Dashiell Hammett: Electronic Exhibit
Hammett's reputation is largely built on his novel The Maltese Falcon, where many of the character types and situations which eventually became cliché were first introduced. San Francisco private detective Sam Spade is the protagonist that defines the type: an unsentimental, cynical, almost amoral "tarnished knight" with a private sense of justice and duty. The colorful supporting characters--the femme fatale, the antagonistic cops, the devoted secretary, the master criminal--and the complicated plot of double-crosses and shocking revelations created a sensation in the detective genre.
The novel was first published serially in Black Mask, and then quickly
reprinted in book form. The novel went through eight reprintings in 1930 alone.
It has remained in print in various hardback and paperback editions and
continues to be easily available today.
Certainly
much of The Maltese Falcon's popularity is owed to John Huston's
fine 1941 film adaptation which starred Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, Peter
Lorre, and Sidney Greenstreet. This was actually the third filming of the
novel, and it remains the definitive version. Huston adapted Hammett's
novel with minimal changes, often transferring unaltered pages of dialogue
from book to film.
Sam Spade also appeared in a handful of short stories which were reprinted
in book form in A Man Called Spade, edited by Ellery Queen.
The
Glass Key (1931) This novel followed hard upon the success of The Maltese Falcon.
It was first serialized in Black Mask from March to June 1930, but
did not see book publication in America until April 1931. The Glass
Key follows Paul Madvig, a political boss in an unnamed city (modeled
on Baltimore), and his trusted assistant Ned Beaumont, in a complicated
story of friendship, political corruption, and murder. It brought Hammett
continued critical and commercial success, and was filmed twice: first
in 1935 when it starred George Raft as Ned Beaumont and Edward Arnold as
Paul Madvig, and again in 1942, starring Alan Ladd, Brian Donleavy, and
Veronica Lake. The basic plot resurfaced in the 1990 film Miller's Crossing,
starring Gabriel Byrne and Albert Finney.
Although
Hammett didn't invent the "hard-boiled" genre, he was the most
important and influential practitioner of the genre's early years. His
stories featuring a nameless detective--commonly known as the Continental
Op--set the standard for all hard-boiled detective literature to follow.
The Op is the epitome of the hard-boiled hero: tough, professional, equally
at home with criminals and the police. He is short, fat, middle-aged, and
more likely to solve problems with his automatic or fists rather than with
puzzle-solving abilities. In a remarkable series of short stories first
published in Black Mask in the 1920's and 1930's, and in the novels
Red Harvest and The Dain Curse (both 1929), Hammett's Continental
Op became the model for all of the hard-boiled detectives that followed.
On display here are a number of paperback books from the late 1940's and
early 1950's, which reprinted many of the best Op stories. Hammett's Op
stories had been largely unavailable in the 1930's and 40's until "Ellery
Queen" (the joint pseudonym of Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee)
edited this series of reprints for a new generation of readers. Unfortunately,
many of these stories continue to be difficult to find outside of these
reprints. Also on display are paperback reprints of Red Harvest
and Dead Yellow Women.

Although never filmed as written, the basic plot of Red Harvest has been recycled numerous times. Basically a western in modern clothes, it was easily adapted as a Japanese samurai film in Akira Kurosawa's Yojimbo (1961), readapted by Sergio Leone in the classic "spaghetti western" A Fistful of Dollars, and has nearly come full circle in last year's film Last Man Standing, which starred Bruce Willis.
Some editions of the Hammett paperbacks included maps on the backcovers indicating where criminal activity and key plot twists took place.
Hammett's
last novel combined hard-boiled style with lighthearted comedy, and proved
to be a resounding success: it sold 34,000 copies in the first eighteen
months. Perhaps even more than The Maltese Falcon, however, The
Thin Man owes it's reputation to Hollywood rather than to Hammett.
In the summer of 1934, the film version of The Thin Man was released,
with William Powell and Myrna Loy as the characters Nick and Nora Charles.
The film was a great success, and it spawned four sequels over the following
years. All in all, this novel earned Hammett over a million dollars, but
it killed his writing career: he never again wrote anything of consequence.
Hammett himself posed as the figure on the dust-jacket of the first edition, and became the model of the detective Nick Charles. The publicity still from a Thin Man film sequel comes from the Baltimore News-American photograph collection.
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