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J.M.R.
INTRODUCTION
The Middle Years: 1924â1925
The character of Black Mask and of Hammettâs fiction changed abruptly when Philip C. Cody, described by H. L. Mencken as âa mild and pleasant fellow who was almost stone deaf,â succeeded Sutton as editor. Cody was spread as thinly as his predecessor with regard to his editorial duties. He was vice-president and general manager of Warner Publications, a growing concern that included Field and Stream, Black Mask, and other pulps, as well as a short-lived book club started in 1925. Cody had doubled as circulation manager of Black Mask, and he brought to the editorâs chair a sense of marketing that Sutton lacked. Cody transformed Black Mask into a magazine that offered increased emphasis on action-packed crime fiction, enlivened by violence and punctuated with sexual titillation. He nurtured a small stable of favorite writers and encouraged them write stories of substantial length.
The effect on Hammett was immediately clear. His stories more than doubled in length after âOne Hour,â a story that the editors of this collection assume to have been accepted by Sutton though it was published in the 1 April 1924 Black Mask , the first that carried Codyâs name as editor. With two exceptions (âThe Tenth Clewâ at 11,419 words and âZigzags of Treacheryâ at 14,521 words), Hammettâs Op stories for Sutton averaged just under 6,000 words apiece. The ten Op stories published by Cody between April 1924 and March 1926 averaged about 14,000 words each. And the Op got meaner. During the course of the nine Op stories written for Sutton, the Op usually didnât carry a gun, and he was not directly involved in any lethal activity. Hammettâs first story for Cody features six murders, three of which are committed with cause by the Op. During the rest of Codyâs tenure, Hammettâs stories average some six dead bodies each. The Op was turning blood simple. The plots become more complicated; the women more seductive and dangerous; the crooks more professional. Dramatic confrontation rather than simple description increasingly served to advance the plot. Notably in âThe Girl with the Silver Eyesâ (June 1924), the first of a handful of stories in which the Op struggles to overcome a dangerous attraction to a beautiful woman, Hammettâs Op begins to reveal his emotions. And Hammettâs settings began to exhibit an international flair, as in âThe Golden Horseshoeâ (November 1924), âThe Gutting of Couffignalâ (December 1925), and âThe Creeping Siameseâ (March 1926).
Cody may have been the boss, but his vision was implemented by associate editor Harry C. North, who had served under Sutton, as well. North seems to have conducted an extensive editorial correspondence with his authors, and he minced no words in expressing his editorial opinion. Cody unleashed him. The communications with Hammett are lost, but Northâs style can be gleaned from his letters to Erle Stanley Gardner, who published more than 100 stories in Black Mask between 1924 and 1943. That correspondence reveals North to be a man with a sharp editorial eye and firm opinions. His entire reply to an early submission by Gardner was âThis stinks.â His editorial principle was also simply stated: he advised Gardner: âIf you could once appreciate the fact that the publisher of Black Mask is printing the magazine to make money and nothing else, perhaps you would be more nearly able to guess our needs.â
Cody wasted no time asserting his authority, but he let North do the dirty work of rejecting two of Hammettâs stories. The rejection must have taken place almost immediately after Cody took control, but the account of it did not appear until August 1924, four months after Codyâs ascension, when he published