
Alfred Hitchcock liked to say that he enjoyed reading novels with “multiple chases and a lot of psychology.” When he read John Buchan’s novel, The Thirty-Nine Steps, he liked it so much he decided to make a movie out of it, reducing the title to a space-saving numeric figure: The 39 Steps.
When the film came out in 1935, Hitchcock did not merely have a hit. He’d turned a page in history. A new cinematic genre was born: the psychological spy thriller—a double chase in which a lone everyman pursues his enemies while fleeing his enemies and the authorities.

Thanks to Buchan and Hitchcock, we can look at literature and film history this way: in the beginning there was Richard Hannay, hero of The 39 Steps. Later, out of that mold, there came such iconic characters as James Bond and James Bourne of Robert Ludlum's The Bourne Identity franchise.
The foreword to the Dover edition of the book tells us that John Buchan “found the exact recipe for an emerging genre and created a perfect [example] of the type,” adding that such novelists as “Eric Ambler, Ian Fleming and John Le Carré all owe a debt to this book.”
By selecting this novel for his next project Hitchcock demonstrated what always seemed to be true with him: that part of his genius lay in keeping a step or two ahead of the curve.

What makes Richard Hannay such a great prototype for the “modern spy novel”? Tune in tomorrow.
Comments
Absolutely! One of the debates in the Hitchcock studies world is whether "From Russia With Love" is an homage or a ripoff! SO many Hitch references in that flick. What do you think?