Shaul-Ike Cohen
One Too Many
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Chandler and Hammett:
I've been reading a bit of Chandler lately. Is that just me, or is he simply a better writer than Hammett? Not that the latter is a hack either, but where Chandler's short sentences have a laconic effect, Hammett's sound wooden sometimes. By the way, both showed they have a funny side, not only in sarcastic remarks, but also in a light-hearted and even fatuous way (Hammett: Thin Man, Chandler: Pearls Are a Nuisance)
Hammett sometimes reads like "And then a man came in. He was tall. And he was wearing a suit. And then he sat down on a chair. The chair was next to a table," and so on, while Chandler's short descriptions makes me stand right in the room next to the protagonists. (When I have too much time lol, I might excerpt descriptions of clothing for the Lounge.)
Chandler and Christie:
My impression is that people sometimes confound the setting with quality - I think Chandler's style is at least as good as Agatha Christie's, for instance, only he writes about hard-boiled guys who beat each other up and talk in slang, while Mrs Christie writes about well-mannered murderers, innocents and detectives whose mostly upper-class background is reflected in their speech. I like both.
I've been reading a bit of Chandler lately. Is that just me, or is he simply a better writer than Hammett? Not that the latter is a hack either, but where Chandler's short sentences have a laconic effect, Hammett's sound wooden sometimes. By the way, both showed they have a funny side, not only in sarcastic remarks, but also in a light-hearted and even fatuous way (Hammett: Thin Man, Chandler: Pearls Are a Nuisance)
Hammett sometimes reads like "And then a man came in. He was tall. And he was wearing a suit. And then he sat down on a chair. The chair was next to a table," and so on, while Chandler's short descriptions makes me stand right in the room next to the protagonists. (When I have too much time lol, I might excerpt descriptions of clothing for the Lounge.)
Chandler and Christie:
My impression is that people sometimes confound the setting with quality - I think Chandler's style is at least as good as Agatha Christie's, for instance, only he writes about hard-boiled guys who beat each other up and talk in slang, while Mrs Christie writes about well-mannered murderers, innocents and detectives whose mostly upper-class background is reflected in their speech. I like both.