Dog Day Afternoon (1975)
Movie Watch
Based on a true story about a Brooklyn bank robbery gone haywire, as a desperate, crazed man and his...
The Boys in the Bank P. F. Kluge John Wojtowicz Sal Naturale
Matt Dentler recommended High and Low (1963) in Movies (curated)
Secrets of a Serial Killer
Book
There it is: fear. It’s crawling all over her face and in her eyes, like a swarm of insects, and...
The Nothing Man
Book
I was the girl who survived the Nothing Man. Now I am the woman who is going to catch him... ...
O.J.: Made in America
TV Show
Herman Broder, a refugee and Holocaust survivor, has three women in his life: Yadwiga, the loyal...
Murder on Marble Row
Book
When an explosion kills wealthy industrialist Gregory Van Dyke, Police Commissioner Teddy Roosevelt...
The Dispatcher
Book
One day, not long from now, it becomes almost impossible to murder anyone—999 times out of a...
Ross (3284 KP) rated Perfect Remains: A Gripping Thriller That Will Leave You Breathless in Books
Aug 30, 2018 (Updated Aug 30, 2018)
As the reader is made aware of the "murderer"'s identity from very early on, this feels more like an early Mark Billingham book than an Ian Rankin or Ed James. Not a true whodunit, more of a case of watching the story unfold, which is thrilling and you get to see the criminal and the detective's view of the events, but may put others off.
While the story is very well crafted, the pacing is top notch and the action exciting, a few aspects irritated me at times. Luc Callanach seems to have coped very well with his change in circumstances, and at times it is almost like he (or the author) has forgotten he is French completely! And also the attitude and conclusions of what was supposed to be a very experienced psychological profiler just didn't feel plausible. And finally, as so often happens with "detective x crime series" books - if the main character didn't see it, it didn't happen. This means that Callanach has to abandon his massive case and oddly decide to go off with another detective in order to discuss something, purely as a plot device - i.e. he has to be involved in it for it to be an important part of the story. In places this worked, and got to the point, but at other times his actions just seemed so unusual as to be ludicrous, just to meet a plot point. Why the lesser characters can't have a PoV chapter is beyond me. It works perfectly well in fantasy fiction, why not in crime?!
However these were minor quibbles, an otherwise great book.
Urban Crime
Games and Entertainment
App
Since Johnny Gainesville left, two massive gangs have waged a bloody war to replace him and take...
The Feather Thief: Beauty, Obsession, and the Natural History Heist of the Century
Book
A rollicking true-crime adventure and a thought-provoking exploration of the human drive to possess...
History Crime