The Hunter
And Other Stories
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- ¥1,000
発行者による作品情報
“This fascinating collection of hitherto unpublished or ungathered tales . . . will be a treat for any fan of the father of the hardboiled detective story.” —The Wall Street Journal
A unique publication from one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century, The Hunter and Other Stories includes new Dashiell Hammett stories gleaned from his personal archives along with screen treatments long buried in film industry files, screen stories, and intriguing unfinished narratives.
Hammett is regarded as both a pioneer and master of hardboiled detective fiction, but these dozen-and-a-half pieces, which explore failed romance, courage in the face of conflict, hypocrisy, and crass opportunism, show him in a different light.
The title story concerns a dogged PI unwilling to let go of a seemingly trivial case, and the collection also includes an unfinished Sam Spade story and two full-length screen treatments: “On the Make,” about a corrupt detective, and “The Kiss-Off,” the basis for City Streets (1931), in which Gary Cooper and Sylvia Sydney are caught in a romance complicated by racketeering’s obligations and temptations. Rich in both story and character, this is a volume no Hammett fan should do without.
“For aficionados of the genre, the unearthing of new Hammett stories is akin to Christians discovering an epilogue to the New Testament. . . . These stories are among Hammett’s best. . . . [His] prose is always savvy and sturdy, but for the man who invented ‘hard-boiled,’ it can also be surprisingly elegant.” —San Francisco Chronicle
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Reviewed by Don Herron. I know fans of crime writer Dashiell Hammett (1894 1961) who have been waiting decades to read the stories collected in this book. Stories from his personal files that he probably never tried to sell, a couple more that haven't been reprinted in over 80 years plus never-before-published screen treatments and a fragment starring his iconic PI, Sam Spade. Most come from an archive placed by his longtime companion, Lillian Hellman, in the Ransom Center, University of Texas, and it's taken all these years to get the rights cleared, a saga in itself. Nothing here gets close to Hammett's white-hot run of fiction in the pulp Black Mask from 1923 1930, the long series of tales featuring the short, fat Continental Op, building up to the peak novels The Big Knock-Over and Red Harvest, and the creation of Sam Spade for The Maltese Falcon. That's where he made his rep, allowing him to cash out in Hollywood in the 1930s. By 1934 and publication of The Thin Man and a handful of stories, Hammett was done with prose fiction whatever he tried to write after that was left as fragments for the Ransom archive. But if you're a Hammett fan, you'll want to savor any leftovers from the feast. Under the section head "Crime," the title story is one of a small group of unpublished detective tales about a short, fat investigator bullying a confession out of a suspect, but lacking some touch that might have made it solid. Other sections use the headings "Men" and "Men and Women." Most intriguing is the never-before-published "Magic," a tale of sorcery perhaps intended for the pulp Weird Tales it's as if Hammett is channeling WT mainstay Clark Ashton Smith. Pulp scholars will be talking about that one for years. "On the Way" appeared in Harper's Bazaar in 1932, an autobiographical romp featuring the author and a woman based on Hellman cruising the bars and dance clubs in Hollywood which sees print in a Hammett collection for the first time. "Screen Stories" collects three Hammett treatments, including "The Kiss Off," the basis for the Gary Cooper film City Streets, and "On the Make," originally a vehicle in which Sam Spade went crooked, but this version features a shady PI named Gene Richmond, though it does resurrect the gangster the Dis-and-Dat Kid from The Big Knock-Over. Always good to see old pals one more time. The collection wraps up with a lost Sam Spade story, "A Knife Will Cut for Anybody," the only fragment included in the book. Not from the Texas holdings, this item comes from an unnamed mystery writer who bought it on the antiquarian market years ago as rare as rare can be. I understand that the e-book edition will include other fragments as extras, so die-hard collectors will want that, too. This may not be the last Hammett book: current collections do not gather all his work no less than two Op tales are missing but we're getting close to the end. And then, someday, we fans will want definitive editions and few authors deserve them more. Don Herron is the author of The Dashiell Hammett Tour, based on his long-lived guided walk, and Willeford, a biography of cult crime writer Charles Willeford.