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S'està carregant… False Cargo (Stories from the Golden Age)de L. Ron Hubbard
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Apunta't a LibraryThing per saber si aquest llibre et pot agradar. No hi ha cap discussió a Converses sobre aquesta obra. Hubbard’s False Cargo is a collection of shorts from his 1930s/1940s pulp fiction period. False Cargo is typical of such he-man stories, but there are enough plot twists to keep the reader interested. Hubbard is especially good at writing accuracy into his stories, such that the glossary at the back of the book really comes in handy. Brent Calloway has been good at breaking up gangs and insurance scams but this one is different. He seems to have met his match in a bar, a fat drunk by the name of O’Brian. Pretending to be the drunk, he gets himself hired as a mercenary to wreck a ship and have the owners collect the insurance. Good story. I liked the way the description of the ships, enough tossing and turning and a few near misses of a fast-whining bullet to keep me seasick and scared. Not a lot of romance, but enough to satisfy. Grounded is another one, though an inferior tale to False Cargo. Somewhere off the China coast, ships are run through a river where ambushes often happen. The narrator is one of the crew and accepts aboard a captain who rumor has it that he let a man die in a plane accident. He got a chute and his partner didn’t! Themes of this tale are pretty clear: Don’t buy rumors. And a man who has to live with a bad repute can still pull things together and make it all go right. The ending for me did not flow well. I may have to reread it! Bottom Line: Good collection of adventure/ship yarns. Great example of pulp fiction of the time. The reader needs to keep in mind of the style of the times to really enjoy them. Recommended. Sense ressenyes | afegeix-hi una ressenya
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Insurance investigator Brent Calloway may be too hard-boiled to crack a smile, but he'll go to any length to crack a case. Calloway's about to go to extremes to see to it that one ship makes it safely from Hawaii to the mainland. Going undercover and posing as ruthless killer Spike O'Brien, Calloway quickly discovers that on this ship nothing is what it seems, and no one can be trusted. With so much insurance money at stake, and the whole crew apparently in on the scam, this could end up being a voyage to the bottom of the sea.... And when the real Spike O'Brien shows up, it's Calloway who'll need a good insurance policy. Because life is cheap when the stakes are so high--on a ship of lies bearing a False Cargo. Also includes the sea adventure "Grounded," in which a Royal Air Force lieutenant loses a friend and tarnishes his reputation, and sets out in search of redemption ... no matter the price. Rattling machine guns, howling winds, and ship-tossing waves come together as the audio version of False Cargo delivers a full payload of action and intrigue. "Pitch-perfect performances." --Booklist "Pulp fiction at its finest." --Audiofile * A Publishers Weekly Listen Up Award Winner No s'han trobat descripcions de biblioteca. |
Debats actualsCap
Google Books — S'està carregant… GèneresClassificació Decimal de Dewey (DDC)813.52Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1900-1944ValoracióMitjana:
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False Cargo is typical of such he-man stories, but there are enough plot twists to keep the reader interested. Hubbard is especially good at writing accuracy into his stories, such that the glossary at the back of the book really comes in handy.
Brent Calloway has been good at breaking up gangs and insurance scams but this one is different. He seems to have met his match in a bar, a fat drunk by the name of O’Brian. Pretending to be the drunk, he gets himself hired as a mercenary to wreck a ship and have the owners collect the insurance.
Good story. I liked the way the description of the ships, enough tossing and turning and a few near misses of a fast-whining bullet to keep me seasick and scared. Not a lot of romance, but enough to satisfy.
Grounded is another one, though an inferior tale to False Cargo. Somewhere off the China coast, ships are run through a river where ambushes often happen. The narrator is one of the crew and accepts aboard a captain who rumor has it that he let a man die in a plane accident. He got a chute and his partner didn’t!
Themes of this tale are pretty clear: Don’t buy rumors. And a man who has to live with a bad repute can still pull things together and make it all go right. The ending for me did not flow well. I may have to reread it!
Bottom Line: Good collection of adventure/ship yarns. Great example of pulp fiction of the time. The reader needs to keep in mind of the style of the times to really enjoy them. Recommended.
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