Hammett is regarded as one of the very best mystery writers.[3] In his obituary in The New York Times, he was described as "the dean of the... 'hard-boiled' school of detective fiction."[4]Time included Hammett's 1929 novel Red Harvest on its list of the 100 best English-language novels published between 1923 and 2005.[5] In 1990, the Crime Writers' Association picked three of his five novels for their list of The Top 100 Crime Novels of All Time.[6] Five years later, The Maltese Falcon placed second on The Top 100 Mystery Novels of All Time as selected by the Mystery Writers of America; Red Harvest, The Glass Key and The Thin Man were also on the list.[7] His novels and stories also had a significant influence on mystery films, including the style that came to be known as film noir.
Early life
Hammett was born near Great Mills on the "Hopewell and Aim" farm in Saint Mary's County, Maryland,[8] to Richard Thomas Hammett and his wife Anne Bond Dashiell. His mother belonged to an old Maryland family, whose name in French was de Chiel. He had an elder sister, Aronia, and a younger brother, Richard Jr.[9] Known as Sam, Hammett was baptized a Catholic[10] and grew up in Philadelphia and Baltimore. Hammett's family moved to Baltimore when he was four years old in 1898, and for the most part, it was the city where he lived until he left permanently in 1920 when he was 26 years old.[11] As a teen, Hammett attended the Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, but his formal education ended during his first year of high school; he dropped out in 1908, when he was thirteen years old, due to his father's declining health and the need for him to earn money to support the family.[12]
Hammett then held several jobs before working for the Pinkerton National Detective Agency. He served as an operative for Pinkerton from 1915 to February 1922, with time off to serve in World War I. While working for Pinkerton in Baltimore, he learned the trade and worked in the Continental Trust Building (now One Calvert Plaza).[13] He said that while with the Pinkertons he was sent to Butte, Montana, during miners' union strikes, though some researchers doubt this really happened.[14] The agency's role in strike-breaking eventually left him disillusioned.[15]
Hammett enlisted in 1918 and served in the United States Army Ambulance Service. He was afflicted during that time with the Spanish flu and later contracted tuberculosis. He spent most of his time in the Army as a patient at Cushman Hospital in Tacoma, Washington, where he met a nurse, Josephine Dolan, whom he married on July 7, 1921, in San Francisco.[16]
Marriage and family
Hammett and Dolan had two daughters, Mary Jane (born 1921) and Josephine (born 1926).[17] Shortly after the birth of their second child, health services nurses informed Dolan that, owing to Hammett's tuberculosis, she and the children should not live with him full time. Dolan rented a home in San Francisco, where Hammett would visit on weekends.[18] The marriage soon fell apart; however, he continued to support his wife and daughters with the income he made from his writing.[19]
Career and personal life
Hammett was first published in 1922 in the magazine The Smart Set.[22] Known for the authenticity and realism of his writing, he drew on his experiences as a Pinkerton operative.[23] Hammett wrote most of his detective fiction while he was living in San Francisco in the 1920s; streets and other locations in San Francisco are frequently mentioned in his stories. He said, "I do take most of my characters from real life."[24] His novels were some of the first to use dialogue that sounded authentic to the era. "I distrust a man that says when. If he's got to be careful not to drink too much, it's because he's not to be trusted when he does."[25]
The bulk of his early work, featuring a nameless private investigator, The Continental Op, appeared in leading crime-fiction pulp magazineBlack Mask. Both Hammett and the magazine struggled in the period when Hammett became established.[26]
Because of a disagreement with editor Philip C. Cody about money owed from previous stories, Hammett briefly stopped writing for Black Mask in 1926. He then took a full-time job as an advertisement copywriter for the Albert S. Samuels Co., a San Francisco jeweller. He was wooed back to writing for the Black Mask by Joseph Thompson Shaw, who became the new editor in the summer of 1926. Hammett dedicated his first novel, Red Harvest, to Shaw and his second novel, The Dain Curse, to Samuels.[27] Both these novels and his third, The Maltese Falcon, and fourth, The Glass Key, were first serialized in Black Mask before being revised and edited for publication by Alfred A. Knopf. The Maltese Falcon, considered to be his best work, is dedicated to his wife Josephine.
For much of 1929 and 1930, he was romantically involved with Nell Martin, a writer of short stories and several novels. He dedicated The Glass Key to her, and in turn she dedicated her novel Lovers Should Marry to him. In 1931, Hammett embarked on a 30-year romantic relationship with the playwright Lillian Hellman. Though he sporadically continued to work on material, he wrote his final novel in 1934, more than 25 years before his death. The Thin Man is dedicated to Hellman. Why he moved away from fiction is not certain; Hellman speculated in a posthumous collection of Hammett's novels, "I think, but I only think, I know a few of the reasons: he wanted to do new kind of work; he was sick for many of those years and getting sicker."[28] In the 1940s, Hellman and he lived at her home, Hardscrabble Farm, in Pleasantville, New York.[29]
The French novelist André Gide thought highly of Hammett, stating: "I regard his Red Harvest as a remarkable achievement, the last word in atrocity, cynicism and horror. Dashiell Hammett's dialogues, in which every character is trying to deceive all the others and in which the truth slowly becomes visible through a fog of deception, can be compared only with the best in Hemingway."[30]
Especially in Red Harvest, literary scholars have seen a Marxist critique of the social system. One Hammett biographer, Richard Layman, calls such interpretations "imaginative", but he nonetheless objects to them, since, among other reasons, no "masses of politically dispossessed people" are in this novel. Herbert Ruhm found that contemporary left-wing media already viewed Hammett's writing with skepticism, "perhaps because his work suggests no solution: no mass-action... no individual salvation... no Emersonian reconciliation and transcendence".[34] In a letter of November 25, 1937, to his daughter Mary, Hammett referred to himself and others as "we reds". He confirmed, "in a democracy all men are supposed to have an equal say in their government", but added that "their equality need not go beyond that." He also found, "under socialism there is not necessarily... any leveling of incomes."[35]
Hellman wrote that Hammett was "most certainly" a Marxist, though a "very critical Marxist" who was "often contemptuous of the Soviet Union" and "bitingly sharp about the American Communist Party", to which he was nevertheless loyal.[36]
At the beginning of 1942, he wrote the screenplay of Watch on the Rhine, based on Hellman's successful play, which received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Writing (Adapted Screenplay). But that year the Oscar went to Casablanca. In early 1942, following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Hammett again enlisted in the United States Army. Because he was 48 years old, had tuberculosis, and was a Communist, Hammett later stated he had "a hell of a time" being inducted into the Army.[37] However, biographer Diane Johnson suggests that confusion over Hammett's forenames was the reason he was able to re-enlist.[38] He served as an enlisted man in the Aleutian Islands and initially worked on cryptanalysis on the island of Umnak. For fear of his radical tendencies, he was transferred to the Headquarters Company where he edited an Army newspaper entitled The Adakian.[39] In 1943, while still a member of the military, he co-authored The Battle of the Aleutians with Cpl. Robert Colodny, under the direction of an infantry intelligence officer, Major Henry W. Hall. While in the Aleutians, he developed emphysema.[37]
After the war, Hammett returned to political activism, "but he played that role with less fervour than before". He was elected president of the Civil Rights Congress (CRC) on June 5, 1946, at a meeting held at the Hotel Diplomat in New York City, and "devoted the largest portion of his working time to CRC activities".[40]
In 1946, a bail fund was created by the CRC "to be used at the discretion of three trustees to gain the release of defendants arrested for political reasons."[41] The trustees were Hammett, who was chairman, Robert W. Dunn, and Frederick Vanderbilt Field.[41]
The CRC's bail fund gained national attention on November 4, 1949, when bail in the amount of "$260,000 in negotiable government bonds" was posted "to free eleven men appealing against their convictions under the Smith Act for criminal conspiracy to teach and advocate the overthrow of the United States government by force and violence." On July 2, 1951, their appeals exhausted, four of the convicted men fled rather than surrender themselves to federal agents and begin serving their sentences. The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York issued subpoenas to the trustees of the CRC bail fund in an attempt to learn the whereabouts of the fugitives.[41]
Hammett testified on July 9, 1951, in front of United States District Court Judge Sylvester Ryan, facing questioning by Irving Saypol, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, described by Time as "the nation's number-one legal hunter of top Communists". During the hearing, Hammett refused to provide the information the government wanted, specifically the list of contributors to the bail fund, "people who might be sympathetic enough to harbor the fugitives."[41] Instead, on every question regarding the CRC or the bail fund, Hammett declined to answer, citing the Fifth Amendment, refusing to even identify his signature or initials on CRC documents the government had subpoenaed. As soon as his testimony concluded, Hammett was found guilty of contempt of court.[41][44][45][46]
Hammett served time in a West Virginia federal penitentiary, where, according to Lillian Hellman, he was assigned to clean toilets.[47][48] Hellman noted in her eulogy of Hammett that he submitted to prison rather than reveal the names of the contributors to the fund because "he had come to the conclusion that a man should keep his word."[49]
By 1952, Hammett's popularity had declined as result of the hearings. He found himself impoverished due to a combination of the cancellation of radio programs The Adventures of Sam Spade and The Adventures of the Thin Man, and a lien on his income by the Internal Revenue Service for back taxes owed since 1943. Furthermore, his books were no longer in print.[50]
Later years and death
During the 1950s Hammett was investigated by Congress. He testified on March 26, 1953, before the House Un-American Activities Committee about his own activities, but refused to cooperate with the committee. No official action was taken, but his stand caused him to be blacklisted, along with others who were blacklisted as a result of McCarthyism.
Hammett became an alcoholic before working in advertising,[23] and alcoholism continued to trouble him until 1948, when he quit under doctor's orders. However, years of heavy drinking and smoking worsened the tuberculosis he contracted in World War I, and then, according to Hellman, "jail had made a thin man thinner, a sick man sicker ... I knew he would now always be sick."[51]
Hellman wrote that during the 1950s, Hammett became "a hermit", his decline evident in the clutter of his rented "ugly little country cottage", where "signs of sickness were all around: now the phonograph was unplayed, the typewriter untouched, the beloved foolish gadgets unopened in their packages."[52] He may have meant to start a new literary life with the novel Tulip, but left it unfinished, perhaps because he was "just too ill to care, too worn out to listen to plans or read contracts. The fact of breathing, just breathing, took up all the days and nights."[53] Hammett could no longer live alone, and they both knew it, so he spent the last four years of his life with Hellman. "Not all of that time was easy, and some of it very bad", she wrote, but, "guessing death was not too far away, I would try for something to have afterwards."[54]
Many of Hammett's papers are held by the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin. This archive includes manuscripts and personal correspondence, along with a small group of miscellaneous notes.[56]
The Irvin Department of Rare Books and Special Collections at the University of South Carolina holds the Dashiell Hammett family papers.[57]
Legacy
Hammett's relationship with Lillian Hellman was portrayed in the 1977 film Julia. Jason Robards won an Oscar for his depiction of Hammett, and Jane Fonda was nominated for her portrayal of Lillian Hellman.
Hammett was the subject of a 1982 prime time PBS biography, The Case of Dashiell Hammett, that won a Peabody Award and a special Edgar Allan Poe Award from the Mystery Writers of America.[58]
Frederic Forrest portrayed Hammett semifictionally as the protagonist in the 1982 film Hammett, based on the novel of the same name by Joe Gores. He would reprise the role of Hammett in the 1992 made-for-TV film Citizen Cohn.
Hammett's influence on popular culture has continued well after his death. For example, in 1975, the film The Black Bird starred George Segal in the role of Sam Spade, Jr.; the film was a sequel and parody of the Maltese Falcon.[59] The 1976 comedic film Murder by Death spoofed a number of famous literary sleuths, including several of Hammett's.[60] The film's characters included Sam Diamond and Dick and Dora Charleston, which were parodies of Hammett's Sam Spade and Nick and Nora Charles.[61] In 2006, Rachel Cohn published the YA novel, Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist, whose main characters were named for the sleuths in Hammett's Thin Man series.[62] The book was made into a film of the same name and released in 2008.[63] Later, Rachel Cohn and David Levithan authored several books whose main characters are named for Hammett and his partner.[64] In 2011, they published the YA suspenseful romance, Dash & Lily's Book of Dares.[65] That was followed by the sequels The Twelve Days of Dash and Lily in 2016 and Mind the Gap, Dash & Lily in 2020.[66] The book series was made into a Netflix television series.[64]
"Hammett gave murder back to the kind of people that commit it for reasons, not just to provide a corpse; and with the means at hand, not with hand-wrought dueling pistols, curare, and tropical fish... He is said to have lacked heart, yet the story he thought most of himself [The Glass Key] is the record of a man's devotion to a friend. He was spare, frugal, hard-boiled, but he did over and over again what only the best writers can ever do at all. He wrote scenes that seemed never to have been written before."[67]
Currently, 82 complete and standalone short stories are known to be written by Dashiell Hammett. They are listed below in the order of initial publication.[68][69] Unfinished writings, fragments, drafts, screen stories, and stories that were later reworked into novels are listed separately below.
Complete and Standalone Short Stories
Title
First Publication
Most Recent Collection
Note
"The Parthian Shot"
The Smart Set, October 1922
Lost Stories (2005)
"Immortality"
10 Story Book, November 1922
Lost Stories (2005)
Written as Daghull Hammett
"The Barber and His Wife"
Brief Stories, December 1922
Lost Stories (2005)
Written as Peter Collinson, the first story written by Hammett but was initially rejected.[70]
"The Road Home"
Black Mask, December 1922
Lost Stories (2005)
Written as Peter Collinson
"The Master Mind"
The Smart Set, January 1923
Lost Stories (2005)
"The Sardonic Star of Tom Doody"
Brief Stories, February 1923
Lost Stories (2005)
Written as Peter Collinson, reprinted elsewhere as "Wages of Crime"
"The Vicious Circle"
Black Mask, June 15, 1923
Woman in the Dark (1951) under the title “The Man Who Stood in the Way”
Written as Peter Collinson, reprinted elsewhere as "The Man Who Stood in the Way"
"The Joke on Eloise Morey"
Brief Stories, June 1923
Lost Stories (2005)
"Holiday"
The New Pearson's, July 1923
Lost Stories (2005)
"The Crusader"
The Smart Set, August 1923
Lost Stories (2005)
Written as Mary Jane Hammett
"Arson Plus"
Black Mask, October 1, 1923
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
Written as Peter Collinson
"The Dimple"
Saucy Stories, October 15, 1923
Lost Stories (2005)
Reprinted elsewhere as "In the Morgue"
"Crooked Souls"
Black Mask, October 15, 1923
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
Reprinted elsewhere as "The Gatewood Caper"
"Slippery Fingers"
Black Mask, October 15, 1923
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
Written as Peter Collinson
"The Green Elephant"
The Smart Set, October 1923
Lost Stories (2005)
"It"
Black Mask, November 1, 1923
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
Reprinted elsewhere as "The Black Hat That Wasn't There"
"The Second-Story Angel"
Black Mask, November 15, 1923
Nightmare Town (1999)
"Laughing Masks"
Action Stories, November 1923
Lost Stories (2005)
Written as Peter Collinson, reprinted elsewhere as "When Luck's Running Good"
"Bodies Piled Up"
Black Mask, December 1, 1923
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
Reprinted elsewhere as "House Dick"
"Itchy"
Brief Stories, January 1924
Lost Stories (2005)
Written as Peter Collinson, reprinted elsewhere as "Itchy the Debonair"
"The Tenth Clew"
Black Mask, January 1, 1924
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
Sometimes spelled "The Tenth Clue"
"The Man Who Killed Dan Odams"
Black Mask, January 15, 1924
Nightmare Town (1999)
"Night Shots"
Black Mask, February 1, 1924
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
"The New Racket"
Black Mask, February 15, 1924
The Adventures of Sam Spade (1944) under the title "The Judge Laughed Last"
Reprinted elsewhere as "The Judge Laughed Last"
"Esther Entertains"
Brief Stories, February 1924
Lost Stories (2005)
"Afraid of a Gun"
Black Mask, March 1, 1924
Nightmare Town (1999)
"Zigzags of Treachery"
Black Mask, March 1, 1924
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
"One Hour"
Black Mask, April 1, 1924
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
"The House in Turk Street"
Black Mask, April 15, 1924
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
"The Girl with the Silver Eyes"
Black Mask, June 1924
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
"Women, Politics and Murder"
Black Mask, September 1924
The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017)
Reprinted elsewhere as "Death on Pine Street" and "A Tale of Two Women"
All 28 Continental Op stories and one unfinished story have been collected in their original unabridged forms in The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017).
Sam Spade
The Maltese Falcon (initially a five-part serial from September 1929 to January 1930 in Black Mask)
"The Great Lovers", The Smart Set, November 1922 (reprinted in Lost Stories, 2005)
"From the Memoirs of a Private Detective", The Smart Set, March 1923
"In Defence of the Sex Story", The Writer's Digest, June 1924
"Three Favorites", Black Mask, November 1924, Short autobiographies of Francis James, Dashiell Hammett and C. J. Daly.
"Vamping Sampson", The Editor, May 1925
On Advertising
"The Advertisement IS Literature". Western Advertising. 9 (3): 35–36. October 1926.
"Advertising Art Isn't Art —- It's Advertising". Western Advertising. 11 (5): 47–48. December 1927.
"Have You Tried Meiosis?". Western Advertising. 11 (6): 60–61. January 1928.
"The Literature of Advertising in 1927". Western Advertising. 12 (1): 154–156. February 1928.
"The Editor Knows His Audience". Western Advertising. 12 (2): 45–46. March 1928.
Examples of Hammett's advertising copy for the Albert S. Samuels Company, a San Francisco jewelers, are given in:
Carne, Hugh (October 1927). "Making Retail Advertising Stand Out". Western Advertising. 11 (3): 58–61, 82.
Starting in December 1925 and ending August 1926, there appeared monthly, in Western Advertising “Books Reviews by S. H.” Hammett is using not using D. but his other initial S. for Samuel.
Letters
Layman, Richard; Rivett, Julie M., eds. (2001). Selected Letters of Dashiell Hammett: 1921–1960. Counterpoint Press. ISBN978-1-582432-10-6.
Creeps by Night; Chills and Thrills. John Day, 1931. (Anthology edited by Hammett with an introduction.)[75]
The Battle of the Aleutians. Field Force Headquarters, Adak, Alaska, 1944. (A pamphlet with text by Hammett and Robert Colodny and illustrations by Harry Fletcher.)
The Dain Curse: The Glass Key; and Selected Stories. Everyman's Library Contemporary Classics. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 2007. ISBN978-0-307266-69-9.
Short fiction
After their initial publication in pulp magazines, most of Hammett's short stories were first collected in ten digest-sizedpaperbacks by Mercury Publications under an imprint, either Bestsellers Mystery, A Jonathan Press Mystery or Mercury Mystery. The stories were edited by Ellery Queen (Frederic Dannay) and were abridged versions of the original publications. Some of these digests were reprinted as hardcovers by World Publishing under the imprint Tower Books. The anthologies were also republished as Dellmapbacks. An important collection, The Big Knockover and Other Stories, edited by Lillian Hellman, helped revive Hammett's literary reputation in the 1960s and fostered a new series of anthologies. However, most of these used Dannay's abridged version of the stories.
The first collection that prints stories in their original unedited forms is Crime Stories & Other Writings (2001) edited by Steven Marcus (especially after the third printing that incorporates the original text of This King Business).[76][77] Subsequent collections that print the original texts include Lost Stories (2005), The Hunter and Other Stories (2013), and The Big Book of the Continental Op (2017).
Mercury Publications
$106,000 Blood Money. Bestseller Mystery B40, 1943. Collection of two connected Continental Op stories, "The Big Knockover" and "$106,000 Blood Money".
The Adventures of Sam Spade. Bestseller Mystery B50, 1944. Collection of three Spade stories and four others.
They Can Only Hang You Once and Other Stories. Mercury Mystery B50, 1949. Reprint of Bestseller Mystery B50.
The Continental Op. Bestseller Mystery B62, 1945. Collection of four Continental Op stories.
The Continental Op. Jonathan Press Mystery J40, 1949. Reprint of Bestseller Mystery B62.
The Return of the Continental Op. Jonathan Press Mystery J17, 1945. Collection of five further Continental Op stories.
Hammett Homicides. Bestseller Mystery B81, 1946. Collection of six stories, four of which feature the Continental Op.
Dead Yellow Women. Jonathan Press Mystery J29, 1947. Collection of six stories, four of which feature the Continental Op.
Nightmare Town. Mercury Mystery #120, 1948. Collection of four stories, two of which feature the Continental Op.
The Creeping Siamese. Jonathan Press Mystery J48, 1950. Collection of six stories, three of which feature the Continental Op.
Woman in the Dark. Jonathan Press Mystery J59, 1951. Collection of the three part novelette.
A Man Named Thin. Mercury Mystery #233, 1962. Collection of eight stories, one of which features the Continental Op.
World Publishing
Blood Money. Tower, 1943. Hardcover edition of Bestseller Mystery B40.
The Adventures of Sam Spade and other stories. 1945. Hardcover edition of Bestseller Mystery B50.
A Man Called Spade and Other Stories. Dell #90, 1945. Mapback reprint of Bestseller Mystery B50 but omits two stories: Nightshade and The Judge Laughed Last.
A Man Called Spade and Other Stories. Dell #411, 1950. Reprint of Dell #90.
A Man Called Spade and Other Stories. Dell #452, 1952. Reprint of Dell #90.
The Continental Op. Dell #129, 1946. Reprint of Bestseller Mystery B62.
The Return of the Continental Op. Dell #154, 1947. Reprint of Jonathan Press Mystery J17.
The Creeping Siamese. Dell #538, 1951. Mapback reprint of Jonathan Press Mystery J48, 1950.
Later collections
Along with the novels, these later collections have been reprinted in paperback versions under many imprints: Vintage Crime, Black Lizard, Everyman's library.
The Big Knockover. Random House, 1966. Including the unfinished novel Tulip.
The Continental Op. Random House, 1974. Edited and with an introduction by Steven Marcus. Comprises 7 stories. ISBN978-0-394487-04-5
Woman in the Dark. Knopf, 1988. Hardcover collection of the three parts of the title novelette, with an introduction by Robert B. Parker. ISBN978-0-394572-69-7
Nightmare Town. Knopf, 1999. Hardcover collection, with contents different from the digest of the same title. ISBN978-0-375401-11-4
Lost Stories. Vince Emery Productions, 2005. Collection of 21 stories not been previously published in hardcover, including some previously unpublished stories, with several long commentaries on Hammett's career providing context for the stories. Introduction by Joe Gores. ISBN978-0-972589-81-9
Vintage Hammett. New York : Vintage Books, 2005. Collection nine stories of Sam Spade, Nick and Nora Charles, and The Continental Op. ISBN978-1-400079-62-9
The Hunter and Other Stories. Mysterious Press, 2013. Collection of previously unpublished or uncollected stories and screenplays, including a fragment of a second Sam Spade novel. Edited by Richard Layman and Julie M. Rivett. ISBN978-0-802121-58-5
The Black Lizard Big Book of Black Mask Stories. New York : Vintage Crime/Black Lizard, Vintage Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, [2010]. ISBN978-0-307455-43-7 Reprints The Maltese Falcon in its original serialized form.
The Big Book of the Continental Op. New York : Vintage Crime/Black Lizard, Vintage Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, [2017]. Collects all twenty-eight stories and two serialized novels starring Continental Op, plus the previously unpublished fragment "Three Dimes." ISBN978-0-525432-95-1
^Mystery Writers Of America (1995). The Crown Crime Companion: The Top 100 Mystery Novels of All Time. Crown Publisher Inc. pp. 22, 31, 39, 88. ISBN0-517-88115-2.
^Nolan, William F. 1978 2nd printing. Dashiell Hammett: A Casebook, with an introduction by Philip Durham. 1969. Santa Barbara, McNally & Loftin, p. 6.
^Layman, Richard (ed.) 2001. With Rivett, Julie M., Introduction by Josephine Hammett Marshall. Selected Letters of Dashiell Hammett 1921–1960ISBN1-58243-081-0, pp. 142f
^Hellman, Lillian (1969). "Introduction". In Hellman, Lillian (ed.). The Big Knockover and Other Stories. Penguin Books. pp. 7–23. ISBN0-1400-2941-9.
^ abG. Michael Doogan, Dash-ing Through the Snow, The Armchair Detective, Winter, 1989, pp. 82–91
^Hellman, Lilian (1962). Introduction to Dashiell Hammett, The Big Knockover: Selected Stories and Short Novels. Houghton Mifflin. (Published posthumously; Hammett had turned down offers to republish his stories, and Hellman published them only after his death, as a tribute.) pp. vii–viii,
^Hellman, Lilian. Introduction to The Big Knockover. pp. xi–xii. Hellman wrote that there began an "irritating farce" that Hammett told her he was cleaning bathrooms "better than [she] had ever done" and "learned to take pride in the work", which she called his form of boasting, or humor, "to make fun of trouble or pain."
^Johnson, Diane (1987). Dashiell Hammett: A Life. Fawcett Columbine. Cited in King Laurie R. (2010). Afterword. Locked Rooms. Random House. p. 403.[ISBN missing]
^Hammett, Dashiell (1999). Marcus, Steven (ed.). Complete Novels. Library of America. pp. 957–958. ISBN978-1-883011-67-3.
^Hellman's introduction to The Big Knockover, p. viii (Hellman speculated that Hammett turned down republishing offers because he hoped for a fresh start and "didn't want the old work to get in the way.")
Braun, Martin (1977). Prototypen der amerikanischen Kriminalerzählung: Die Romane und Kurzgeschichten Carroll John Daly und Dashiell Hammett. Frankfurt: Lang.
Lopez, Jesus Angel Gonzalez (2004). La Narrativa Popular de Dashiell Hammett: Pulps, Cine, y Comics. Biblioteca Javier Coy d'Estudis Nord-Americans, Universitat de Valencia.
Marling, William (1983). Dashiell Hammett. New York: Twayne.
Maurin, Maria Jose Alvarez (1994). Claves Para un Enigma: La Poetica del Misterio en la Narrativa de Dashiell Hammett. Universidad de Leon.
Mellon, Joan (1996). Hellman and Hammett. New York: Harper Collins.
Metress, Christopher, ed. (1994). The Critical Response to Dashiell Hammett. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press.
Nolan, William F. (1969). Dashiell Hammett: A Casebook. Santa Barbara: McNally & Lofin.
Nolan, William F. (1983). Hammett: A Life at the Edge. New York: Congdon & Weed.
Panek, Leroy Lad (2004). Reading Early Hammett: A Critical Study of the Fiction Prior to The Maltese Falcon. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland.
Symons, Julian (1985). Dashiell Hammett. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
Thompson, George J. "Rhino" (2007). Hammett's Moral Vision. San Francisco: Vince Emery Productions.
Ward, Nathan (2015). The Lost Detective: Becoming Dashiell Hammett. New York: Bloomsbury USA.
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العلاقات العمانية الماليزية سلطنة عمان ماليزيا سلطنة عمان ماليزيا تعديل مصدري - تعديل العلاقات العمانية الماليزية هي العلاقات الثنائية التي تجمع بين سلطنة عمان وماليزيا.[1][2][3][4][5] مقارنة بين البلدين هذه مقارنة عامة ومرجعية للدولتين: ...
Reaksi Diels–Alder Dinamai berdasarkan Otto Paul Hermann DielsKurt Alder Jenis reaksi Sikloadisi Reaksi Diena terkonjugasi (tersubstitusi) + Olefin (tersubstitusi) ↓ Sikloheksena (tersubstitusi) Pengenal Portal Organic Chemistry diels-alder-reaction ID ontologi RSC RXNO:0000006 Y Reaksi Diels–Alder adalah reaksi kimia organik antara diena terkonjugasi dengan alkena tersubstitusi, umumnya dinamakan sebagai dienofil, membentuk sikloheksena tersubstitusi.[1] Reaksi ini dapat b...
Aerial view of Greater Johannesburg at night (2020) The term Greater Johannesburg may mean: The area governed by the Greater Johannesburg Metropolitan Council (GJMC) from 1995 to 2000.[1][2][3][4] The current City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality, which superseded the GJMC in 2000 with the incorporation of much of Midrand and some of Modderfontein.[5][6][7] The place itemized in the 1996 census, defined as the MLC's constituting...
Swedish music competition Melodifestivalen 2023DatesHeat 14 February 2023Heat 211 February 2023Heat 318 February 2023Heat 425 February 2023Semi-final4 March 2023Final11 March 2023HostPresenter(s)Farah AbadiJesper RönndahlArtistic directorKarin GunnarssonDirected byFredrik BäcklundRobin HofwanderHost broadcasterSVTWebsitesvt.se/melodifestivalen ParticipantsNumber of entries28VoteVoting systemHeats and semi-final: 100% public voteFinal: 50% public vote, 50% jury voteWinning songTattoo by Lore...
Serbian tennis player Slobodan ŽivojinovićŽivojinović at Wimbledon in the mid 1980s.Country (sports) YugoslaviaResidenceBelgrade, SerbiaBorn (1963-07-23) 23 July 1963 (age 60)Belgrade, SR Serbia, SFR YugoslaviaHeight1.98 m (6 ft 6 in)Turned pro1981Retired1992PlaysRight-handed (one-handed backhand)Prize money$1,450,654SinglesCareer record151–139Career titles2Highest rankingNo. 19 (26 October 1987)Grand Slam singles resultsAustralian ...
Vista do palácio na Piazza Venezia, com o Palazzo Bonaparte à direita bem no começo da Via del Corso. À esquerda, a Piazza San Marco. Antigamente o Palazzetto Venezia ficava no grande espaço vazio em primeiro plano e agora ele está ao lado da praça, à esquerda (não visível). Palazzo Venezia ou Palazzo Barbo é um palácio localizado na esquina da Piazza Venezia com a Via del Plebiscito no rione Pigna de Roma. Atualmente abriga o Museo nazionale di Palazzo Venezia, a sede do Istituto...
Political party in Thailand Thai Liberal Party พรรคเสรีรวมไทยAbbreviationTLPLeaderSereepisuth TemeeyavesSecretary-GeneralSuwit KittitaranonFounderPaiboon PuangthonglorFounded29 August 2013; 10 years ago (2013-08-29)HeadquartersBangkok, ThailandIdeologyProgressive conservatism[1][2]Antimilitarism[3]Political positionCentre to centre-rightColours YellowHouse of Representatives1 / 500Websitesereeruamthai.or.thPoliti...
Somali AustraliansTotal population18,401 (by ancestry, 2021)[1]Regions with significant populationsMelbourne · Perth · Brisbane · TownsvilleLanguagesSomali, Australian EnglishReligionIslam[2] Somali Australians are citizens and residents of Australia who are of Somali ancestry. Although the first Somali community in Victoria was established in 1988, most Somalis began to settle in the country in the early 1990s following the civil war ...
Estados Unidos y Unión Soviética fueron las dos superpotencias visibles durante la Guerra Fría. En la imagen se observa a Ronald Reagan y Mijaíl Gorbachov en 1985. Después de la disolución de la Unión Soviética, EE. UU. fue la única superpotencia verdaderamente hegemónica. La polaridad en relaciones internacionales se refiere a la distribución del poder dentro de un sistema internacional o estructura internacional, y por lo tanto concierne a la naturaleza del sistema internacional ...
United States federal district court in North Carolina United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina(W.D.N.C.)LocationCharles R. Jonas Federal Building(Charlotte)More locationsAshevilleStatesvilleAppeals toFourth CircuitEstablishedJune 4, 1872Judges5Chief JudgeMartin Karl ReidingerOfficers of the courtU.S. AttorneyDena J. KingU.S. MarshalTerry J. Burginwww.ncwd.uscourts.gov The United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolin...
City in Maharashtra, India This article is about the municipality in Maharashtra, India. For its namesake district, see Nanded district. For its namesake taluka, see Nanded taluka. This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Nanded – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2015) (Learn how and w...
Japanese manga series Level EManga volume 1 cover, featuring Prince BakaレベルE(Reberu Ī)GenreScience fiction comedy[1] MangaWritten byYoshihiro TogashiPublished byShueishaImprintJump ComicsMagazineWeekly Shōnen JumpDemographicShōnenOriginal runOctober 2, 1995 – January 15, 1997Volumes3 (List of volumes) Anime television seriesDirected byToshiyuki KatōProduced by Hatsuo Nara Ken Hagino Kōji Kajita Written byJukki HanadaMusic byYang Bang-eanStudi...
Wali Kota JayapuraPetahanaFrans Pekeysejak 23 Mei 2022KediamanKantor Wali kota JayapuraMasa jabatan5 tahunDibentuk1999Pejabat pertamaDrs. Florens ImbiriSitus webjayapurakota.go.id Berikut adalah Daftar Wali Kota Jayapura dari masa ke masa. No Wali Kota Administrasi Awal jabatan Akhir jabatan Prd. Ket. Wakil Wali Kota 1 Florens Imbiri 1979 1989 1 — 2 Michael Manufandu 1989 1993 2 No Wali Kota Awal jabatan Akhir jabatan Prd. Ket. Wakil Wali Kota — R. Roemantyo 1993 1994 — — 1 1994 ...
For the 1928 American film, see Telling the World (film). 2011 single by Taio CruzTelling the WorldSingle by Taio Cruzfrom the album Rio soundtrack, Rokstarr and TY.O Released20 March 2011Recorded2009–2010GenreR&Bpop rockdance popLength3:33 (original version)4:09 (radio version)LabelIslandSongwriter(s)Taio CruzAlan KasiryeProducer(s)Taio CruzTaio Cruz singles chronology Higher (2010) Telling the World (2011) Falling in Love (2011) Telling the World is a song by English recording art...
У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. Пипец. Kick-Ass: The Game Обложка игры в PlayStation Store Разработчик Frozen Codebase Издатель WHA Entertainment Даты выпуска iPhone: 17 апреля 2010 PlayStation 3: 29 апреля 2010 Жанр Beat 'em up Технические данные Платформы iOS PlayStation 3 (PlayStation Network) Режимы игры однопользовател...
2021 squad-based tactical shooter video game This article is about the video game. For the term for non-commissioned members of a military, see Enlisted rank. For the unrelated American sitcom, see Enlisted (TV series). 2021 video gameEnlistedDeveloper(s)Darkflow SoftwarePublisher(s)Gaijin EntertainmentEngineDagor EnginePlatform(s)Xbox Series X/SPlayStation 5PlayStation 4Xbox OnePersonal computerReleaseMarch 2, 2021Genre(s)First-person shooterMode(s)Multiplayer Enlisted is a free squad-based ...
Railway station in Gloucestershire, England Ham Mill HaltThe site of the station in 2008General informationLocationStroud, GloucesterEnglandPlatforms2Other informationStatusDisusedHistoryOriginal companyGreat Western RailwayPre-groupingGreat Western RailwayPost-groupingGreat Western RailwayKey dates12 October 1903 (1903-10-12)Opened as Ham Mill CrossingJuly 1957Name changed to Ham Mill Halt2 November 1964 (1964-11-02)Closed Ham Mill Halt was opened on 12 October ...