Fotografía de autor

Harold Adams (1) (1923–2014)

Autor de The Man Who Was Taller Than God

Para otros autores llamados Harold Adams, ver la página de desambiguación.

20+ Obras 511 Miembros 8 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Harold Adams was born in Clark, South Dakota in 1923. He worked at the Minnesota Charities Review Council and the Better Business Bureau. He wrote the Carl Wilcox Mystery series, The Thief Who Stole Heaven, When Rich Men Die, and The Fourth of July Wake. He won the Private Eye Writers of America's mostrar más Shamus Award and a Minnesota Book Award for The Man Who Was Taller than God. He died on April 4, 2014 at age of 91. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos

Series

Obras de Harold Adams

The Ditched Blonde (1995) 39 copias
The Man Who Met the Train (1988) 37 copias
No badge, no gun (1998) 35 copias
A way with widows (1994) 35 copias
Barbed Wire Noose (1987) 33 copias
Lead, So I Can Follow (1999) 33 copias
Hatchet Job (1996) 32 copias
The Ice Pick Artist (1997) 29 copias
The Fourth Widow (1986) 28 copias
The Missing Moon (1983) 24 copias
Paint the Town Red (1982) 22 copias
When Rich Men Die (1987) 21 copias
Murder (1981) 21 copias

Obras relacionadas

The Mysterious West (1994) — Contribuidor — 233 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1923-02-20
Fecha de fallecimiento
2014-04-04
Género
male
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
Clark, South Dakota
Lugar de fallecimiento
Eden Prairie, Minnesota
Lugares de residencia
Minnetonka, Minnesota, USA
Educación
writer
Ocupaciones
Mystery Writer
Minneapolis Better Business Bureau

Miembros

Reseñas

This is the second entry in the Carl Wilcox Mystery series, and it feels a little like a book pulled from the reject pile before the first one was published. Instead of the grit of the first one, there's a lot of b-movie dialog, and while the plot is busy, the story feels ham-handed. Oh well.
 
Denunciada
ffortsa | Jun 3, 2021 |
I didn't finish this book. Carl Wilcox returns to his home town of Corden, South Dakota and a young woman is killed. He is accused because he has a criminal history. The story takes place in or about the depression and reads like a stiff tough guy story. I got about a quarter of the way into the book and gave it up. I have way too many books to spend time forcing my way thru something I'm not particularly enjoying.
 
Denunciada
taurus27 | Sep 4, 2017 |
This won't take you anytime at all to read. Barely 156 pages it is a quick one. You could read it in one sitting, for sure. Anyway, the plot:
It's the first murder the town of "hopeless" Hope, South Dakota has ever seen. Felton Edwards, a tall, womanizing, good for nothing and better-off-dead man, is found face down in a gravel pit. Some shot to death this tall drink of water and like Hatchet Job there is no shortage of suspects because everyone had a beef with Mr. Edwards. Never mind the fact he hasn't been in Hope for the last 15 years. Enter Carl Wilcox, our hero. As a retired police officer he has been called back into service by Hope's mayor, Christian Frykman. Frykman can't bear the thought of a murder happening in his little town. Wilcox may have an unorthodox way of solving crimes (he makes more dates with single women than finding clues), but he always gets the job done.… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
SeriousGrace | otra reseña | Dec 11, 2015 |
En ex-con goes home to a little town shimmering in the heat in South Dakota and ends up playing detective to a triple murder. I liked the atmosphere and the casual tough-guy rhetoric, and the plot was just complicated enough to be interesting. But what I really liked was the sense of heat and itch of hay and small-town life the writer evokes..
½
 
Denunciada
ffortsa | Dec 7, 2015 |

Premios

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Estadísticas

Obras
20
También por
1
Miembros
511
Popularidad
#48,532
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
8
ISBNs
60
Idiomas
1

Tablas y Gráficos