Published:
"The Maltese Falcon," Dashiell Hammett, and Detective Sam Spade Discoveries Revealed in New Book
Hammett Expert Richard Layman Packs "Discovering The Maltese Falcon and Sam Spade" With Hundreds of Unexpected Delights, Says Los Angeles Times
A richly illustrated new paperback
published today, "Discovering The Maltese Falcon and Sam Spade," edited by
Richard Layman, uncovers from institutional and private archives a wealth
of revelations about the book and film versions of "The Maltese Falcon,"
its author Dashiell Hammett, and his influential hero, detective Sam Spade.
Crammed with fascinating facts, the new book provides hundreds of
never-before-published photos, documents, and original source materials,
including production notes for the three movie versions.
"A treasure beyond price for fans of both the classic Hammett novel and the
three (that's right, three) film versions of the doomed quest for a black
bird," writes Kenneth Turan in The Los Angeles Times. "An incredible
amalgam of photos, memos, letters, reviews, whatever, this will make fans
of the book or the film gasp as one unexpected delight succeeds another.
With this book, wonders really do never cease."
The result of a lifetime of research by Hammett expert Layman, "Discovering
The Maltese Falcon and Sam Spade" provides hundreds of surprises about the
novel, its author, and its film versions, such as:
-- For rights to publish the now-famous novel (which has sold more than
4.5 million copies in English alone), publisher Alfred A. Knopf paid author
Hammett an advance of nothing.
-- The sculptor who created the legendary statuette of the black bird for
the 1941 Humphrey Bogart movie may have been an accomplice of the Black
Dahlia murderer and the killer of author James Ellroy's mother.
-- Working notes (printed here for the first time) for "The Secret
Emperor," Hammett's first, never-finished novel, show that it included
elements he later used in "The Maltese Falcon" and "The Glass Key."
-- About the same time that Hammett wrote "The Maltese Falcon," he also
wrote "The Boundaries of Science and Philosophy," published here for the
first time.
-- More than 2,000 changes were made to the original magazine version of
"The Maltese Falcon" before it was published as a novel.
Contributors to "Discovering The Maltese Falcon and Sam Spade" include
Dashiell Hammett himself, plus Jo Hammett, Richard Layman, Joseph Shaw,
Mary Astor, Dorothy Parker, Hal Wallis, John Huston, Joe Gores, William F.
Nolan and more than fifty additional writers. It is illustrated with more
than 250 black & white and color photos, illustrations, and facsimiles. The
book is "the stuff that dreams are made of" for fans of "The Maltese
Falcon," Dashiell Hammett, detective fiction, film noir, and the history of
literature and cinema.
"Discovering The Maltese Falcon and Sam Spade" is released in 2005 as part
of events held worldwide this year to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the
publication of "The Maltese Falcon," often named as one of the twentieth
century's best novels. John Huston's film adaptation made Humphrey Bogart a
star, and was selected by the American Film Institute as number 23 in its
selection of the 100 greatest movies of all time.
"Discovering The Maltese Falcon and Sam Spade: The Evolution of Dashiell
Hammett's Classic Novel, Including John Huston's Movie with Humphrey
Bogart" edited by Richard Layman
Publication date: September 7, 2005
Trade paperback; $19.95 U.S./$26.95 Canada; 376 pages; ISBN 0-9725898-6-4
To request a review copy, contact Lee Houskeeper at (415) 777-4700. To
purchase copies for resale, please fax IPG at (312) 337-5985 or call (800)
888-4741.
Distributed by Market Wire
Copyright © 2008, MarketWire
Copyright © 2008, NewsBlaze,
Daily News
Tags: ,Media and Entertainment:BooksandPublishing, MediaandEntertainment:Movies, ,CA,SAN FRANCISCO, CA
_ _Is your favorite bookmark site missing?
Ask for it.