The Maltese Falcon
by Dashiell Hammett
List Price: $9.00
Pages: 224
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0679722645
Publisher: Vintage

Samuel Dashiell Hammett was born in St. Mary's County, Maryland,
on May 27, 1894, and grew up in Philadelphia and Baltimore. He left school
at the age of fourteen and held a variety of jobs, from messenger boy
to stevedore, and finally worked as an operative for the famous Pinkerton's
Detective Agency, a job that sent him west. In 1918, World War I interrupted
his sleuthing, although he was discharged from the army in less than a
year with tuberculosis. Spending time in several veterans' hospitals,
in one he met a nurse, Jose Dolan, and married her in 1921. Settling in
San Francisco, he resumed detective work, and began to write. In 1922
he sold his first story, to H. L. Mencken's Smart Set, and quickly
thereafter began to sell many to its spinoff that featured mystery and
crime fiction, Black Mask. In the next decade, Hammett became the
unquestioned master of detective-story fiction in America. His first four
novels--Red Harvest (1929), The Dain Curse (1929), The
Maltese Falcon (1930), and The Glass Key (1931)--exerted a
powerful influence on American culture and writing. His last novel, The
Thin Man (1934), introduced the sophisticated husband-and-wife sleuthing
team of Nick and Nora Charles.
In World War II, Hammett again
served in the U.S. Army, as a sergeant in the Aleutians for most of his
more than two-year stint. In 1951, he was blacklisted for his left-wing
political affiliations and jailed for six months. Tax delinquency charges
by the Bureau of Internal Revenue followed. He never wrote again. Dashiell
Hammett died on January 10, 1961. The Continental Op was published
posthumously in 1974 by arrangement with his estate's executor and longtime
friend and companion, Lillian Hellman.
top of the page