Raymond Chandler, author of the 1939 novel 'The Big Sleep', famously claimed that his contemporary, Dashiell Hammett (author of The Maltese Falcon) had taken murder out of the vicar's rose garden and given it 'back to the kind of people who commit it for reasons, not just to provide a corpse'. He was having a dig at what he considered the genteel tradition of English detective fi ction, above all the province of female writers from the 1930s (Agatha Christie, Marjorie Allingham, etc)
This thesis will examine the careers of authors Raymond Chandler and Paul Auster. The paper will def...
This undergraduate honors paper examines the concept of the Femme Fatale in the context of Raymond C...
One of the enduring myths ofdetective fiction surrounds the concept of the clue puzzle. The pleasure...
Dashiell Hammett is best remembered for a series of attributes that are at best chimerical and at wo...
The literary life of Dashiell Hammett's Sam Spade was as brief as his posthumous career has been end...
A winner of the John S. Knight Assignment Sequence Prize, this sequence originates from English 147,...
All the world loves a mystery, and much of the reading public has always loved detective stories. Th...
One of the founding fathers of American detective fiction, Raymond Chandler is also a theoretician o...
The conflation of the hard-boiled style and war experience has influenced many contemporary crime wr...
In February 1946, George Orwell published 'The Decline of the English Murder', an essay which both c...
More than any other writer, Raymond Chandler (1888-1959) is responsible for raising detective storie...
In February 1946, George Orwell published a short but witty essay entitled ‘The Decline of the Engli...
This thesis covers the representation of violence and trauma in both the British Golden Age and the ...
John Huston's 'The Maltese Falcon' (1941) is often cited as the first fully fledged 'film noir'. Yet...
Sam Spade was the invention of the great noir crime writer, Dashiell Hammett, who published his firs...
This thesis will examine the careers of authors Raymond Chandler and Paul Auster. The paper will def...
This undergraduate honors paper examines the concept of the Femme Fatale in the context of Raymond C...
One of the enduring myths ofdetective fiction surrounds the concept of the clue puzzle. The pleasure...
Dashiell Hammett is best remembered for a series of attributes that are at best chimerical and at wo...
The literary life of Dashiell Hammett's Sam Spade was as brief as his posthumous career has been end...
A winner of the John S. Knight Assignment Sequence Prize, this sequence originates from English 147,...
All the world loves a mystery, and much of the reading public has always loved detective stories. Th...
One of the founding fathers of American detective fiction, Raymond Chandler is also a theoretician o...
The conflation of the hard-boiled style and war experience has influenced many contemporary crime wr...
In February 1946, George Orwell published 'The Decline of the English Murder', an essay which both c...
More than any other writer, Raymond Chandler (1888-1959) is responsible for raising detective storie...
In February 1946, George Orwell published a short but witty essay entitled ‘The Decline of the Engli...
This thesis covers the representation of violence and trauma in both the British Golden Age and the ...
John Huston's 'The Maltese Falcon' (1941) is often cited as the first fully fledged 'film noir'. Yet...
Sam Spade was the invention of the great noir crime writer, Dashiell Hammett, who published his firs...
This thesis will examine the careers of authors Raymond Chandler and Paul Auster. The paper will def...
This undergraduate honors paper examines the concept of the Femme Fatale in the context of Raymond C...
One of the enduring myths ofdetective fiction surrounds the concept of the clue puzzle. The pleasure...