Home » Mystery » Book Clubs » Custom StoresThe Maltese Falcon | ||
Author - Dashiell Hammett ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Paperback Book item from Vintage was reviewed on 6-Oct-2008. Search ISBN:0679722645 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. The Maltese Falcon Reference Book. Classifications : Mystery Book Clubs Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books General AAS Literature Humanities New & Used Textbooks Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books General AAS New & Used Textbooks Custom Stores Speci . Click the following link to view the cover of The Maltese Falcon. Related topics: Mystery. Book Clubs. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. Books. General AAS. Literature. Humanities. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. requestid: f5ba6927-861f-4e63-971c-ce1a9ff3a81arequestprocessingtime: 0.0648800000000000 salesrank: 26821 numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 7079055510 1) Paperback Book The Maltese Falcon by Vintage. I´m a big fan of pulp/hard-boiled fiction. I recently started reading the "classics". I found Dashiell Hammett to be a wonderful author. His prose is very minimal and tight. I loved the style.
2) Paperback Book The Maltese Falcon by Vintage. It was the portly Continental Op who usually played the starring role in Dashiell Hammett´s written adventures. Sam Spade, tough guy private detective, was never a major character in the books, actually appearing in only one of Hammett´s novels. But what a novel! It has been said that Hammett took crime fiction out of the wood-paneled libraries of tweed wearing detectives and put the thugs in the back alleys where they belonged.
3) Paperback Book The Maltese Falcon by Vintage. Plenty of raves for The Maltese Falcon abound as it remains the most quintessential detective story. I actually agree but think otherwise for several points. While the writing at times is good and stylish, Dashiell Hammett can at times be intermittent as he keeps the story taut and then lets it loose. Sometimes, the pacing is fast and slow and fast. The characters are every now and then annoying; take for instance, Brigid O´Shaughnessey, she can be boring with her talk when she goes in circles without reaching a point. Casper Gutman is loquacious and very pedantic. Joel Cairo isn´t so bad himself but can be effeminate at times. His lines are not bad though. Speaking of lines, Sam Spade gets the best of them. But I am disappointed that he can be a "talker" especially when he rounds up the usual suspects at his apartment or is alone with Brigid to the end of the story. I prefer him to cut the chase and move fast and think fast pretty much of the time. Still, the story behind The Maltese Falcon is interesting and fun for a mystery read, but the actions, at least a few of them, are extraordinarily and complicatedly done. The logic seems to be overwhelming in certain points yet is essential to the mystery. If I had to choose the better version of The Maltese Falcon, it will be John Huston´s film over Dashiell Hammett´s book; the movie masterpiece is so much better executed and is regarded as the ultimate film noir of films noir. Everything in the film is exactly perfect and remains the way I envision of The Maltese Falcon; the book is pretty much one to two levels below the film. Again, that doesn´t mean The Maltese Falcon is not a worthy read...it still is. Once I´ve read the book and also seen the picture a few times, the latter outclasses the former. One of the best parts of The Maltese Falcon the book is how perfectly well Dashiell describes the characters; it´s a gift indeed. The lines that Sam Spade gets are of the legend stuff. Lo and behold, the ever famous quote "the stuff that dreams are made of" is notably missing in the ending. One of my favorites is when Sam says, "I won´t play the sap for you." I liked how he keeps saying "dingus" for the falcon. Another is when he says "you´re an angel" to his secretary. While Sam has affection (if that´s what it is) for Brigid, I find it strange since they only met for few days and without being intimate. It´s hardly realistic. All in all, The Maltese Falcon is an almost classic detective story but not of thoroughly supreme quality á la Doyle´s stories of Sherlock Holmes. I am still laughing that our Sam Spade is a blonde. Wherefore art thou, Bogie?¤ 4) Paperback Book The Maltese Falcon by Vintage. The Maltese Falcon is nothing to write home about. It´s a good book, and I recommend it, but it is nothing discernibly "special." You don´t finish it and go, "Wow!"
5) Paperback Book The Maltese Falcon by Vintage. Sam Spade, gorgeous dames, heat packing bad guys, treasure, action, private detective wit...this book has it all in "Spades". I´d never read the book and it´s been long enough since I saw the movie that I was able to enjoy it without knowing what was coming next.
6) Paperback Book The Maltese Falcon by Vintage. A treasure worth killing for. Sam Spade, a slightly shopworn private eye with his own solitary code of ethics. A perfumed grafter named Joel Cairo, a fat man name Gutman, and Brigid O’Shaughnessy, a beautiful and treacherous woman whose loyalties shift at the drop of a dime. These are the ingredients of Dashiell Hammett’s coolly glittering gem of detective fiction, a novel that has haunted three generations of readers.¤ 7) Paperback Book The Maltese Falcon by Vintage. Sam Spade, Dashiell Hammett´s archetypally tough San Francisco detective, is more noir than L.A. Confidential and more vulnerable than Raymond Chandler´s Marlowe. In The Maltese Falcon, the best known of Hammett´s Sam Spade novels (including The Dain Curse and The Glass Key), Spade is tough enough to bluff the toughest thugs and hold off the police, risking his reputation when a beautiful woman begs for his help, while knowing that betrayal may deal him a new hand in the next moment. Spade´s partner is murdered on a stakeout; the cops blame him for the killing; a beautiful redhead with a heartbreaking story appears and disappears; grotesque villains demand a payoff he can´t provide; and everyone wants a fabulously valuable gold statuette of a falcon, created as tribute for the Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV. Who has it? And what will it take to get it back? Spade´s solution is as complicated as the motives of the seekers assembled in his hotel room, but the truth can be a cold comfort indeed. Spade is bigger (and blonder) in the book than in the movie, and his Mephistophelean countenance is by turns seductive and volcanic. Sam knows how to fight, whom to call, how to rifle drawers and secrets without leaving a trace, and just the right way to call a woman "Angel" and convince her that she is. He is the quintessence of intelligent cool, with a wise guy´s perfect pitch. If you only know the movie, read the book. If you´re riveted by Chinatown or wonder where Robert B. Parker´s Spenser gets his comebacks, read the master. --Barbara Schlieper¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 3-Nov-2008, 06797226459780679722649, 880-770-850-370-450-USB-8
Search: Vintage, Book Posters, Book Art | ||
Home | Back to review | Site Map | V11794 | ||