|
|
|
ROBERT
CRAIS: ON HAMMETT
“If they hang you I’ll always
remember you.”
The best
known crime novel ever written is
The Maltese Falcon. Don’t take
my word for it, prove it to
yourself: Go to the mall, ask total
strangers (even people who’ve never
read a book), and--after you’ve
explained what a crime novel
is--nine times out of ten they’ll
describe Sam Spade’s search for the
black bird.
I’m the first to admit that they’ll be thinking of the
movie with Humphrey Bogart, but
that’s okay. The very best parts of
the movie are all right here in
Dashiell Hammett’s brilliant novel:
smarmy, mincing Joel Cairo (played
flawlessly by Peter Lorre); the
young gunsel, Wilmer, wound so tight
that he’s about to explode
(perfectly rendered by Elisha Cook,
Jr.); gluttonous Casper Gutman
(don’t you just love that name?),
with his willingness to sell out
anyone and anything for the Falcon;
Brigid O’Shaunessey’s deceitful,
manipulative whore; and the novel’s
signature hero, Samuel Spade.
Even the best lines and moments in the movie are
original to the book: Spade slapping
Joel Cairo as he declares, “When
you’re slapped you’ll take it and
like it”; Spade stripping the
gunsel’s weapons, smirking, “C’mon,
this will put you in solid with your
boss.”
It’s all here in Dashiell Hammett’s layered and complex
novel.
As a work of hardboiled fiction, The Maltese Falcon
has everything: lies, deceit,
double-cross, misdirection,
violence, brutality, and a
breathtaking coldness. When Spade’s
partner, Miles Archer, is found
murdered, Spade expresses not a
shred of pain or grief, and, in
short order, we learn that Spade was
having an affair with Archer’s wife,
and didn’t even like the man. Spade
milks clients for as much money as
he can squeeze, lies to damn near
everyone, and breaks the law as a
matter of course, apparently willing
to overlook the murder of his
partner and multiple homicides for
sex and a few thousand dollars. When
a woman with whom Spade has slept is
about to be arrested for murder, the
warmest statement he can manage is,
“If they hang you I’ll always
remember you.” My friends, that is
frosty. Hammett even describes Sam
Spade as looking like Satan, his
face a stack of sharp V’s that
conjures the image of a
hatchet-faced man built of cold
steel.
But, waitaminute.
If Spade is truly the rat he makes out to be as he
swaggers and bluffs his way through
the crime-ridden underbelly of San
Francisco, would we, his readers,
become so enamored of him that we
would invest ourselves in him and
his ultimate success or failure?
Would we care?
Spade isn’t the one-dimensional character that so many
private eyes were during the
legendary Black Mask days, and
Hammett was anything but a
one-dimensional writer. Dashiell
Hammett deftly presents us with
subtle clues that Spade isn’t nearly
so hardboiled as he pretends, and
isn’t nearly the rat. Hammett
reveals Spade to be a complicated
man, with often confusing and
all-too-human layers. As the novel
unfolds, we find ourselves
questioning Spade’s motives, asking
ourselves what Spade might be up to,
and why is he putting himself at
such risk? Multiple homicides have
been committed, and Spade might be
the next body to drop. The police
suspect Spade’s involvement, and are
hot on his trail. Is Spade really
going to such extremes for a few
thousand dollars? Does he really
give a damn about the Maltese
Falcon, or Brigid O’Shaunessey?
Or is Sam Spade a man more worthy of our trust?
Hammett layers in doubt and clues: After unloading a
high hand on Gutman and his punk
gunsel, Spade stalks out, revealing
only after the scene that he was
trembling with fear; Spade’s affair
with Archer’s wife is first
presented as an unimportant fling,
yet is later revealed to have been
so serious that they had discussed
her divorcing Archer, and it’s
hinted that perhaps Spade hadn’t
been able to bring himself to
comfort or even approach her until
the case was resolved. Finally, when
the truth is out and the falcon is
revealed to be nothing more than a
leaden dream, Hammett allows Spade
to express his true motivation
(“When a man’s partner is killed
he’s supposed to do something about
it”) and the ultimate truth of his
character (“Don’t be too sure I’m as
crooked as I’m supposed to be”).
It is a testament to Hammett’s brilliance that the
reader can sense these things about
Spade even as we’re presented with
evidence to the contrary.
Sam Spade was worth rooting for all along, and is more
than deserving of being our “hero”
because The Maltese Falcon is
about friendship. It’s about duty,
and obligation, even when we don’t
like our friend very much, and about
doing the right thing even when it
costs money, and hurts the people
for whom we care. Its subtle themes
have influenced not only myself, but
everyone else who has or will toil
in the fertile fields of crime
fiction. Hammett’s influence on
succeeding generations of crime
novelists is undeniable, and this
influence almost universally extends
from this novel.
The Maltese Falcon is what the movie people call
“a buddy picture.” Only in this
case, one of the buddies has been
murdered, and the surviving buddy
risks everything to bring the killer
or killers to justice.
As of this writing, I have produced eight novels
chronicling the lives of my own
fictional detectives, Elvis Cole and
Joe Pike. In the most recent, L.
A. Requiem, Elvis Cole’s
partner, Joe Pike, is accused of
murder. Even though witnesses and
all the evidence supports that
accusation, Elvis Cole--who has
nothing more to go on than an
unwavering belief in his
partner--risks his license, his own
freedom, his life, and his
relationship with the woman he loves
in his efforts to save his friend.
All eight titles are, at their core, books about the
values that most of us hold dear,
and most of us share.
Duty. Obligation. Friendship. Loss.
I have based my career upon these themes, and their
corruption. They hail back to the
beginnings of drama, and to the
hero’s journey. Their appeal, I
think, is to the animal part of us
that seeks comfort in the company of
others on cold nights when death
lurks beyond the light of the
campfire. They affirm that there
exists some sort of moral order, and
that justice will prevail, or, at
least, some good man or woman will
die trying to preserve that order.
Sam Spade is the friend we need in trying times. He is
our taunting big brother, our brutal
father, the schoolyard bully who has
seen the error of his ways and now
defends us. He is the man we want in
our corner because he will stop at
nothing to save us, or, if need be,
avenge us. It is Spade’s humanity
that we feel, and which Hammett so
brilliantly illuminates, and it is
that humanity to which we respond.
Rereading this novel again after so many years, I was
taken with how quickly I fell into
the world that Hammett created, how
sharp I found the dialog and
descriptions, how compelling I found
the story and characters. If you are
about to read this classic novel for
the first time, you are in for a
treat.
The Maltese Falcon was first published in 1930. It has
lived and thrived in all the years
since, and it will live on, because,
like all great fiction, it connects
us with our true selves.
© 1999 by Robert Crais
|
|
|