US crime novelist. He introduced the hard-boiled detective character into fiction and attracted a host of imitators, with works including
The Maltese Falcon (1930, filmed 1941),
The Glass Key (1931, filmed 1942), and his most successful novel, the light-hearted
The Thin Man (1932, filmed 1934). His Marxist politics were best expressed in
Red Harvest (1929), which depicts the corruption of capitalism in Poisonville.
Hammett was a former Pinkerton detective agent. In 1951 he was imprisoned for contempt of court for refusing to testify during the McCarthy era of anticommunist witch hunts. He lived with the dramatist Lillian
Hellman for the latter half of his life.
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