Dashiell Hammett's second novel, The Dain Curse (1929), is a razor-edged exploration of deceit, addiction, and the sinister allure of the supernatural. When a cache of stolen diamonds leads to a string of violent deaths, the Continental Op-Hammett's nameless, hard-bitten detective-finds himself entangled with the Dain family, a clan shadowed by rumor and tragedy. At the center is Gabrielle Dain Leggett, a fragile young woman haunted by the belief that her bloodline is cursed. From fog-choked city streets to the isolated coastal refuge of a sinister religious cult, the Op fights his way through frame-ups, inside jobs, and a bloodline rotted by greed. Hammett blends classic detection with psychological unease in a tale that exposes the thin line between guilt and madness. Beneath its twisting plot lies a bleak moral terrain-one that helped forge the gritty realism of modern crime fiction. Taut, sardonic, and unsentimental, The Dain Curse shows Hammett at his most daring: transforming the detective story into an instrument of American literary modernism. This Warbler Classics edition includes an extensive biographical timeline.