Jenny Huston

Posted: August 28, 2013 in Uncategorized

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One of the most experienced voices on national radio, Jenny Huston presented her own music show on RTÉ 2fm for more than nine years, and made regular TV and daytime talk radio appearances. She was nominated twice for Best Irish DJ at the Meteor Awards.
Canadian-born Jenny has also hosted Liveline, was a weekly contributor and regular fill-in presenter for the Gerry Ryan Show, as well as guesting on RTÉ Radio 1 programmes such as Drivetime with Mary Wilson, The Tubridy Show, Rattlebag and The Pat Kenny Show. She has also contributed to the BBC, CBC and CFOX, Canada and DRS Virus, Switzerland.
Before working at RTÉ, she had stints on CVUF-FM (the campus radio station at University of Victoria in Canada), Radio Kilkenny and Phantom FM.
In 2009, she wrote In Bloom: Irish Bands Now, which examined the impact of Irish artists on the international music scene.
Jenny has a degree in psychology and a higher diploma in arts administration. She is also a certified trainer (FETAC Level 6).
Along with her love of music, Jenny is an avid traveller, fascinated by social psychology and mildly addicted to cooking programmes. When she isn’t at a gig or cooking for friends, she can found struggling to get her fitness back at the gym.

Books About Drink

Posted: August 28, 2013 in Uncategorized

Draft Copies: Books About Drink

The drink has claimed many a poor author – Dylan ThomasDorothy ParkerF. Scott FitzgeraldKingsley AmisTruman Capote, and Charles Bukowski to name just a few. Many writers embraced the bottle and wove drinking themes in their writing – Amis alone published On Drink and Everyday DrinkingEvelyn Waugh, a contemporary of Amis, once wrote: “Wine is a bride who brings a great dowry to the man who woos her persistently and gracefully.”

Things have changed. Today, there seems to be an unlimited supply of memoirs about how people beat the booze and conquer their addiction. A number of non-fiction writers are keen to understand how alcohol has shaped society with books about how booze “changed the world.” That’s fair enough but books celebrating bars, beer, wine, and the hard stuff used to be commonplace but they now appear to belong to another generation.

On Drinking by Kingsley Amis

Perhaps the greatest bookish irony of alcohol is that the first edition of Alcoholics Anonymous is one of the most collectible literary items of the 20th century – it’s the tome that single-handedly created a genre and launched a hundred thousand self-help books.

We have selected 20 books, mostly from the dim and distant past, on drinking. Ale, wine, gin, inns, bars, cocktails, drinking songs, beer cans, bartending and staying off the stuff – it’s all there.

 

Twenty Drinking Books

Old Waldorf Bar Days by Albert Stevens Crockett
Old Waldorf Bar Days
by Albert Stevens Crockett

A piece of history from 1931 that reveals how posh folks drank before Prohibition.

Find all copies

The Savoy Cocktail Book
The Savoy Cocktail Book

A highly collectible example of 1930 Art Deco but affordable reprints are available.

Find all copies

The Tale of John Barleycorn or, From Barley to Beer by Mary Azarian
The Tale of John Barleycorn or, From Barley to Beer
by Mary Azarian

Printed in 1982, a beautiful version of this folksong illustrated with woodcuts.

Find all copies

The Class Book of U.S. Beer Cans
The Class Book of U.S. Beer Cans

Homer Simpson would love this one from 1982 – photos of 2000+ beer cans from 1930 to 1980.

Find all copies

Born in a Beer Garden or, She Troupes to Conquer by Christopher Morley
Born in a Beer Garden or, She Troupes to Conquer
by Christopher Morley

The story of the resurrection of the Old Rialto Theatre in Hoboken, New Jersey to stage a Morley play.

Find all copies

The Curiosities of Ale & Beer by John Bickerdyke
The Curiosities of Ale & Beer
by John Bickerdyke

Published in 1886, an eccentric history of beerlore from Leadenhall Press.Reprinted in 1965.

Find all copies

Ardent Spirits: The Rise & Fall of Prohibition by John Kobler
Ardent Spirits: The Rise & Fall of Prohibition
by John Kobler

Printed in 1973 and reprinted in ’93, this book also looks at America’s early temperance ideals.

Find all copies

Wine in War and Peach by Evelyn Waugh
Wine in War and Peace
by Evelyn Waugh

Waugh’s 1947 tribute to his beloved vino with illustrations by Rex Whistler.

Find all copies

Drinks-man-ship by Len Deighton
Drinks-man-ship
by Len Deighton

This 1964 collection of essays were culled from Town Magazine. Very scarce.

Find all copies

The Common Sense of Drinking by Richard R Peabody
The Common Sense of Drinking
by Richard R Peabody

Very collectible, this 1931 book influenced AA creator Bill Wilson. Peabody was a recovering alcoholic.

Find all copies

The Stork Club Bar Book by Lucius Beebe
The Stork Club Bar Book
by Lucius Beebe

First published in 1946, this cocktail recipe book also offers an insight into saloon society.

Find all copies

Bar Room Ballads by Robert Service
Bar Room Ballads
by Robert Service

First published in 1940, a lusty collection of poems and ballads from frontier saloons.

Find all copies

The Blood of the Grape: The Wine Trade Textbook by Simon L. Andre
The Blood of the Grape: The Wine Trade Textbook
by Simon L. Andre

Published in 1920, this book contains a series of Andre’s lectures to the Wine Trade Club.

Find all copies

Inns, Ales and Drinking Customs of Old England by Frederick W. Hackwood
Inns, Ales and Drinking Customs of Old England
by Frederick W. Hackwood

First published in 1909, this covers the lot – pub signs, drunkenness, breweries, songs etc.

Find all copies

The Guinness Book of Guinness 1935-1985 by Edward Guinness
The Guinness Book of Guinness 1935-1985
by Edward Guinness

Self-published in 1988, this book concerns the firm’s Park Royal brewery in Northwest London

Find all copies

Bass & Co. Limited by Alfred Barnard
Bass & Co. Limited
by Alfred Barnard

These are 1977 reprints (100 copies) of an 1889 edition about this Burton-on-Trent brewer.

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The Broom is Out by Dick Wall
The Broom is Out
by Dick Wall

A memoir from an Anheuser-Busch executive – details pre-WWII life in St Louis, Missouri

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Mother's Ruin: The Story of Gin by John Watney
Mother’s Ruin: The Story of Gin
by John Watney

A long forgotten gem from 1976 – details how gin drinking became a political hot potato.

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Old Mr. Boston Deluxe Official Bartender's Guide by Mr. Boston
Old Mr. Boston Deluxe Official Bartender’s Guide
by Mr. Boston

First printed in 1935 and still going strong – more than 1,400 recipes 

Find all copies

Straight Up or on the Rocks by William Grimes
Straight Up or on the Rocks
by William Grimes

The author investigates 350 years of American drinking in this 1993 book.

Find all copies

ATTN: Professionals in academia/education, administration, publishing, public history, museum studies, library studies, and more… Please consider submitting a presentation proposal for the following CFP for the Graduate Student Caucus professionalization panel at the 2014 ASECS Annual Meeting in Williamsburg, VA, March 20-22, 2014.

Going Rogue: The Merits and Perils of Breaking with Professional Conventions
Graduate students often worry about toeing the academic line and keeping an eye on the market. Countless articles and blogs proffer advice to graduate students for shaping oneself and one’s project for the tenure track. However, with the market’s shifting demands and opportunities, the tenure track is not the only nor the best professional course. This panel, a roundtable format, will include brief and informal presentations from professionals (i.e. faculty, administrators, editors/publishers, archivists, curators, secondary educators, etc.) on alternative career paths to the tenure track. Proposals of 250 words that address different professional options and provide practical ideas for preparing for this path in graduate school will be considered. In thinking about alternative professional paths for academics, presenters might address how students’ approach to dissertation research and writing or other aspects of graduate study might shift in consideration of a wider field of employment. Presentations that discuss the merits and perils of other unconventional or experimental approaches to professionalization will also be included. Please submit proposals to Sarah Schuetze at sarah.schuetze@uky.edu.

The Best Prison Literature

Posted: August 28, 2013 in Uncategorized
20,000 Years in Sing Sing by Lewis E. Lawes
20,000 Years in Sing Sing by Lewis E. Lawes

With notorious rare book thief William Jacques jailed once again, AbeBooks is showcasing some of the finest prison literature ever published.

Call it the Slammer, the Big House, the Pokey or the Clink, prison remains a place no-one wishes to go but everyone wants to read about. The vast majority of people will never step inside one but everyone can imagine what jailbird life must be like.

Authors, both fiction and non-fiction writers, have considered almost every aspect of imprisonment – the solitude of a life sentence, the culture and the contraband, the escapes, the torture, the miscarriages of justice and the innocent souls, the warders, the political and war-time prison camps, and the letters and visits.  Even the slang, the tattoos and the last meals of those on Death Row have been documented.

Countless books, from The Count of Monte Cristo to Dave Eggers’ Zeitoun, have touched upon prison life but our selection of 25 books highlights novels and real-life accounts where doing time is at the absolute heart of the story.

 

Fictional Prison Literature

Darkness at Noon by Arthur Koestler

Darkness at Noon
Arthur Koestler

Hocus Pocus by Kurt Vonnegut

Hocus Pocus
Kurt Vonnegut

Invitation to a Beheading by Vladimir Nabokov

Invitation to a Beheading
Vladimir Nabokov

The 25th Hour by David Benioff

The 25th Hour
David Benioff

Upstate by Kalisha Buckhanon

Upstate
Kalisha Buckhanon

Falconer by John Cheever

Falconer
John Cheever

Affinity by Sarah Waters

Affinity
Sarah Waters

The Brethren by John Grisham

The Brethren
John Grisham

Non Fiction Prison Literature

Papillon by Henri Charriere

Papillon
Henri Charrière

Birdman of Alcatraz by Thomas E. Gaddis

Birdman of Alcatraz
Thomas E. Gaddis

Dead Man Walking by Sister Helen Prejean

Dead Man Walking
Sister Helen Prejean

Midnight Express by Billy Hayes & William Hoffer

Midnight Express
Billy Hayes & William Hoffer

One Day in My Life by Bobby Sands

One Day in My Life
Bobby Sands

Borstal Boy by Brendan Behan

Borstal Boy
Brendan Behan

Meals to Die For by Brian Price

Meals to Die For
Brian Price

The Great Escape by Paul Brickhill

The Great Escape
Paul Brickhill

Discipline & Punish by Michel Foucault

Discipline & Punish
Michel Foucault

In the Belly of the Beast by Jack Henry Abbott

In the Belly of the Beast
Jack Henry Abbott

King Rat by James Clavell

King Rat
James Clavell

People's Prison by Geoffrey Jackson

People’s Prison
Geoffrey Jackson

Manslaughter United by Chris Hulme

Manslaughter United
Chris Hulme

TOP 10 TRAIN THRILLERS

Posted: August 28, 2013 in Uncategorized

orget about Harry’s Hogwarts Express. Forget about those Railway Children, the Boxcar Children and Thomas the Tank Engine. Forget about The Little Engine That Could and The Polar Express too. The best books about trains are ones involving dirty deeds done dirty cheap. For more than a century, mystery writers have been drawn to trains, railways and stations because they are wonderful places to set a crime – hordes of strangers, multiple destinations, people fleeing from the past or looking for a fresh start. You may never make eye contact with a fellow train passenger again after reading some of these thrillers.

Top 10 Train Thrillers

Strangers on a Train by Patricia Highsmith

1. Strangers on a Train 
Patricia Highsmith

A gripping psychological thriller from 1950 that proves you can meet dangerous people on trains.

The Wheel Spins by Ethel Lina White

2. The Wheel Spins 
Ethel Lina White

Another thriller (1936) about meeting a stranger on a train – Hitchcock turned it into The Lady Vanishes.

Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie

3. Murder on the Orient Express 
Agatha Christie
 

First published in 1933, Hercule Poirot has a mystery to solve after Mr. Ratchett is stabbed 12 times.

Stamboul Train by Graham Greene

4. Stamboul Train 
Graham Greene

Published a year before Murder on the Orient Express, this is a thriller set on the Orient Express.

The Necropolis Railway by Andrew Martin 

5. The Necropolis Railway
Andrew Martin

Published in 2002, a British murder mystery set in the golden age of steam.

The Edge by Dick Francis

6. The Edge
Dick Francis

A classic thriller where the Jockey Club’s Tor Kelsey takes a transcontinental train journey across Canada.

La Béte Humaine by Émile Zola

7. La Béte Humaine
Émile Zola

Published in 1890, this thriller is set on the railway between Paris and Le Havre

4.50 From Paddington by Agatha Christie

8. 4.50 From Paddington 
Agatha Christie

Elspeth McGillicuddy sees a woman strangled in a passing train and Miss Marple investigates.

Mr. Norris Changes Trains by Christopher Isherwood

9. Mr. Norris Changes Trains
Christopher Isherwood

A 1935 novel set in pre-War Europe with a chance meeting on a train. Also readGoodbye to Berlin.

The Taking of Pelham One Two Three by John Godey

10. The Taking of Pelham One Two Three 
John Godey

A New York subway train is hijacked in this thriller from 1973 that became a move a year later.

And Five Recommended Non-Fiction Books About Trains

The 8.55 to Baghdad by Andrew Eames

The 8.55 to Baghdad

Andrew Eames

A train journey from London to Baghdad just before the Iraq War in Agatha Christie’s footsteps.

Stranger on a Train by Jenny Diski

Stranger on a Train 

Jenny Diski

Diski travels around the US by train but this book is really about the author’s fragile mental state.

The Old Patagonian Express by Paul Theroux

The Old Patagonian Express 

Paul Theroux

Theroux heads south from the US into Central America to Patagonia describing sights and people. 

The Story of London's Underground by John R. Day

The Story of London’s Underground 
John R. Day

First published by London Transport in the 1960s. Tells of smoke-filled tunnels to the modern day Tube.

The Big Red Train Ride by Eric Newby

The Big Red Train Ride

Eric Newby

The Trans-Siberian Railway covers seven time zones and 5,900 miles. Newby made the trip in 1977.

Five Railway Books That Caught abes Eye

The Women of Pulp

Posted: August 28, 2013 in Uncategorized
by Beth Carswell

Temptress by Jack Woodford

Some can’t be tamed. Some can’t be trusted. In they stroll with a sob story as familiar as the day is long, and yet, we fall for it every time. Blondes, brunettes, redheads – it doesn’t matter. These voluptuous vixens, these dangerous dames, these buxom bombshells might seem a dime a dozen, but each ruby-lipped temptress is more tempting than the last.

The more you know about love…the more you’ll love this story!

She would never steal another woman’s man again!” 

The raw, sizzling novel of a girl singer, her men, and murder in the hot record business.

She liked her men tough.

She fought for liberty like a woman – with her beauty, her brains – her body.

Silk stockings and perfect pouts, these broads attract trouble like a flame attracts moths. And as for us? We can’t resist ’em. We love a damsel in distress. Heiresses and nurses, secretaries and seductresses..it makes no difference. Some may be collectible, some may be contemptible, but one thing is certain. They are….

 

 

 

…the Women of Pulp!

The Blonde in Black by Ben Benson

The Blonde in Black 
Ben Benson
1958

 

Make Mine a Harlot by Michael Storme

Make Mine a Harlot
Michael Storme
1952
(sold out)

 

Six Deadly Dames by Frederick Nebel

Six Deadly Dames 
Frederick Nebel 
1950

 

The Pick-up Girl by Roland Vane

The Pick-up Girl 
Roland Vane 
1952

Murder of a Nymph by Margot Neville

Murder of a Nymph 
Margot Neville 
1950

Fires That Destroy by Harry Whittington

Fires That Destroy 
Harry Whittington 
1951

Hollywood Nymph by Stu Rivers aka Charles Nuetzel

Hollywood Nymph 
Stu Rivers aka Charles Nuetzel 
1964

The Kept Woman by Mack Reynolds

The Kept Woman 
Mack Reynolds
1963

The Vixens by Frank Yerby

The Vixens 
Frank Yerby
1950

Virgin Nurse by Arthur Adlon

Virgin Nurse
Arthur Adlon
1960
(sold out)

Brunettes are Dangerous  by Roland Daniel

Brunettes are Dangerous 
Roland Daniel 
1960

The Hard-Boiled Blonde by Glen Watkins

The Hard-Boiled Blonde 
Glen Watkins
1948

The Dame by Richard Stark aka Donald Westlake

The Dame 
Richard Stark aka Donald Westlake
1969

Rebel Wench by Gardner F. Fox

Rebel Wench 
Gardner F. Fox
1955

A Dame Called Murder by Robert O. Saber

A Dame Called Murder 
Robert O. Saber
1955

The Mistress by George C. Foster

The Mistress 
George C. Foster
1930

Exit for a Dame by Richard Ellington

Exit for a Dame 
Richard Ellington
1953

The Case of the Negligent Nymph by Erle Stanley Gardner

The Case of the Negligent Nymph 
Erle Stanley Gardner
1956

The Dame by Carter Brown

The Dame 
Carter Brown 
1959

The Wicked, Wicked Women by James Kendricks

The Wicked, Wicked Women 
James Kendricks
1961

Blonde Blackmail by Bruce Sanders

Blonde Blackmail 
Bruce Sanders
1945

Three-Time Sinner by Norman Bligh

Three-Time Sinner 
Norman Bligh
1952

The Case of the Restless Redhead by Erle Stanley Gardner

The Case of the Restless Redhead 
Erle Stanley Gardner 
1957

Kill Her with Passion by Hank Janson

Kill Her with Passion
Hank Janson
1963

Dame in Danger by Robert Maguire

Dame in Danger 
Robert Maguire
1955

 


Kubla Khan pop-up: Nick Bantock“In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
A stately pleasure dome decree
Where Alph, the sacred river, ran
Through caverns measureless to man
Down to a sunless sea.” 

The opening lines of Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s poem Kubla Khan (likely his most famous, along with Rime of the Ancient Mariner) are rhythmic, vivid and creative. They are also, by Coleridge’s own assertion, fuelled by opium. He took laudanum and opium for various ailments from toothache to dysentery, and in this particular case, fell into a sedated dream. Upon waking, he began the poem. Sadly, he was interrupted by a business matter, and when he tried to recall the trancelike state in which he had begun the poem, found he was unable. 

Without the reverie of the drugs, would Kubla Khan be what it became? 

The drug choice may not often be opium today, but among authors, Coleridge is far from unique in using controlled substances. While there is no evidence that Lewis Carroll ever used hallucinogens, it has long been speculated upon, given the hookah-smoking caterpillar and giant mushrooms of Wonderland. And Jabberwocky sounds like the nightmarish incarnation of a particularly unpleasant acid trip. Kingsley Amis

Peruvian author Carlos Castaneda experimented with psychotropic plants like peyote as a way to reach heightened awareness and trances. Though he claimed the drugs weren’t necessary, they certainly helped. His Teachings of Don Juan touches on themes of spirituality, and mentions the connection of metaphysics and the mind-body connection in regard to natural hallucinogens. 

Gonzo journalism founder Hunter S. Thompson was open about his love of drugs to the very end – after his death in 2005, his ashes were shot from a cannon atop a tower he designed himself, which depicted a fist clutching a button of peyote. 

Of all the mind-altering materials authors dabble in, the most prevalent is of course, the sauce. Alcoholic authors seem a dime a dozen: the likes of Dorothy ParkerF. Scott FitzgeraldHerman MelvilleKingsley Amis (pictured at right) and more have struggled with alcohol addiction. Amis even wrote books about the joys and pitfalls of being a drinker. His Everyday Drinking: The Distilled Kingsley Amis is as funny and witty as it is educational, with chapters titled ‘The Hangover’ ‘The Boozing Man’s Diet’, and more.

Another writer who was anything but shy in his adoration of imbibing was Charles Bukowski, who was as infamous for his affair with the bottle as for his affairs with women. Alcohol and drunkenness are recurrent themes in his poetry, and reportedly contributed to the tumult of his relationships. In his poem A Radio With Guts, he wrote: 

Horsemeat by Charles BukowskiBukowski - Photographs 1977-1987


“I used to get drunk
and throw the radio through the window
while it was playing, and, of course,
it would break the glass in the window
and the radio would sit there on the roof
still playing
and I’d tell my woman,
‘Ah, what a marvelous radio!’”
 

Even Ernest Hemingway had a lifelong battle with the booze, purportedly drinking gin in his tea at breakfast. Truman Capote allegedly penned In Cold Blood while downing a double martini before lunch, another with lunch, and a stinger afterwards, and volunteered himself for rehabilitation more than once. Both authors suffered alcohol-related health failures, Capote eventually dying of his.

 

Other writers bound to the booze include: 

Dylan Thomas – the famous Welsh poet’s official cause of death at age 40 was ‘chronic alcohol poisoning’. 
Tennessee Williams – Southern playwright who penned A Streetcar Named Desire lived to 71 despite fondness for alcohol, amphetamines and barbiturates. 
Jack Kerouac – off the wagon far more often than On The Road
James Joyce – Irish author of UlyssesFinnegan’s Wake and more. Also binge drinker. 
Aleister Crowley – muddled mystic who was steeped in the occult as well as cocaine, opium, heroin, alcohol and more. 
Edgar Allan Poe – 
the dark, tortured mind who wrote The Tell-Tale Heart and The RavenRumors of his drug use eventually proved greatly exaggerated, but he was certainly a drinker.
Aldous Huxley – 
As well as alcohol, the Brave New World author experimented with psychedelics including LSD. 
Timothy Leary
 – famous for tuning in, turning on, dropping out – and drinking up. 
Norman Mailer
 – twice awarded the Pulitzer Prize, Mailer struggled with alcohol and drugs throughout his entire life. He died in 2007 at age 84.

 

 

 

 

All the Sad Young Men by F. Scott Fitzgerald Moby Dick by Herman Melville The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway Tales of Mystery & Imagination by Edgar Allan Poe

 

 

Alcoholics Anonymous by Bill Wilson

And that’s just a drop in the bucket (bottle?). We have to wonder whether intoxicant indulgences help or hinder the creative process. Does whiskey unclog writers’ block? Psilocybin mushrooms make a deadline a piece of cake? Or is it the euphoria, escapism and easing of pain that’s irresistibly attractive to writerly types? It’s hard to say, but can it be coincidental that so many artists and creative people fall prey to the same pitfalls?

At least one author will forever be associated with drink, but for his triumph over it, and his dedication to helping others afflicted by alcohol see that sobriety was possible and help was available. Bill Wilson published the first printing of his book, Alcoholics Anonymous, in 1939. He co-founded the program, which in 2006 had a reported 1,867,212 members in 106,202 AA groups worldwide. 

 

 

MATTER! The HumanitiesMATTER!

The Humanities are academic disciplines
that seek to understand and interpret the
human experience, from individuals to
entire cultures, engaging in the discovery,
preservation, and communication of the
past and present record to enable a deeper
understanding of contemporary society.
The Humanities encompass literature, classics,
ancient and modern languages, history, philosophy, media studies, the fine and performing arts,
and other related subjects.  It can be a challenge
to show the benefits the Humanities bring: in this
infographic we gather available evidence to
show the Humanities matter!

Presented by 4Humanities and UCL Centre for Digital Humanities

Link  —  Posted: August 28, 2013 in Uncategorized

Hammett by Joe Gores
Hammett
A novel by crime writer and detective Joe Gores 

 

Dashiell Hammett is best known for writing The Maltese Falcon and The Thin Man, and creating the iconic private eye Sam Spade. His no nonsense crime writing will never be forgotten but Hammett, who died 50 years ago this week, led a fascinating life of drama and intrigue.

Born Samuel Dashiell Hammett in 1894, Hammett received little formal education and dropped out of school at age 13. He tried his hand at a wide variety of work, including newsboy, stevedore, laborer and more, before joining the Pinkerton National Detective Agency when he was 21. Hammett worked for Pinkertons intermittently as an agent until he was 28, but took a hiatus after enlisting in the U.S. army during World War I as a sergeant in the ambulance corps.

There was a worldwide Spanish Influenza epidemic at the time, and Hammett contracted it almost immediately, then caught tuberculosis, and spent much of the war in a hospital in Washington State. It was there that he met his eventual wife, a nurse named Josephine Dolan. But the marriage lasted less than a decade as Hammett’s persistent tuberculosis and the risk of infecting his children prevented him from living with his family.

An Issue of Black Mask MagazineHammett’s writing career began with short stories penned in his spare time, mostly inspired by his experiences with private investigation. He also earned some income writing ad copy for a San Francisco-area jewelry store as well as reviewing books. He was first published in 1922 in a periodical called The Smart Set. But his break came a year later when a short story was published in Black Mask Magazine. He became a regular contributor to Black Mask and was soon one of their most popular writers, along with fellow mystery authors Erle Stanley Gardner and Raymond Chandler. One of his best loved characters, The Continental Op, appeared in 34 short stories in Black Mask. He wrote five novels – Red Harvest, (1929), The Dain Curse (1929), The Maltese Falcon (1930), The Glass Key (1931) and The Thin Man (1934).

Despite tuberculosis and ill health, Hammett re-enlisted in the army in 1942 and used favors and influence to be admitted. He worked as an army newspaper editor in the Aleutian Islands but could add emphysema to his list of ailments by the end of the conflict. His health never fully recovered.

Poor health did not prevent Hammett from becoming deeply entrenched in political activity. In the 1930s, when not writing or delving into investigative intrigue, Hammett spend much of his time involved in the anti-fascist movement. Devout in his beliefs, part of the reason for Hammett’s separation from the Pinkerton Agency was his disapproval of the agency’s anti-union stance. Hammett’s beliefs, vocal denunciation of Nazism, membership of the Communist Party and eventual role as vice-chairman of the deemed-subversive Civil Rights Congress (CRC) was noticed by the authorities. In the late 1940s and early ‘50s, his activities were highlighted as ‘un-American’ under Senator Joseph McCarthy’s reign of anti-communist hysteria. In 1951, the author was imprisoned on contempt charges for six months after he refused to testify against four fellow communists in a conspiracy trial for whom the CRC had posted bail.

Even after his release from prison, life for Hammett was not rosy – the powers-that-be saw to it that his Sam Spade radio series was cancelled, and the I.R.S. came after him for $100,000 in back taxes. In 1953, McCarthy’s interest turned to banning pro-Communist books. Hammett’s work was branded subversive and recommended for suppression.

With his affluence and health behind him, Hammett continued to write, often in solitude, but occasionally spending time with his longtime friend and lover Lillian Hellman, upon whom the character of Nora Charles, from The Thin Man, was based. He died in New York on January 10, 1961 and is buried in the Arlington National Cemetery near Washington DC.

 

Dashiell Hammett’s Novels

Dashiell Hammett’s Collected Short Stories


 
 
Sherlock Holmes created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Recently The Guardian reported that in 1945, at the behest of the Ministry of Information in Britain, Agatha Christie wrote an essay lauding the excellence of British crime fiction. In what was essentially a piece of post-WWII propaganda meant to showcase the English culture and way of life, Christie did indeed lavishly praise several of her contemporaries, including Ngaio MarshJohn Dickson Carr, and Arthur Conan Doyle.

Apparently reluctant to be entirely glowing and gushing, she also included some less flattering words for fellow crime-writer Margery Allingham, whom she charged with over-developing her characters at the expense of the plot, and for Dorothy L. Sayers, whose recurring character Lord Peter Wimsey was a good example, Christie asserted, of “a good man spoilt”, and that any early interest he held was eventually replaced by run-of-the-mill handsomeness and dullness.

Most surprising were the harsh words Christie reserved for her own creation, the much-beloved Belgian detective Hercule Poirot. While Poirot is widely considered the most famous detective in literary fiction (except for, perhaps, that one fellow), Christie stated in the essay that she had become bored to tears of him, and even considered him something of an embarrassment. She acknowledged the ardent affection reserved for Poirot by fans, but went on to caution would-be writers: “Be very careful what central character you create – you may have him with you for a very long time!”

Christie herself may not even have realized, in 1945, just how extensive Poirot’s longevity was to be. The famously fastidious and mustachioed character still has legions of fans today, and is among the most beloved fictional characters in history – his obituary was even published in the New York Times on August 6th, 1975, two months before the release of the last Poirot novel, Curtain. The obit ran as front page news, under the headline: “Hercule Poirot Is Dead; Famed Belgian Detective; Hercule Poirot, the Detective, Dies

Mike Hammer, created by Mickey SpillanePoirot is far from alone. There are numerous fan clubs, both physical and electronic, dedicated to fictional detectives (fic-dicks?). Whether police detectives, private eyes, or amateur snoops, readers eat them up. The same Peter Wimsey whom Dame Agatha was so rough with above has countless fans all over the globe, and stacks of copycat fan fiction written about him by admirers.

Likewise Sherlock HolmesNero Wolfe and Mike Hammer. Something about the detective genre seems to inspire the creation of long-lasting repeat characters, heroes in possession of varying ratio of admirable qualities and flaws, to whom readers everywhere can relate. We get to know them, and glimpse what makes them tick. We cheer for them, we fear for them, and we look forward to their next adventures. 

Some sleuths have been collaborative efforts as well, coming from more than one contributing mind. The most obvious example is keen-teen sleuth Nancy Drew, the amateur adolescent whose investigative adventures have intrigued gaggles of pre-teens  for generations. Nancy Drew’s creator is listed as Carolyn Keene. Keene, along with The Hardy Boys’ series author Franklin W. Dixon, doesn’t actually exist. Both are collective publishing pseudonyms created by the Stratemeyer Syndicate, a book-packaging firm who puts out the stories, which have actually been written by a collection of ghostwriters. However, both The Hardy Boys (since 1927) and Nancy Drew (since 1930) have gained popularity and loyal devotees, eagerly following their next clue alongside them. It was always a special treat when a book included both Nancy Drew and The Hardy Boys teaming up to solve a particularly stubborn case.

Even the more dark and hardboiled detectives have their admirers. These anti-hero types were the antithesis of the wholesome, fresh-faced appeal of Nancy Drew and her cohorts. They too investigated crimes and mysteries, but the superficial similarities stopped there. These gritty gumshoes knew their way around guns, and were as often as not halfway to the bottom of a whiskey bottle. They were not afraid to get rough with an informant or give a hysterical dame a good shake when necessary. Two of the most well-known of that ilk are Dashiell Hammet’s Sam Spade and Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe. Interestingly, Humphrey Bogart played both of those characters in film adaptations.

A fun variation on the theme is the little old lady, most famously personified by Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple. Jane Marple is an elderly unmarried woman, deceptively innocent in appearance and demeanor, who  uses her keen intelligence and ability to go unnoticed to her advantage when solving baffling crimes and grisly murders. Another excellent example is Emily Pollifax, the title character from the series by Dorothy Gilman. Technically a spy, Mrs. Pollifax is a vaguely depressed aging woman at the beginning of the series, who finds herself enormously cheered and revitalized after a series of misunderstandings lands her a job with the CIA and sees her sent off on a wildly unbelievable mission, ending up in Albania, which (naturally) she happens to survive, while tidily solving the mystery and landing herself a job in the meantime.

Whether your preference is debonair and dashing, deceptively demure or downright dastardly, there is a fictional detective to fit the bill. If the genre is anywhere near as much fun to write as it is to read, it’s small wonder we’ve so many to choose from.

 

 

Literary Detectives Not to Be Missed

Albert Campion created by Margery Allingham
Albert Campion 
created by Margery Allingham
Nero Wolfe created by Rex Stout
Nero Wolfe 
created by Rex Stout
Ellery Queen created by Daniel Nathan (Frederic Dannay) and Manford Lepofsky (Manfred Bennington)
Ellery Queen 
created by Daniel Nathan and Manford Lepofsky
Henry Gamadge created by Elizabeth Daly
Henry Gamadge 
created by Elizabeth Daly
Sam Spade created by Dashiell Hammett
Sam Spade 
created by Dashiell Hammett

Philip Marlowe created by Raymond Chandler
Philip Marlowe 
created by Raymond Chandler
Emily Pollifax created by Dorothy Gilman
Emily Pollifax 
created by Dorothy Gilman
Hercule Poirot created by by Agatha Christie
Hercule Poirot 
created by by Agatha Christie
Anthony Gethryn created by Philip MacDonald
Anthony Gethryn 
created by Philip MacDonald
Precious Ramotswe created by Alexander McCall Smith
Precious Ramotswe 
created by Alexander McCall Smith

Roderick Alleyn created by Ngaio Marsh
Roderick Alleyn 
created by Ngaio Marsh
Lord Peter Wimsey created by Dorothy L. Sayers
Lord Peter Wimsey 
created by Dorothy L. Sayers
John Rebus created by Ian Rankin
John Rebus 
created by Ian Rankin
Adam Dalgliesh created by P.D. James
Adam Dalgliesh 
created by P.D. James
Nick and Nora Charles created by Dashiell Hammett
Nick and Nora Charles 
created by Dashiell Hammett

Roy Grace created by Peter James
Roy Grace 
created by Peter James
Miss Marple created by Agatha Christie
Miss Marple 
created by Agatha Christie
Guido Brunetti created by Donna Leon
Guido Brunetti 
created by Donna Leon
Alex Cross created by James Patterson
Alex Cross 
created by James Patterson
Brother Cadfael created by Ellis Peters (Edith Pargeter)
Brother Cadfael 
created by Ellis Peters (Edith Pargeter)

Father Brown created by G.K. Chesterton
Father Brown 
created by G.K. Chesterton
Inspector Morse created by Colin Dexter
Inspector Morse 
created by Colin Dexter
Tom Barnaby created by Caroline Graham
Tom Barnaby 
created by Caroline Graham
Marcus Didius Falco created by Lindsey Davis
Marcus Didius Falco 
created by Lindsey Davis
Dalziel and Pascoe created by Reginald Hill
Dalziel and Pascoe 
created by Reginald Hill

Gideon Fell created by John Dickson Carr
Gideon Fell 
created by John Dickson Carr
Tony Hill & Carol Jordan created by Val McDermid
Tony Hill & Carol Jordan 
created by Val McDermid
Agatha Raisin created by M.C. Beaton (Marion Chesney)
Agatha Raisin 
created by M.C. Beaton (Marion Chesney)
Inspector Jack Frost created b R.D. Wingfield
Inspector Jack Frost 
created by R.D. Wingfield
Kay Scarpetta created by Patricia Cornwell
Kay Scarpetta 
created by Patricia Cornwell

Hieronymus 'Harry' Bosch created by Michael Connelly
Hieronymous ‘Harry’ Bosch 
created by Michael Connelly
Spenser created by Robert B. Parker
Spenser 
created by Robert B. Parker
Lew Archer created by Ross MacDonald
Lew Archer 
created by Ross MacDonald
Perry Mason created by Erle Stanley Gardner
Perry Mason 
created by Erle Stanley Gardner
Kinsey Millhone created by Sue Grafton
Kinsey Millhone 
created by Sue Grafton

Elvis Cole created by Robert Crais
Elvis Cole 
created by Robert Crais
Charlie Chan created by Earl Derr Biggers
Charlie Chan 
created by Earl Derr Biggers
Jules Maigret created by Georges Simenon
Jules Maigret 
created by Georges Simenon
Harry Hole created by Jo Nesbo
Harry Hole 
created by Jo Nesbo
Kurt Wallander created by Henning Mankell
Kurt Wallander
created by Henning Mankell