The Dain Curse

The Dain Curse - Paperback

$12.94
Sale price  $12.94 Regular price 
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The Dain Curse

The Dain Curse - Paperback

by Dashiell Hammett
$12.94
Sale price  $12.94 Regular price 

Book Overview

by Dashiell Hammett (Author)

With the Scarpetta Cast drawing millions into forensic crime drama on Prime Video, there's never been a better time to reach back to the hard-boiled original that helped define investigative fiction. Dashiell Hammett's The Dain Curse sends his nameless Continental Op detective into a case that opens as a routine diamond theft - then spirals into murder, occult rituals, addiction, and a family curse that contaminates every lead.

Set across a shadowy San Francisco Bay Area of the late 1920s, the investigation threads through secret societies, staged séances, and layered deceptions, each revelation reframing everything that came before.

Hammett's prose is lean and relentless, and the Op's cynical, no-nonsense voice cuts through corruption and moral ambiguity with the same unflinching clarity that today's best procedural thrillers aspire to.

If you've been gripped by stories where buried family legacies drive the crime and the detective refuses to look away, this is where that tradition began.
Number of Pages: 186
Dimensions: 0.43 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: September 15, 2025
ISBN9798880925612
Author Dashiell Hammett
PublisherStart Publishing Pd
GenreLiterature
FormatPaperback
PublishedSeptember 2025
LanguageENG- English
Pages186
Weight1.0 lb
Target AudienceAdults
Print SizeStandard Print

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About Dashiell Hammett

Dashiell Samuel Hammett was born in St. Mary's County. He grew up in Philadelphia and Baltimore. Hammett left school at the age of fourteen and held several kinds of jobs thereafter--messenger boy, newsboy, clerk, operator, and stevedore, finally becoming an operative for Pinkerton's Detective Agency. Sleuthing suited young Hammett, but World War I intervened, interrupting his work and injuring his health. When Sergeant Hammett was discharged from the last of several hospitals, he resumed detective work. He soon turned to writing, and in the late 1920s Hammett became the unquestioned master of detective-story fiction in America. In The Maltese Falcon (1930) he first introduced his famous private eye, Sam Spade. The Thin Man (1932) offered another immortal sleuth, Nick Charles. Red Harvest (1929), The Dain Curse (1929), and The Glass Key (1931) are among his most successful novels. During World War II, Hammett again served as sergeant in the Army, this time for more than two years, most of which he spent in the Aleutians. Hammett's later life was marked in part by ill health, alcoholism, a period of imprisonment related to his alleged membership in the Communist Party, and by his long-time companion, the author Lillian Hellman, with whom he had a very volatile relationship. His attempt at autobiographical fiction survives in the story "Tulip," which is contained in the posthumous collection The Big Knockover (1966, edited by Lillian Hellman). Another volume of his stories, The Continental Op (1974, edited by Stephen Marcus), introduced the final Hammett character: the "Op," a nameless detective (or "operative") who displays little of his personality, making him a classic tough guy in the hard-boiled mold--a bit like Hammett himself.

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