Chris Stein/Negative: Me, Blondie and the Advent of Punk
Glenn O'Brien, Deborah Harry and Shepard Fairey
Book
For the duration of the 1970s - from his days as a student at the School of Visual Arts through the...
The Complete Collection
Book
This volume collects the complete writings of Henry James: 23 novels, 112 stories and novellas, 12...
Hounds of the Hollywood Baskervilles (Babs Norman Hollywood Mystery #1)
Book
Asta, the dog from the popular Thin Man series, has vanished, and production for his next film is...
Humour Mystery Historical
Rockne and Jones: Notre Dame, USC, and the Greatest Rivalry of the Roaring Twenties
Book
Notre Dame's rallying cry was once "Win one for the Gipper." e football series with Army that...
Mayhawke (97 KP) rated Elevator Pitch in Books
Jun 28, 2019
Over a decade ago I stopped reading crime fiction from the U.S. because I found what seemed to be a an unpleasant dwelling on the suffering of victims; a voyeurism which I found uncomfortable, and highly unpleasant. It was as though American crime writers were incapable of exploring the darkness of humanity, or giving clarity to events without relishing the pain and terror that must have been experienced by those on the receiving end of them.
Of course this was never true of all U.S. crime fiction, but I couldn't be asked to keep searching for the other kind. It was easier to just stay away from it all.
So, this is the first American crime novel I have read in nearly fifteen years.
What a joy it was. Barclay sets out a gripping thriller, an excellently plotted story which will educate you just a bit more than is comfortable on the ease of hacking lift controls in the technical age, whilst carefully leading you up and down the garden path a couple of times. The reading style is comfortable, the exposition is well paced. Eventually you arrive at a satisfying, and prompt conclusion. Barclay avoids the temptation to draw out the end like a cheerleader pulling gum, something that only works in Golden Era crime, and I always feel is out of place in otherwise fast-paced books of a more recent age.
Against this the characters have a slightly superficial feel, as though they have only been given the complexity they need for the book, and the denouement was not a huge surprise, though it was batted back and forth between two potential subjects nicely. But these really are minor complaints I really enjoyed this book and I will definitely be going back and reading some more of Linwood's books on the basis of this one.
What Is It All but Luminous: Notes from an Underground Man
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From the golden-haired, curly-headed half of Simon & Garfunkel--a memoir (of sorts): artful, moving,...
Music biography
Cave Man
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The ways of men ever run to corruption. Days of upheaval that saw the thrones of angels cast down...
The Romford Pele: It's Only Ray Parlour's Autobiography
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THE SUNDAY TIMES TOP TEN BESTSELLER. The Trophies ...The Tuesday Club ...The Prawn Crackers ...Marc...
The Worst Date Ever: or How it Took a Comedy Writer to Expose Africa's Secret War
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When scriptwriter Jane Bussmann (South Park, The Fast Show, Brass Eye and Smack the Pony) moved to...
The House is Full of Yogis
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A witty memoir about the trials of adolescence, the tribulations of family life and the...