***Not Sam Spade- Dashiell Hammett’s Woman In The Dark
Book Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Woman In The Dark, Dashiell Hammett,
Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1933
Sure, everybody knows, or at least
everybody used to know, Dashiell Hammett’s classic prototypical hard-boil
detective Sam Spade from his The Maltese
Falcon. Hammett along with Raymond Chandler and his Philip Marlowe series
of crime novels set the then modern day expression of what a literary detective
should look like in comparison with the old parlor detectives. Others may
recall a different style with the suave and sophisticated husband and wife pair
of Nick and Nora Charles (okay with Asta too) of his last crime novel, The Thin Man (which led to a cinematic
series with William Powell and Myra Loy). The novel under review, Woman In The Dark, was written just
prior to that one and although it has no rough-hewn or suave detectives to save
the day it did have an effect on that last novel. At least according to Robert
Parker in his introduction here.
This plotline is fairly simple although
the same terse language and powerful physical and geographical descriptions of
the more famous crime novels is still in evident. An ex-con, Steve, just out of
the can becomes involved with a “woman of the night,” Luise, in a small town
which is “owned” by some local Mayfair swell. The woman is a “guest” of that
Mayfair swell but when he plays rough she decides to split. And winds up on
Steve’s doorstep. Well said Mayfair swell took umbrage and went looking for
her, found her, and set Steve up for another tumble in stir. Steve is not
buying that, not buying Luise’s apparent fate as mapped out by our swell, and
is handy enough to do something about it. Take a charge at a few windmills for
a damsel in distress. Hey this theme sounds familiar is this guy kin to Sam
Spade?
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