Crime Stories & Other Writings By Dashiell Hammett
Reviewed by John Desbin
The Adventures of the Continental Op
I envy first time readers of Dashiell Hammett’s work who discover The
Adventures of the Continental Op through Crime Stories & Other
Writings. Editor Steven Marcus presents twenty four of Hammett’s hard-edged
short stories of crime and violence. Twenty of them feature a nameless operative
of the San Francisco branch of The Continental Detective Agency. The stories are
based on the experience of Hammett as an operative of the Pinkerton Detective Agency,
which he joined in 1915, in Baltimore, Maryland; and ended his employment in 1921,
in San Francisco. His first crime story “The Road Home”, would appear
in the December 1922 issue of The Black Mask, a detective pulp.
Prior to Crime Stories & Other Writings, The
Big Knockover , and Marcus’ 1974 collection from Random House The
Continental Op, were the only collections available to fans of the Op’s
short fiction. The two books had sixteen of the Op’s adventures, but Marcus
has included all of the stories from his earlier collection and left out only “Corkscrew” from The
Big Knockover. As a Hammett fan and collector of Op stories for 20 years,
only “Slippery Fingers” was new to me, but I purchased the book because
I had to have that one Op story. And the other point was that all stories but one
are taken from their pulp magazine appearances. Editor Steven Marcus has edited nothing… Good
Man!
The stories are reprinted in the order of their Black Mask appearances,
which allows the reader to watch as Hammett’s skill as a writer develops from
one story to the next. He reveals to us the talents necessary for the detective to
master in order to become a hardened professional manhunter. We watch the Op as he
listens, observes, and begins to manipulate events in order to get to the truth he’s
been hired to uncover.
A special feature of this volume is also the reprinting of “From
the Memoirs of a Private Detective”, from The Smart Set, March
1923. In this short feature Hammett reveals some of the amusing incidents in his career
as a manhunter, and gives a glimpse of the content of what makes his fiction unique.
Not counting the eight linked novelettes which make up his first two
novels Red Harvest and The Dain Curse, Hammett wrote
28 stories of the Op. (Although E.R. Hagemann in his A Comprehensive Index
to Black Mask 1920-1951, Pg 119 #1112, does not think “It” is
one). The following list of eight Op stories, not in Crime Stories & Other
Writings, will be in chronological order. Black Mask publication
date will be followed by the name of the book publication of the story.
“It”; Black Mask November 1923; Woman
In TheDark (As “The Black Hat that Wasn’t There”) Lawrence
Spivak, 1952
“Bodies Piled Up”; Black Mask December 1st,
1923; Dead Yellow Women;Nightmare Town, 1999
“One Hour”; Black Mask March 1st 1924; The
Return of the Continental Op; Nightmare Town, 1999
“Who Killed Bob Teal?”; True Detective November
1924; Dead Yellow Women; Nightmare Town,1999
“Mike, Alec, or Rufus”; Black Mask January
1925; Creeping Siamese (“As Tom, Dick, or Harry”); Nightmare
Town, 1999 (Title Restored)
“Corkscrew”; Black Mask September 1925; Nightmare
Town,1948; The Big Knockover, 1966
“Death and Company”; Black Mask November
1930; The Return of the Continental Op, Lawrence Spivak, 1945
Now, the sharp-eyed reader will notice two different publication dates
on the Nightmare Town, 1948 and 1999. The 1948 date refers to a digest-sized
magazine published by Lawrence Spivak as a “Bestseller Mystery”. It was
also published as a Dell Mapback, #379 in 1950. In fact, all but one of the above listed
titles had digest and paperback appearances.
Trying to collect all of Hammett’s short fiction, even in paperback,
is no easy matter, since most of it is in hard-to-find and expensive to purchase Spivak
digests or Dell Mapbacks. Adding to the difficulty is the same named books with slightly
different contents. For instance, there are three paperbacks with the titles The
Continental Op.
The best guide to this mass of paperback editions is Gary Lovisi’s Dashiell
Hammett and Raymond Chandler: A Checklist and Biography of their Paperback Appearances,
Gryphon Press, 1994. Also valuable is “Collecting Mystery Fiction: Dashiell
Hammett, Pgs. 156-163, The Armchair Detective, Vol. 17, #2, Spring
1984.
I began tracking Op stories in 1974 after I found an Ex-Libris copy of
William F. Nolan’s
frst book on Hammett: Dashiell Hammett: A Casebook,
1969, McNally & Loftin, Pgs 132-145.
Two good articles on Hammett’s pulp fiction can be found in Robert
Sampson’s volume 4 of Yesterday’s Faces: The Solvers Pgs
222-237; and Michael Chomko’s excellent fanzine“Purple Prose:
issue #14 is devoted to detective fiction and “Hammett’s Ops”, by
Michael Black is cover featured. A lot of interior art from Black Mask Hammett
Stories is featured as well.
Crime Stories & Other Writings is well worth the
price and should become a cornerstone volume in any reader’s library collection
of Hammett short fiction.
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