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Hammett (2002)

Hammett (2002)

Book Info

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Genre
Rating
3.68 of 5 Votes: 2
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ISBN
0752851829 (ISBN13: 9780752851822)
Language
English
Publisher
orion (an imprint of the orion publishing group ltd )

About book Hammett (2002)

When I discovered this novel, I jumped on it. I don’t know how I missed it. I very much enjoy humorous mysteries; I have read 32 Cadillacs and a couple of Joe Gores’s other DKA novels. This book was no disappointment; Gores is a masterful novelist. If Hammett has any appeal to you, read this book.Gores wrote that “I didn't start out to be a mystery writer.” http://www.mysterynet.com/books/testi...It is lucky for us that that is what he became.Joe Gores was a three-time Edgar Award winner, and only one of three authors (the other two being Donald E. Westlake and William L. DeAndrea) to receive Edgars in three separate categories. He was recognized for his novels Hammett, Spade & Archer (the 2009 prequel to Dashiell Hammett’s The Maltese Falcon) and his Edgar Award-winning or -nominated works, such as A Time of Predators, 32 Cadillacs and Come Morning.In his web posting, “Why I Write Mysteries,” he relates: In 1955, Stanford University refused me a Master's Degree in English Literature because my proposed Thesis was on the novels of Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, and Ross Macdonald. “Since these novels are not literature," they said, "obviously graduate theses cannot be written about them.” That is, if fiction is fun to read, it is mere escapist fare.[I] discovered that the mystery is the only fiction genre that lets you write anything you want while demanding a form that makes you tell a story people want to read.So I write my mysteries for pleasure, mine and I hope yours, and for money.I think that this prejudice against mysteries has declined, although not completely. In a teaching job interview not too long ago, I was asked what novel had I read recently that I had enjoyed. The title that popped into my mind, out of all the books I had read in the past few weeks, was a mystery. Interestingly, the interviewer knew the book, and we talked about it. Later, I thought that maybe I should have mentioned another book because, well, is mystery literature? It is, as far as I am concerned!Gores explains much better than I can the appeal of the type of mystery I prefer: The opening line of “Gone Girl” [a short story Ross Macdonald wrote, featuring an early incarnation of private eye Lew Archer. The piece was written in the 1950s.] was ‘I was tooling home from the Mexican border in a light blue convertible and a dark blue mood,’” Gores recalls. “And I thought ‘My God, that is the way I want to write! . . . That kind of tightness, that kind of directness, no nonsense, no navelgazing. You are in there to create vivid characters who are doing extremely interesting things and that’s it.”http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/m... I have little patience for the type of mystery that involves the detective’s personal life. As I mentioned in another blog, this refers to such writers as Sarah Paretsky, Rita Mae Brown, and Sue Grafton. Unfortunately, this seems to be a fault of women mystery writers. But I generalize…Hammett is excellent. I could have been reading Dashiell himself. The setting, the plot, the dialogue, the prose – all tone-perfect. Hammett, when published in 1975, was well-received as a fictionalized version of the adventures of Samuel Dashiell Hammett. Wim Wenders directed the movie version in 1982, which I’ll have to try to find. Decades later, Gores still felt he had “unfinished business” with the author, so in 1999, he asked Hammett’s daughter, Jo Marshall, if the family would consider a new book based on The Maltese Falcon.Although Marshall first said no, she had a change of heart. As her daughter Julie Rivett puts it, the family felt that Gores was the right guy to take up her grandfather’s story. “He’s walked the walk as well as talked the talk. He knows as well as anyone where those characters came from,” she said.Gores released Spade & Archer, a prequel novel that explains how Spade came to seek the falcon statue that is perhaps the greatest MacGuffin in detective fiction. It is both a love letter to the original work and a satisfying read for Falcon fans that circles back to where Gores’s own hard-boiled history—and the genre’s—began: with an appreciation for the finely written line, and a nose for trouble. I haven’t read this book; I intend to. The reviews I read were very positive.Gores, who had been working on a new DKA novel, died 50 years after Hammett's death, to the day. RIP, Joe Gores, and thanks for all the books.

I have to say, so far, more Mickey Spillane than Dashiell Hammett-- the cop kicking the rapist's testicles in so hard that his spinal column breaks being exhibit A. Also, I know that I'm deficient as regards attention (Doctor told me so), but this book loses me every couple of pages. What happened? What? Not necessarily a bad thing, but not what I was expecting at all. The Nouvelle Vague, incredibly enthused by low-budget American filmmaking precisely because it so often contravened established rules, and thereby opened new windows onto what could be effected by cinema, they then adopted as aesthetic decisions what had been either necessities or mistakes on the part of their American heroes. I see this novel possibly being like those Americans.But then, it could just be inept.

Do You like book Hammett (2002)?

Joe Gores' admiration for Dashiell Hammett became a staple in his career, having also written a prequel to The Maltese Falcon. This admiration is appropriate given that Gores, just like Hammett, was a private detective turned author in San Francisco. In the afterword of "Hammett", Gores makes a point in how Hammett turned the pulp detective story from taboo entertainment in Black Mask magazine, into serious literature, a feat that has baffled critics and writers since. Hammett was unlike other pulp writers in that he was an investigator learning how to write, instead of a writer learning how to investigate. Gores knows of this struggle and makes it his protagonist's inner struggle throughout the book. An admirable tribute to the noir legend, but not without its faults. Gores crafts a complex and relevant mystery surrounding political corruption in 1928. The story is exquisitely crafted, and the last fifty pages contain more twists than a 1950s dance hall. I was in awe.However, "Hammett" suffers from the same problem that the other Gores novel I've read, "Cases", suffers from. The prose is so deeply detailed that it slows the pace of the story almost to a halt. Every once in a while comes a scene gripping enough that it flies by, but soon after Gores spends unnecessary time describing clothes of characters or writing much too lofty descriptions of their looks and actions. Hammett as the protagonist of this fictional story is interesting, but ultimately, distracting. Gores periodically goes off on tangents with factual anecdotes of Hammett's childhood, all of which do not help in his investigation. I was waiting for Hammett to find something in his writing that became a key to helping him solve the case, but it never came. This makes the idea of Hammett the retired detective as protagonist irrelevant, and the novel, I think, would benefit more by Hammett working as a writer/detective rather than simply a former detective thrown back into his old profession.Overall, I admire Joe Gores, but haven't yet read a novel of his that I've felt is on the same level as his inspirations. This novel is worth reading for fans of well-crafted mystery stories. However, the work of Hammett himself takes precedent, and I don't think even Joe Gores would disagree.
—Jared Shipley

This book - which I prefer to Hammett's own work - is a grand specimen of the one-last-job retired-crime-fighter trope, featuring America's founding noir writer as the retiree. Clear-headed and straightforward in language (which Hammett wasn't), it is written by yet another retired P.I., with respect for both the myth and the reality of American crime. Entertaining and twisty enough for crime fans without being artificial about it.Its eye toward California's bizarre early-20th-century history makes it something of a more upbeat Chinatown.
—Wilson Lanue

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