Ratings3
Average rating3
A young, frightened, foreign woman appears at the door of an isolated house. The man and woman inside take her in. Other strangers appear in pursuit of the girl. Menace is in the air. Originally published in 1933, Hammett's Woman in the Dark shows the author at the peak of his narrative powers. With an introduction by Robert B. Parker, the author of the celebrated Spenser novels.
Reviews with the most likes.
This book is another step in my premature search for an author to replace Raymond Chandler - premature because I have one of his books left to read. In Dashiell Hammett, it seems I have not found that replacement. To me it wasn't hard-boiled, or noir enough to compare with Chandler. Pulp fiction - yes.
This was an odd little book - no way a novel, a short story, at most a novella. I read it in a day, at lunch time for 45 minutes, then another hour or so in the evening.
It has a format which held interest, by throwing the reader into the story without explaining the characters and their relationships until partway through. It is a little abrupt in the telling, meaning I had to skip back occasionally where the story took a turn I wasn't expecting, and I had missed a half sentence of importance - like someone new entering a conversation when in the paragraph prior there were only two persons present - and I had missed a couple of words bringing a character into the room.
I don't want to introduce spoilers in such a short book, so it is hard to review the plot, other than to say we don't really get to know the characters well, and it felt more like a storyline that should form the basis of a longer work - needing fleshing out and tidying up, giving us more. I am not sure if this is the style of the author, or whether his novel length detective stories provide more depth.
Not too sure I will find out, I don't think I will be pursuing more of his work, although if it were to fall into my lap i might give it another go.
An average 3 stars.