For this week’s analysis I will be focusing on the first
part of my reading book, “The Maltese Falcon” by Dashiell Hammett. This week’s
focus is literary devices, in which I will focus on the third person narration
as well as how it connects to the detective novel genre of reading.
While the first chapter was initially just background
information, in the following chapters we begin to get a feel for how this
novel grabs its readers. We soon enough learn that the strict third person point
of view becomes very unreliable. This is both confusing to the reader, but also
enticing, since we too want to solve these detective mysteries. In the first
chapter, we are introduced to Sam Spade (our main character), Miles Archer (his
partner), Effie Perine (his assistant secretary, and Ms. Wonderly (his newest
client), whom of which he sends Archer to help.
We later find, in the next chapter, that Archer was killed.
From this we see the true third person narration. We don’t hear the thoughts of
any of the characters, and only hear one side of the conversations of phone
calls. While this doesn’t seem like a problem initially, after Spade returns
home, two other officials come to his home and start investigating him for the
murder of Floyd Thursby (the man Archer was investigating before his death). This
comes as a shock to the reader as it felt as though e have been only focusing
on Sam’s actions, yet the narrator time-jumps, so we miss a lot of details. While
Sam claims to have been walking around town during the questioning, we as
readers, don’t even know that much. We just know he went home. This makes both
the narrator AND Sam Spade seemingly in-trustable but also grasps the attention
of the readers.
In the second chapter, the next day, Sam returns to his
office. We are then introduced to Archer’s wife, whom Sam calls precious. From
their conversation as well as Effie’s remarks, we are left to assume a secret
affair between the two. Also, Effie thinks that perhaps she had killed her own
husband to get closer to Sam and eventually become official with him. Again,
this shows that perhaps if the narrator filled us in on these details, we wouldn’t
look so negatively and be judging the main character.
In chapter four, one of the biggest secrets is revealed. The
client Ms. Wonderly meets with Sam and admits she isn’t who she said she is and
reveals herself as Brigid O’Shaughnessy. Sam says that he already could tell that
she was lying but that she had a lot of money, so he went along with it. We as
readers didn’t know that Sam was steps ahead of us, but at the same time, the
novel wouldn’t be as intriguing without all the shocks.
I really look forward to reading more of your analysis’s because I remember reading one of the chapters as our assigned reading. It’s nice to get some more information since when I first read one of chapters and it was so vague. I really like how your focusing on narration since when it is third person, it is harder to read characters and what they will do next.
ReplyDeleteIt’s amazing also how many people are involved in this story when it first starts. Sounds like there’s already some scandal going on, haha! Good luck with the rest of your story and look forward to reading more about it.