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Dashiell Hammett's lost works found in Texas

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I thought this news worthy of it's own thread, considering the potential for movies.

A cache of unpublished works by famed writer Dashiell Hammett, often seen as the father of hardboiled detective fiction, has been found and is set to be unveiled in America.

Hammett, whose best-known work The Maltese Falcon was made into a film starring Humphrey Bogart, died in 1961. Now 15 unpublished short stories are to hit the bookshelves after being unearthed by a magazine editor, Andrew Gulli, among the literary archives of the Harry Ransom Centre at the University of Texas in Austin.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/feb/04/dashiell-hammett-unpublished-works-found

Hammett, along with other writers of the 1920s, 30s and 40s such as Raymond Chandler, defined a new fictional world with their gritty portrayals of urban America. They eschewed straightforward heroes and villains for chancers and grifters who worked both sides of the law. These low-life characters and anti-heroes were a ground-breaking development for most mass fiction and still influence crime novels today.

See also
http://www.thefedoralounge.com/showthread.php?48679-1940s-set-Novels&highlight=hammett
 

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