Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat are you reading the week of June 23, 2013?
The Cater Street Hangman by Anne Perry ~ Charlotte and Thomas Pitt book #12013 book #73
Viva_La_Revolution
(28,791 posts)Currently in the middle of #5. I read the first 11 years ago when they first came out but I missed the last few. They're epic fantasy.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wheel_of_Time
applegrove
(122,926 posts)"The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies?" by Jared Diamond
Rowdyboy
(22,057 posts)From the author of a string of fine novels comes a very intelligent, turn-the-pages-as-fast-as-you-can thriller that pits a psychoanalyst against a brilliant - and deeply disturbed - villain. The premise: the villain, who calls himself Rumplestiltskin, has given Dr. Frederick Starks two weeks in which to guess his identity. If he cant guess it, Rumplestiltskin will begin killing off people close to Dr. Starks, and hell keep killing, unless Starks kills himself.
I mean, thats one killer of a premise: find out who the bad guy is, or youll be forced to kill yourself. And Rumplestiltskin doesnt exactly make it easy for the good doctor: a few tantalizing clues, little verses that could mean nothing, or anything, but thats it.
Katzenbach, whos always thinking, is especially clever here. Think about it: if this novel featured a detective as its hero, it wouldnt work. A detective would know how to find someone who doesnt want how to be found. The novel would fall flat on its face if its central character were, for example, a politician: imagine a public figure setting off on his own, going on the run, changing his identity, chasing the man whos got his life in his hands. It just wouldnt work: way too unbelievable. Im not sure this story would work as a film, either, although its quite likely someone will eventually put it in the big screen (Hollywood likes to make movies out of Katzenbachs novels, although they advertised Harts War so poorly that no one went to see it). In a movie, the plot would seem too slick, too implausible.
Katzenbach spends a lot of time on the small details, lets us see Starkss indecision, his fear, his confusion. About midway through the novel, we begin to feel that we are Dr. Frederick Starks, fighting for our own lives. In a movie, where events are condensed, where small details are lost, the story would probably just seem slick and Hollywoodish.
There are a lot of novels featuring fiendishly twisted villains and plucky, underdog heroes. Some of them are very good. Few of them are as good as The Analyst. Its Katzenbachs best novel.
--David Pitt
Myrina
(12,296 posts)After that, starting Eco's "The Prague Cemetery".
getting old in mke
(813 posts)50s space opera and a reminder of grade school/junior high reading.
Listening: _A Storm of Swords_ by George RR Martin. On and on and on the audiobooks go. But I'm finding listening to them a bit like audio crack: His technique of using POV chapters translates really well--there are a gazillion charcaters, but within a single POV, only a limited number, which is good. The reader, Roy Dotrice, sounds like a creaky old story teller with limited voicing for characters, but doesn't need that many at a given time. I like the "creaky old story teller" choice for these books.
didact
(246 posts)closeupready
(29,503 posts)And The Crooked Hinge, John Dickson Carr.
Paladin
(28,724 posts)Outstanding historical novel about several generations of a Texas oil-and-cattle dynasty---kind of like "Giant," except with actual research in evidence. It's currently on the NYT best seller list, nothing but rave reviews. Highly recommended, with a head's-up about the violence, which is pretty graphic.
Kablooie
(18,745 posts)I knew nearly nothing about the story and never saw the movie so I thought it would be a nice change.
I just finished reading "The Bell Jar" by Sylvia Plath and was kind of worn from living in that insane asylum so I thought I'd get a change with a romance between fisherman and a city woman.
Whoo boy.
And I've got "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" sitting waiting to be read too.
This is driving me crazy!
Mz Pip
(27,884 posts)I've become a big fan of novels set in Maine.