The Maltese Falcon Starring Tom Wilkinson, Jane Lapotaire and Nickolas Grace




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Book Description
The Maltese Falcon is considered Dashiell Hammett's finest novel. The story introduces detective Sam Spade, a man of few words who displays little emotion. Hired by a woman - Miss Wonderly - to locate her sister, Spade gives the assignment to his partner Miles Archer. Archer tails the missing sisterContinue
5 Reviews
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Robot-mel said on Sep 8, 2010 about the Hardcover edition | Add your feedback
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THey say this is the father of all the "hard-boiled" detectives we now have: well, it is hard-boiled alright, and it would seem that in eighty years his descendants have not gone terribly far from here! A great read, and a very convoluted, gripping story, set in splendid San Francisco.
ilariainthelibrary said on Jun 13, 2010 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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wilkinsjordan said on Jan 4, 2010 about the Hardcover edition | Add your feedback
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Rameycreek said on Feb 22, 2009 about the Hardcover edition | Add your feedback
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sid_rw said on Jun 30, 2008 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
Book Details
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(51)
- English Books
- Audio Cassette
- ISBN-10: 0563478411
- ISBN-13: 9780563478416
- Publisher: Bbc Book Pub
- Pub date: May 31, 2001
- Also available as: Paperback, Hardcover, Audio CD, School & Library Binding, Others and eBook
- In other languages: other languages
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Prices Change currency & sellers
| ISBN | Edition | List | Sale | Seller |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9780563478416 | Audio Cassette | $17.71 | -- | The Book Depository |
| Other editions → | ||||
I've loved this movie for years and it was great to read the book it was based on. It's always interesting to see how writing the 30s and 40s was a lot less scrutinized than Hollywood. Not only did they come right out and say that Cairo was gay in the book but he was also in love/lust with the kid w ... (continue)
I've loved this movie for years and it was great to read the book it was based on. It's always interesting to see how writing the 30s and 40s was a lot less scrutinized than Hollywood. Not only did they come right out and say that Cairo was gay in the book but he was also in love/lust with the kid who did all the killings. They also explicitly said how Sam and Bridget slept together, and the very unromantic reasons for doing so. In fact if there seemed to be any true romance with Sam in this book it seemed to be with the secretary. Bridget he admired for her ruthlessness but only at the very end did it seem like he might love her. The other great moment was when Sam and Bridget were having a midnight meal, he put his tablecloth on the table before they ate, cause back then even hard boiled detectives used tablecloths!
I liked how Sam wasn't really a tough guy, he was tall and a looked, I loved the description of him as a "blonde satan" but he wasn't even a hard drinker compared with most pulp novels. He got away with everything by just out thinking the police and criminals around him.
All told the book was very enjoyable. I really love every novel of Hammet's that I've read so far and am going to hunt down all that I can find by him.
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