- By Dashiell Hammett
- Pub Date: 1933
- Where I bought this book: Conveyor Belt Books, Covington, Ky.
- Pub Date: 1933
- Where I bought this book: Conveyor Belt Books, Covington, Ky.
- Why I bought this book: I found this new bookstore, and felt I had to buy something.
****
Too many characters for such a short book (201 pages) make this old dime-store novel confusing and difficult to follow. Yes, I know Hammett is considered one of the best of the hard-core crime novelists of his time, but it seems this particular gumshoe tale long ago passed its prime.
While its writing is plain, straight-forward, and linear for the most part, it is jumbled by introducing some characters almost as an aside, using different descriptions or identifications for some, and having others float in and out of the story at random.
The by-now cliches of the genre can be annoying, but are understood as part of the era when it was written.
This is a detective story that uses lots of dialogue, and it isn't always clear who is talking, or whom they are referring to. Following along is confusing, and I found myself repeatedly asking, "Who now?"
At one point near the end, two colleagues meet, and their tone and relationship seem to have changed so much that I turned back pages to see what I'd missed. I'm still not sure what happened.
But Hammett's descriptions of 1930s New York, and its cops and gangsters and dames and detectives is arresting. The style is compelling, and it is easy to get immersed in the tale, even if you sometimes feel lost in the twists and turns.
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