Where to Start with Dashiell Hammett: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Dashiell Hammett — how to approach The Maltese Falcon, his essential novel and the founding text of hardboiled crime fiction. A complete reading guide.
Dashiell Hammett (1894–1961) was an American crime writer who drew on his years as a Pinkerton detective to create a new mode of crime fiction — hardboiled, stripped of Victorian gentility, set in the actual criminal world of American cities — that transformed the genre. The Maltese Falcon (1930) is his masterpiece and the most influential detective novel in American literary history, introducing Sam Spade and the moral archetype of the hardboiled investigator. Hammett’s later blacklisting during the McCarthy era, his refusal to cooperate with the House Un-American Activities Committee, and his imprisonment for contempt of court added a biographical dimension to the principled morality his characters embody.
Where to Start: The Maltese Falcon (1930)
The essential Hammett — and the novel that defined hardboiled crime fiction. Sam Spade is introduced in the novel’s opening paragraphs with a description that reads like a blueprint: “Samuel Spade’s jaw was long and bony, his chin a jutting v under the more flexible v of his mouth. His nostrils curved back to make another, smaller, v. His yellow-grey eyes were horizontal. The v motif was picked up again by thickish brows rising outward from twin creases above a hooked nose…” The description is famous because it is not physical description but character: the repeated V shapes suggest a wedge, something sharp and penetrating, a face designed to cut through.
The plot begins with a simple surveillance job and escalates with dizzying speed into murder, conspiracy, and the pursuit of a medieval artifact that may or may not be worth the fortunes everyone claims. The plot mechanics are not the point. The point is Sam Spade, and what he is.
Hammett’s innovation — what makes The Maltese Falcon the model for a century of crime fiction — is the moral ambiguity at its centre. Spade is not a good man in any conventional sense: he sleeps with his partner’s wife, he manipulates and deceives throughout the investigation, and he is entirely willing to use people instrumentally. What he is not is corruptible. The novel’s climactic scene, in which Spade explains to the woman he loves why he is going to turn her in to the police for his partner’s murder, is the definitive statement of the hardboiled code: not sentiment, not personal feeling, not even love can override the principle. “When a man’s partner is killed he’s supposed to do something about it.”
Hammett’s prose is the other achievement: lean, objective, precise, written entirely from the outside. We never enter Spade’s consciousness; we observe what he does and what he says, and infer the rest. This formal discipline — unprecedented in the detective fiction of the time — creates a reading experience that is both cold and compelling.
The 1941 John Huston film, with Humphrey Bogart as Spade, is one of Hollywood’s finest and follows the novel closely; watching one illuminates the other.
Reading Dashiell Hammett
Begin with The Maltese Falcon — it is his finest and most influential work. The Thin Man (1934) is the lighter companion novel. His short fiction featuring the Continental Op is in several collections. All standalone.
For the full Dashiell Hammett bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Dashiell Hammett author page on Editors Reads.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Dashiell Hammett?
The Maltese Falcon (1930) is the essential starting point — Hammett's San Francisco private detective Sam Spade novel that invented the hardboiled detective and created the moral archetype — the man who cannot be bought, who sees through every performance — that has defined crime fiction ever since. The finest and most influential American detective novel.
What is The Maltese Falcon about?
The Maltese Falcon follows Sam Spade, a San Francisco private detective hired by a woman who calls herself Miss Wonderly to follow a man — and within twenty-four hours Spade's partner Miles Archer is dead. Spade is drawn into a conspiracy involving a group of international criminals and a black statuette of a falcon, supposedly a priceless artifact, that everyone wants and nobody will be honest about. The novel's central question is not who has the falcon but who Spade is: what he values, what he will do, and where his principle comes from.
How does The Maltese Falcon compare to Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe novels?
Hammett and Chandler are the two founding figures of hardboiled crime fiction, and the comparison is instructive. Hammett's Sam Spade is more morally ambiguous than Chandler's Philip Marlowe — colder, more calculating, capable of genuine ruthlessness in ways Marlowe is not. Hammett's prose is more stripped and objective (Spade is described from the outside, his inner life withheld); Chandler's is more lyrical and interior. The Maltese Falcon is the place to start with Hammett; The Big Sleep or Farewell, My Lovely is the place to start with Chandler.
What should I read after The Maltese Falcon?
After The Maltese Falcon, Hammett's The Thin Man (1934) is his other major novel — lighter in tone, with a married detective team whose banter anticipates later crime fiction. His collection The Continental Op covers the short fiction featuring his unnamed operative protagonist. Raymond Chandler's The Big Sleep is the natural companion text — the two books together define the hardboiled tradition. James Ellroy's LA Confidential is the great successor novel that extends Hammett and Chandler's Los Angeles into the 1950s.
