror writer has done something based on him. (Only exception I can think of is Clive Barker)
Raymond Chandler wasn't a very good mystery writer (as you point out, his plots generally didn't make sense, or in some cases were unresolved*), but he definitely wasn't a hack. He was not a very fast writer, and only wrote a comparative handful of stories. He was a brilliant writer when it came to description and dialogue. Every piece of his is literally a masterpiece.
And if you read some of the essays by him, that was essentially his point. He didn't like the clever/gimmick myteries of Christie and such. He was more focusing on the telling, not the story itself.
* (Often because he wrote his novels by piecing together and expanding completely unrelated short stories)
Raymond Chandler wasn't a very good mystery writer (as you point out, his plots generally didn't make sense, or in some cases were unresolved*), but he definitely wasn't a hack. He was not a very fast writer, and only wrote a comparative handful of stories. He was a brilliant writer when it came to description and dialogue. Every piece of his is literally a masterpiece.
And if you read some of the essays by him, that was essentially his point. He didn't like the clever/gimmick myteries of Christie and such. He was more focusing on the telling, not the story itself.
* (Often because he wrote his novels by piecing together and expanding completely unrelated short stories)