Imatge de l'autor

John Moss (1) (1940–)

Autor/a de Still Waters

Per altres autors anomenats John Moss, vegeu la pàgina de desambiguació.

John Moss (1) s'ha combinat en John Errington Moss.

16 obres 91 Membres 1 crítiques

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Obres de John Moss

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Coneixement comú

Altres noms
Moss, John George
Moss, John Errington
Data de naixement
1940-02-07
Gènere
male
Nacionalitat
Canada
Lloc de naixement
Galt, Ontario, Canada (now Cambridge)
Llocs de residència
Peterborough, Ontario, Canada
Professions
professor (Canadian literature)
Organitzacions
Royal Society of Canada
University of Ottawa
Biografia breu
[excerpt from author's website]
As a boy, John declared he wanted to live a life of adventure. So far, so good. He swam the Hellespont, was Peter O'Toole's stand-in in Lawrence of Arabia, a lighting technician on the West End, ran ultramarathons, and has dived in wondrous places, ranging from the Red Sea and the Great Barrier Reef to Tahiti, Easter Island, and numerous sites in the Caribbean. He has trekked through the Barren Lands on his own for twenty-eight days, and with his brother, Steve, and then with his wife, Beverley Haun, across major portions of Baffin Island. At different times he has raised horses, bred dogs, kept swans, and cultivated bees. He remains astonished at being alive, a sentient self-conscious part of the universe. Writing mysteries is the best way he has found, yet, of exploring the breadth of a full life and its inevitably ominous end. John was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2006, in recognition of his career as a professor of Canadian literature with over a score of books on Canadian culture, Artic exploration, and experimental literature. He and Beverley, whose book Inventing Easter Island grew out of her work as a cultural theorist, share a stone farmhouse with an Airedale and a Kerry Blue terrier and numerous ghosts in Peterborough, Ontario. He was a scuba instructor (PADI and SDI) and an endurance athlete (Boston Marathon, eleven times; the original Ironman, once; Canadian Ski Marathon, gold bar; numerous treks in the barrenlands and many long-distance loppets closer to home). John is an amateur house builder, Bev is an inspired potter. They enjoy canoeing, cross-country skiing, and long hikes in interesting places around the world. In 2017 they did the Wainwright coast-to-coast walk across England and would like nothing better than to do it again.

Membres

Ressenyes

Not a Conventional Detective Story

I don’t often find myself reaching for Ronald Knox's "Ten Commandments of Detective Fiction" and S.S. Van Dine's "Twenty Rules for Writing Detective Stories" but the unsettled feelings left by Lindstrom Alone caused me to search for reasons to help identify my issues with it. The “Ten and Twenty” are from the early part of the 20th Century though and many classic detective story writers since then have broken a few of them along the way. Rules are meant to be bent and/or broken of course but when writers start going too far afield most readers will start to feel some degree of discomfort and disorientation. Some of this rule bending goes on in Lindstrom Alone to good effect but with some others it becomes somewhat wearisome by the end.

Private detective Harry Lindstrom (who is also an ex-philosophy professor prone to related musings) is a damaged individual who is recovering from the loss of his wife Karen and their children. The accident behind that loss is revealed very gradually throughout the story. The quirky thing here is that even though Karen is dead, she still appears as the partner detective in the story. You could even say that she is the Holmes (i.e. smarter) partner vs. Harry’s Watson (i.e. not as smart) partner. The more perceptive observations are expressed by the “Karen” voice which are always written in italics to distinguish it from the rest of the book. All of the thoughts are coming from Harry in reality of course but this manifested split-personality is how he is processing his bereavement. This is the most interesting twist on the genre and is apparently to be continued in the later books of this planned trilogy based on the teasers provided at the end of this volume.

I don’t want to get into spoilers about the overall plot except to say that some of the characters, esp. the Swedish police and the suspect family simply did not act and feel very true to life. The police especially were really odd. You expect the culprits to be suspicious of course, but not the police as well. It just felt too elaborate and drawn out in an odd way.

Lindstrom himself was an interesting character and I would definitely read more of this trilogy when it appears. An early scene that was played out on a high-rise balcony was especially expertly handled and portrayed a gripping sense of fear and terror.

Trivia
With titles like Lindstrom Alone, Lindstrom’s Progress and Lindstrom Unbound, you definitely get the sense that writer Moss has taken his title inspirations from some past classics. I thought of "Titus Alone", "The Pilgrim's Progress" and "Prometheus Unbound", but each reader will have their own thoughts.

The characters Quin and Morgan, who have cameos in Lindstrom Alone are also the lead characters in their own series.
… (més)
 
Marcat
alanteder | Jun 27, 2018 |

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Estadístiques

Obres
16
Membres
91
Popularitat
#204,136
Valoració
3.8
Ressenyes
1
ISBN
53

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