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The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett (1930)

The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett (1930)Originally published in a serialized form in the late 1920s, Dashiell Hammett’s The Maltese Falcon was a highly influential precursor to the tremendously popular hardboiled fiction. It remains an exciting read with a detached, morally ambiguous detective and all the key elements of a noir mystery to be expected of the genre, but lacks the significant substance to make it truly remarkable.

When his partner is shot while on a stakeout for a new client, detective Sam Spade is drawn into a seedy world of bumbling policemen, beautiful and dangerous women, and treasure hunting criminals – all of them seeking the priceless ornament, the Maltese Falcon. The plot, circuitous as it is, is the supporting player to the noir style that Hammett is renowned for. Like with Chandler’s The Big Sleep, even if the reader becomess lost in the twists and double-crossings it doesn’t pose much of an issue. None of the characters ever seem to really know what is truth, who to believe or what is happening. Hammett is careful to never reveal the inner thoughts of those around Spade, we can only trust Spade’s professional intuition, his simmering violence and distrust of everything.

The boy spoke two words, the first a short guttural verb, the second ‘you.’
‘People lose teeth talking like that.’ Spade’s voice was still amiable though his face had become wooden. ‘If you want to hang around you’ll be polite.’
The boy repeated his two words.

Sam Spade is such a great character, described as “a blond Satan”, his motives are always ambiguous, even in the end, but he is just so effortlessly cool. He knows who to call, when to call, he knows the tricks to get the information he needs. Most importantly, he knows to trust no one. Not even the timid yet beautiful Brigid O’Shaughnessy that seeks his help. Of course, their relationship isn’t strictly business, and there are some tantalizing fade-to-black sex scenes, the saucier details ignored in favour of keeping the plot moving. Even if, at times, it feels like much of the plot involves the characters sitting in offices and apartments, smoking during lengthy discussions.

He shut his eyes and smiled complacently at an inner thought. He opened his eyes and said:  ‘That was seventeen years ago. Well, sir, it took me seventeen years to locate that bird, but I did it. I wanted it, and I’m not a man that’s easily discouraged when he wants something.’ His smile grew broad. ‘I wanted it and I found it. I want it and I’m going to have it.’

It would be impossible for me to review this book without mentioning the iconic film version, the 1941 film directed by John Huston and starring Humphrey Bogart – the first major film noir. Reading Joel Cairo’s affected dialogue in the Maltese Falcon, it is impossible to not hear Peter Lorre speaking them, or to picture anyone but Sydney Greenstreet as Casper Gutman. Much of the dialogue was lifted straight from the novel for the screenplay, and it must be one of the more faithful novel-to-film adaptations.

Yet, for all its seedy hardboiled style, whipsmart protagonists, crackling dialogue and swift plotting, I can’t help but feel that The Maltese Falcon is, well, empty. Not quite the fraud the characters in the novel so desperately devote themselves to, but similarly not worth as much as we’re led to believe. A successful innovator of the style, and a cleverly plotted thriller but lacking anything beyond that to really give it any weight. It just does not have the psychological depth to push it beyond being a captivating story. Perhaps this can be attributed to the lack of insight into any of the characters, we are blind to their motives – and pure greed seems too simple an answer – and their futile and ruthless search for something which may not even exist isn’t explored in any great depth. Style is the clear winner in The Maltese Falcon, and Dashiell Hammett is a skilled master of the genre.

As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner (1930)

As I Lay Dying by William FaulknerAs I Lay Dying: Successive episodes in the death and burial of Addie Bundren are recounted by various members of the family circle, principally as they are carting their mother’s coffin to Jefferson, Mississippi, in order to bury her among her people. As the desires and fears and rivalries of the family are revealed in the vernacular speech of the South, the author builds up an impression as epic as the Old Testament, as earthy and comic as Chaucer, as American as Huckleberry Finn.

I’m almost considering launching yet another tirade on how my Australian high school education and limited experience of studying Literature at a tertiary level never introduced me to Faulkner. I don’t know why I place such emphasis on discovering these authors within an educational setting, maybe because it seems like that is where most people tend to come across them? Then I think that I probably would not have understood these authors when I was younger, and that I am discovering them now because I am at a level where I can appreciate and enjoy them without it feeling like laborious study.

So, William Faulkner. I’ve spent a while researching Southern – mainly Southern Gothic – literature, and everything I’ve read of the genre has completely floored me. Faulkner was the huge looming giant of the genre, intimidating me with his stature and supposed difficulty.

I could just remember how my father used to say that the reason for living was to get ready to stay dead a long time. (Addie)

William Faulkner

William Faulkner

The death and subsequent burial rites of Addie Bundren are told through the voices of her children and husband, and local townsfolk, in a stream of consciousness style. It is richly layered and complex, it approaches issues of death and of the fragility of human identity. While the stream of consciousness narrative, shifting between fifteen different characters does take time to adjust to, it is also liberating – so much of the story is left to the imagination, so much is left unsaid and the reader has to interpret. It is challenging but in a satisfying way. The characters, at the beginning, seem to be indistinguishable from one another but gradually, through nuances of speech and thought patterns, they become clearer. They all deal with their grief over Addie Bundren’s death in their own way, no matter how far from usual conceptions of grief they may be. Their actions speak of their character more than their thoughts or speech does – I’m thinking mainly of Jewel here, who isn’t really given much of a voice, and his actions are read through the other characters. While Darl is the most eloquent of the family, some of his internal monologues are just breathtakingly gorgeous. The division between the inner thoughts and the conversations between the family establishes up how secretive and set apart all the characters are.

My mother is a fish. (Vardaman)

Most striking, and I’ve been thinking about it for days since, is Addie’s chapter told from her point of view after her death. (I think Faulkner says a lot about her position in the family by only allowing her voice to be heard beyond the grave.) She speaks of motherhood and childrearing in a completely unexpected non-romanticized way. It’s confronting in that it still seems to be largely believed that motherhood and the desire for children is a trait inherent in women. Addie speaks of how she hates her children, how motherhood is just a word and doesn’t mean a thing to her, it is just something she does.

He had a word, too. Love, he called it. But I had been used to words for a long time. I knew that that word was like the others: just a shape to fill a lack; that when the right time came, you wouldn’t need a word for that any more than for pride or fear. (Addie)

An intense novel, thematically and stylistically, but the images of these characters have stuck with me for days. Their struggles, their secrets. I’m really looking forward to reading more Faulkner.

(In tribute to the friendly young man who complimented my choice when I purchased this from his book stall, telling me it was his favourite book of all time.)