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S'està carregant… The Right Madness (2005 original; edició 2006)de James Crumley (Autor)
Informació de l'obraThe Right Madness de James Crumley (2005)
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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. This very enjoyable crime/P.I. novel follows a very complicated case in which a psychoanalyst's files go missing -- and then his patients start dying. Our hero, CW Sughrue, is the man trying to solve the case. Lots of action, lots of characters, and a web of intrigue that will keep you going until the very end. Violence and mayhem here also, so be forewarned. The Right Madness. James Crumley. 2005. I think Crumley died a year or so ago. I’ve seen his novel, The Last Good Kiss, on a lot of “best crime novels” lists so when I found this at the book store in Topeka last summer I had to get it. His character C.W. Sughrue is, well, quite a character! The Vietnam vet is as hardboiled as they come and has a ton of emotional and physical wounds; he claimed he retired, but when his best friend a psychiatrist begs Sughrue to find out who stole his confidential patient records, Sughrue feels he must help, and aided by cigarettes and drugs he quickly becomes involves in murders, drugs and sex. Anyone who likes hardboiled mysteries will enjoy this plot-twisting fast-passed novel. Crumley strikes again. One of his last books before his untimely death (his body simply worn out by a lifetime of hard living) but he's still got the ol' fastball. C.W. Sughrue breaks one of his golden rules and takes on a case for an old friend, with tragic results all around. Crumley's shamuses don't tie up all the loose ends and they're sadder and wiser when they complete a case. Some mystery fans may find the sex and drugs and violence too tough for their liking but if you're not reading Crumley, you're missing out on one of the few writers in the field who could out-Chandler Chandler (and that's saying something). Picked this up from the bargain bin. Good gumshoe writing, but with a very gritty edge to it. Not for the faint-of-heart. A little more difficult to follow after the first half, and when I finished the book, I wasn't entirely sure that the "mystery" had been solved. Probably will read it again just to find what I probably missed the first read. Sense ressenyes | afegeix-hi una ressenya
Pertany a aquestes sèriesC.W. Sughrue (4) Premis
The new unputdownable thriller from the author of The Final Country, winner of the CWA Silver Dagger Award 2002. You're only as tough as you feel. Take private eye C.W. Sughrue, ex-alcoholic and recovering gunshot victim. He thought he knew better than to do any work for Doctor Will "Mac" Mackindrick - even if he is his buddy. But 30,000 big ones does a whole lot of talking. So who's blackmailing Mac? One of his patients maybe? Sughrue's first day on the job lives up to expectations when the wife of one of Mac's patients ends up headless with a noose round her neck - and Sughrue's pretty certain she won't be the only fatality. In fact, you can count on it. Six patients. That's six bodies... No s'han trobat descripcions de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — S'està carregant… GèneresClassificació Decimal de Dewey (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999LCC (Clas. Bibl. Congrés EUA)ValoracióMitjana:
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Primarily set in Montana, the mystery that starts with patient records stolen from a psycologist friend who begs for his help, takes Sughrue across the great West and down to Texas in pursuit of answers and the stolen records. Along the way, the detective weaves through a violent world populated by some of the most colorful characters this side of an Elmore Leonard book.
Crumley started writing in the late Sixties, a product of the Vietnam era, and is considered a heir apparent to Raymond Chandler. In his writing you can find the roots of James L Burke and other modern mystery writers.
The Right Madness isn't Crumley's best work, but even his lesser efforts eclipse the works of most writers. Crumley speaks to a lost time in America. A time when perhaps we weren't as sensitive as we are today, but we were arguably a whole lot more decent. Check it out. ( )