The Maltese Falcon
Dashiell Hammett
Editorial: Passerino
Sinopsis
In the rain-slicked streets of San Francisco, where trust is a luxury and lies come cheap, private detective Sam Spade is drawn into a deadly game of greed, deception, and murder.What begins as a routine case quickly spirals into a labyrinth of double-crosses involving a cast of dangerous figures: a seductive woman with too many secrets, smooth-talking criminals, and a priceless object shrouded in myth — the Maltese Falcon. Everyone wants it. Few are willing to pay its true price. As bodies fall and alliances crumble, Spade navigates the shadows with cold intelligence and sharper instincts. In a world where morality is negotiable and justice is rarely clean, he must decide how far he is willing to go — and what he is willing to lose. First published in 1930, The Maltese Falcon is the novel that defined the hard-boiled detective genre. With its razor-sharp dialogue, relentless pace, and uncompromising realism, Dashiell Hammett created an enduring masterpiece of American crime fiction — dark, cynical, and unforgettable.Dashiell Hammett was an American writer widely regarded as the founder of the hard-boiled detective genre. A former operative for the Pinkerton Detective Agency, Hammett brought an unprecedented level of realism to crime fiction, replacing the refined puzzles of classic whodunits with gritty urban settings, moral ambiguity, and hard-edged protagonists. His novels introduced a new kind of detective: tough, cynical, observant, and guided by a personal — often uncompromising — code of ethics. With works such as The Maltese Falcon, Red Harvest, and The Glass Key, Hammett reshaped detective fiction and laid the foundations of modern noir, deeply influencing both literature and cinema.His lean, direct prose, sharp dialogue, and unsentimental view of human nature remain hallmarks of American crime writing.
