by Dashiell Hammett (Author), RichardLayman (Editor), JulieMRivett (Editor)
Dashiell Hammett was a crime writer who elevated the genre to true literature, and "The Thin Man" was Hammett's last and most successful novel. Following the enormous success of "The Thin Man" movie in 1934, Hammett was commissioned to write stories for additional films. He wrote two full-length novellas, for the films that became "After the Thin Man" and "Another Thin Man." Bringing back his classic characters, retired private investigator Nick Charles and his former debutante wife Nora, who return home to find Nora s family gardener murdered, pulling the couple back into another deadly game of cat and mouse. Hammett has written two fully satisfying "Thin Man" stories, with classic, barbed Hammett dialogue and fully developed characters. Neither of these stories has been previously published (except for a partial in a small magazine 25 years ago). "The Return of the Thin Man" is a hugely entertaining read that brings back two classic characters from one of the greatest of mystery writers who ever lived. This book is destined to become essential reading for Hammett's millions of fans and a new generation of mystery readers the world over."
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 233
Publisher: Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press
Published: 15 Nov 2012
ISBN 10: 0802120504
ISBN 13: 9780802120502
This first unabridged appearance of two Nick and Nora Charles 'novellas' by Hammett should be an occasion for delight, and it is. --The Wall Street Journal
Read Return of the Thin Man and rediscover why Dashiell Hammett was the peerless master of crime fiction in all its dark and bloody glory. --New York Journal of Books
A volume no fan of Hammett's, of Nick and Nora Charles, of 'The Thin Man' series should even think of doing without. --The Huffington Post
PRAISE FOR DASHIELL HAMMETT
I think Hammett's stories are about the best there are. --Ross MacDonald
Hammett's prose was clean and entirely unique. His characters were as sharply and economically defined as any in American fiction. --The New York Times
Hammett . . . wrote scenes that seemed never to have been written before. --Raymond Chandler
The exuberance of language, the relish with which seedieness is described . . . it's a pleasure to imagine young Hammett cutting loose with whatever rascally high jinks he could cook up. --Margaret Atwood
An acknowledged literary landmark. --The New York Times Book Review