Nick Charles is a former PI, now looking after the business interests his wife has inherited, and living a wealthy life. Nick and his wife, Nora, have travelled to New York for the Christmas holiday, staying in a suite in the Normandie. Rather than the relaxing break they were hoping for, they are dragged into investigating the death of Julia Wolf, secretary to eccentric inventor, Clyde Wynant. Swirling round Nick and Nora, as he tries to determine who killed Wolf, are Wynant’s estranged family, his former partner, his lawyer, some low-life hoodlums, and the police. All of whom seem to have something to hide and gain. The only person missing is the one everyone wants to meet – Clyde Wynant; the thin man.
The Thin Man is a crime farce, written in an all-tell, dialogue and action style, with no excess fat in the prose. There’s a lot of melodrama, with people storming in and out, kissing and making up; and lots of lying, deceit, manipulation and double crosses. Nick Charles is the rock at the centre of all this carry-on; the tough, no-nonsense PI, who’s able to calmly and authoratively take charge and sort the wheat from the chaff, and is attractive to dames and admired by men. He’s the guy that everybody naturally turns to for help, including the police. The characterisation is well developed and Hammett keeps the dozen or so central characters swirling round each other, with the pace relentless without being excessive, and the plot twisting continuously. The story had a little too much melodrama for my taste, but it’s an enjoyable hardboiled yarn nonetheless.
4 comments:
THE THIN MAN might be my favorite Hammett novel. It's underrated. Loved the movies!
For my money, the movie tops the novel because I love those two together.
Well, it might or might not be worth your while to seek out the sequel, a treatment for the film series, that Hammett wrote and which was published much later by the fine BLACK MASK revival book/magazine.
Will have to check out the movie. I imagine they didn't have to do much re. screenplay - the book would translate easily given the way its constructed and the dialogue.
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