Showing posts with label dashiell hammett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dashiell hammett. Show all posts

The Maltese Falcon Review

The Maltese Falcon
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Alongside Raymond Chandler's Marlowe, Dashiell Hammett's Sam Spade is one of the most famous detectives from American literature. These two writers define what we know as the noir literature. Personally speaking, I found it more pleasant to read Hammett than Chandler. Both writers are great, and deliver the best in the prose, character development, settings and all, but I found "The Maltese Falcon" more interesting than "The Big Sleep" and "Farewell, my Lovely".
Hammett's prose is straightforward. He doesn't waste time with digressions and many descriptions -- only the essential. As a consequence, his novel is packed with action and mystery. It is not a surprise that this author writes with so much authority -- he used to be a private detective. Most of the book --if not the whole narrative --feels like getting inside information.
Hammett's style became a paramount in this genre and he has a major influence on many contemporary writers -- e.g. James Ellroy, Jeffery Deaver, and the French Jean-Christophe Grange among others. Hammett's prose is filled with witty observations on the American way of life -- mostly on the violence and corruption that were permeating the American Society.
Contrary to what many contemporary readers may wrongly assume, the older mystery novel is not as prudish and conservative as it may sound. Hammett's prose is more related to the 20s than the 50s. And in that early period society was looser than after the McCarthyism. Therefore, "The Maltese Falcon" can be a grateful surprise to many readers -- who will find drink, drugs, sex and sexual orientation (the Cairo character's sexual orientation has been largely discussed since the book was published).
However we are almost all the time with Spade, the reader has no access to his thought. It is the reader's job to reach conclusions and put the pieces together. And we can learn this from dialogues, events and mostly Spade's reactions and facial expressions. But this is not a hard job for the reader -- on the contrary, this is one of the best features of Hammett's style.
Of course, the movie version of the book is very famous --and almost as good. But it is always an irreplaceable pleasure to read Hammett's words. And to meet Spade before he `had' Bogart's face.


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Dashiell Hammett Tour (Herron's Literary Walks in San Francisco) Review

Dashiell Hammett Tour (Herron's Literary Walks in San Francisco)
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If you can go to San Francisco and take Don Herron's Hammett walking tour...do it! I promise you will be entertained, informed and exhausted (remember, SF is a city of hills.) Don is really an expert on the life and literary merits of Dashiell Hammett, especially the works he produced while a resident of this beautiful city by the bay. Over the many years that Don has guided this tour, he has uncovered (and willingly shares) many fascinating facts and factoids about Hammett and 1920s San Francisco. If your travels never take you there, however, this book is a worthy substitute. Beautifully produced and well-written, Don's book is perfect for the armchair traveller and any hard-boiled mystery buff.

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The Big Wake-Up Review

The Big Wake-Up
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Another suspenseful and funny mystery from Mark Coggins. The adventure begins when San Francisco private eye August Riordan witnesses a murderous rampage that couldn't happen in any other city. This event draws him into a search for an important body that is coveted by a collection of mysterious (and at times ruthless) South Americans. Along the way, this private eye had me laughing out loud with one sarcastic remark after another. An entertaining page turner, no question about it.

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The Dashiell Hammett Tour: Thirtieth Anniversary Guidebook (The Ace Performer Collection series) Review

The Dashiell Hammett Tour: Thirtieth Anniversary Guidebook (The Ace Performer Collection series)
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Don Herron has been guiding Hammett fans around San Francisco on his Dashiell Hammett Tour since 1977, and his book allows tourists to do the self-guided thing or to enjoy Herron's in-depth knowledge and anecdotes from afar. This thirtieth anniversary edition, published in hardback as part of Vince Emery Productions' "Ace Performer Collection", includes a preface by Dashiell Hammett's daughter Jo, in which she recalls the first time she took the tour, and an introduction by crime novelist Charles Willeford, who advises comfortable walking shoes and some knowledge of Hammett's work before embarking on the tour. This hardback edition may not be the most practical for stuffing in your pocket and setting off to explore the streets of San Francisco, but it is great for reading.
"The Dashiell Hammett Tour" doesn't read like a typical tourbook, which tend not to be very exciting unless you are there. Fans who have never been to San Francisco will find plenty to like. Herron always has something interesting to say. He begins with a 46-page biography of Hammett. There are 30 sites on the tour, plus 9 off-tour sites, that featured either in Hammett's life or in his fiction. (Three of Hammett's novels, including "The Maltese Falcon", and most of his short stories were set in San Francisco.) The entries for each site are a combination of biography, literary criticism, and personal experiences. I've read several Hammett biographies, all of his fiction, and some criticism, and Herron was still able to tell me some things I didn't know.
There are black-and-white photos throughout, new and old, so we can see what the sites looked like when Dashiell Hammett lived in the city, 1921-1929. There are a few maps for walking the tour and for driving it. (I assume that the driving maps are different to accommodate one-way streets.) There is an annotated bibliography at the end. Herron says the tour takes 2-3 hours on foot and ½ hour by car. It's also a lot of fun just to read it. My only criticism is that some readers (particularly older readers) may find that the off-white paper does not provide enough contrast with the black ink for comfortable reading. I wondered if there would be much point in reading "The Dashiell Hammett Tour" if I am not in San Francisco, but Don Herron is always insightful, and I enjoyed the virtual tour a great deal.

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