
The hero is the vigilante, even tougher and more murderous than the cops and the mobsters. The bosses control the courts, the police chief uses the cops as his private army, and most of the cops can be bought. Civilisation is rotten, and law and order are corrupt. There is nothing admirable in Red Harvest it is a barbarous bloodbath, its worldview nihilistic and anti-democratic.

But it doesn’t flow.Īdmirers praise Red Harvest for its depiction of corruption and violence, for its realism, its atrocity, and its cynicism, as though these are praiseworthy. The prose is functional at best: terse, abrupt, staccato, like the rat-tat-tat of a machine gun. I’ll see that you get my reports as regularly as possible. I’m going to use it opening Poisonville up from Adam’s apple to ankles.

I’ve got ten thousand dollars of your money to play with. I’m just mean enough to want to ruin him for it. “Your fat chief of police tried to assassinate me last night. Minor characters like the gangster Reno appear late in the book, and suddenly become significant. Characters like the attorney Dawn appear and are killed two pages later. There’s no logic or inevitability these killings just seem arbitrary. Everyone tries to bump off everyone else the number of murders is bewildering, and we don’t care about any of the deaths. The “last honest citizen” is an ineffectual civil reformer, murdered before the story begins. The characters are tough guys and greedy dames, mobsters, bootleggers, grifters and gamblers. Red Harvest is a senseless blizzard of pistol bullets and machine guns, speeding cars and gang wars. The book was well received at the time on both sides of the Atlantic since then, it has been listed among Time’s 100 Best English-Language Novels from 1923 to 2005 the Crime Writers’ Association’s Top 100 Crime Novels of All Time and the Mystery Writers of America’s Top 100 Mystery Novels of All Time.īut the plot is poorly constructed, and Hammett glorifies violence and vigilantism. Red Harvest was the ex-Pinkerton P.I.’s first novel, originally serialized in four parts in Black Mask (1927–1928). Most are gunned down a couple are done in with an ice-pick. At least 22 people are killed in its blood-soaked pages. Red Harvest is a book from the red-light district, a bordel of violence. Reno hurled the remaining bomb through the doorway. Reno called him a lousy fish-eater and shot him four times in face and body.

Stepping over wreckage, the bootlegger came slowly down the steps to the sidewalk. In the glare from the burning next-door house we could see that his face was cut, his clothes almost all torn off. We waited a moment, and then Pete the Finn appeared in the dynamited doorway, his hands holding the top of his bald head.
