Author - Dashiell Hammett

Dashiell Hammett (1894–1961) transformed crime fiction by introducing realism drawn from his experience as a Pinkerton detective. He rejected sentimental mysteries in favor of moral complexity, sharp dialogue, and flawed characters shaped by violence and corruption. His work laid the foundation for modern noir and influenced generations of writers by proving that detective fiction could function as serious literature.

The Maltese Falcon introduces readers to a hard-edged world where greed, deception, and obsession collide, and where intelligence matters more than sentiment. Hammett drops the reader directly into a case that spirals beyond a routine job, forcing his protagonist to navigate lies, violence, and moral ambiguity without illusions about justice or human nature.
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