Hammett's Moral Vision: The Most Influential In-Depth Analysis of Dashiell Hammett's Novels Red Harvest, The Dain Curse, The Maltese Falcon, The Glass ... Man
Hammett's Moral Vision: The Most Influential In-Depth Analysis of Dashiell Hammett's Novels Red Harvest, The Dain Curse, The Maltese Falcon, The Glass ... Man
Hammett's Moral Vision: The Most Influential In-Depth Analysis of Dashiell Hammett's Novels Red Harvest, The Dain Curse, The Maltese Falcon, The Glass ... Man
Price: $18.21 FREE for Members
Type: eBook
Released: 2006
Publisher: Vince Emery Productions
Page Count: 342
Format: pdf
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0972589833
ISBN-13: 9780972589833
User Rating: 5.0000 out of 5 Stars! (2 Votes)


Charles A. Clemens | 5 out of 5 Stars!
29/02/2008

I have just finished reading HAMMETT'S MORAL VISION for the second time and I continue to be amazed at the conclusions drawn rounded look at the novels of Dashiell Hammett and even goes so far as to suggest the reason that he stopped writing: He had said all that he had to say!

How many writers, famous, successful writers, keep writing the same story over and over again? I see Dashiell Hammett as an important author and a great author. Mr. Thompson's book has only reinforced those beliefs.

I do not feel that "Rhino" Thompson gives sufficient honor to Dashiell Hammett serving and distracting.

That being said, I loved the last 179 pages of the book. I found it well-written and organized. The type-setting, page numbering, and headings made it easy to follow the numerous footnotes and to access the Notes section in the rear of the book.

I disagree with Mr. Berger's complaint about Thompson's emphasis on "Hammett's Development As A Writer." I think the emphasis is more on Hammett's development as a humanist, as a commentator on capitalist society, and as a human being. He had a message regarding the dehumanizing effects of a money-oriented, soulless world, and he told his stories well.

I think Thompson did an excellent job in selecting short quotations from the five books he discusses and I think a reader of HAMMETT'S MORAL VISION cannot help but gain a better understanding of the man, Dashiell Hammett.

My biggest disappointment was that Thompson chose not to discuss Hammett's final work, TULIP. Hammett's writing style changed markedly after THE THIN MAN and I would have liked to read a discussion of how Hammett's relationship with Ms. Hellman, his declining health, and thoughts of mortality led to that strange little book.

Flitcraft | 5 out of 5 Stars!
01/10/2007

I love Hammett, and I think Thompson has some valid insights, but I'm kind of disappointed with this book. But it depends. If I were a regular reader of "detective fiction" (i.e., if Hammett didn't happen to interest me intellectually, and if I read any other detective fiction with arbitrary delight), I might have actually loved this book. So don't base your judgment entirely on what I have to say about this book.

But what I will say is this: as a student of philosophy and English literature, and as someone who has read some literary criticism in his day, I will say this book is disappointing. Part of the problem is, Mr. Thompson tries to cover way too much. What I mean is this: he takes you through the novels entire. What he might have done is taken a more specific theme and found the places in the novels that fit with that theme. What you need, in that case, is not the entire novels: you need only "pieces" of each novel, and more speculation, more imagination. Not explication. The assumption should be that your reader is reading you because they've already read the author's books already.

For a good example of what I mean, read the Introduction to THE CONTINENTAL OP collection depth" and "influential." I don't know how influential it has been, as I have not read ALL the criticism on Hammett over the past forty years. But I really don't think it is "in-depth": it's more of an introduction.

There really is, I think, too much focus out there on "Hammett's Development As A Writer." To HELL with his "development"! He was a writer; that is all. There is no "development": everything he wrote was good. He might have changed over the years, sure. But it's not as though he started out as a hack writer and ended up as a brilliant novelist in the end. The fact of the matter is that Hammett was able to say in very few words what it takes other writers pages and pages and pages to say. It is simply more difficult to write something short than it is to write something long. This may be especially true of detective fiction. For instance, why is it that we have so little of Hammett and Chandler, but they are still considered the best? Whereas we have volume after volume of Parker, Spillane, Burke, Grafton, etc., and don't seem to be an "Influence" on anyone.

But by all means, if you want a good introduction to Hammett's worldview, or if you're a book collector, or if you are really unfamiliar with literary analysis, you might love this book.

But I wouldn't read a mediocre book on Hammett for the same reason I wouldn't read a mediocre book on Shakespeare or Aristotle.

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