Fotografía de autor

Vilmos Kondor

Autor de Budapest Noir: A Novel

15 Obras 183 Miembros 12 Reseñas

Series

Obras de Vilmos Kondor

Budapest Noir: A Novel (2008) 118 copias
Bűnös Budapest (2009) 17 copias
Budapestin vakooja (2010) 11 copias
Budapest romokban [krimi] (2011) 7 copias
Der leise Tod (2010) 4 copias
Budapestin marraskuu (2019) 4 copias
Budapest novemberben (2012) 3 copias
A bűntől keletre (2015) 3 copias
A másik szárnysegéd (2013) 2 copias
Szélhámos Budapest (2016) 2 copias
Örvényben (2021) 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1954
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Hungary

Miembros

Reseñas

Loved it. Born Hungarian and eager to visit again, I will look for more of the landmarks in the story. Great story to get a feel for the prewar Hungary. A great story in its own right, the setting and the mystery work together to create a great reading experience.
 
Denunciada
thosgpetri | 11 reseñas más. | Feb 24, 2019 |
Another fascist-era detective a la Bernie Gunther. (Bernie even gets a mention on page 80.) But the villain is not--oops, don't want to spoil anything.
Our hero, a newspaper reporter called Mr. Editor by the underlings of the world, is not an antifa; he just wants a little justice for a nice, well-educated, middle-class jewish woman, a young pregnant one. Who is dead, dead, dead.
Mr Editor is not a smart-ass Bernie Gunther/Sam Spade/Marlowe, but more of a straight shooter. He does follow the normal detective path, however, being semi-seduced, threatened, and beaten, but he lives on to pee a clean stream and fight for the righting of small wrongs.
Lots of Budapest background: you know all the trolley lines before the book ends. You almost figure out the small-country politics and meet the bit players in the fascist league. You learn the fight scene--legit and bare-knuckle. You even get out of the city to tromp through the mud and eat wild boar in a village.
Not bad, but not great, a two-night read when you don't have anything else to do.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
kerns222 | 11 reseñas más. | May 25, 2018 |
“And aren’t you curious even now about what a Jewish streetwalker would have been doing here?” Krisztina fixed her eyes on Gordon. “And as long as we’re on the subject, have you ever seen a Jewish prostitute? If you want my opinion, the question is not how she died, but how a Jewish girl—probably from a respectable, bourgeois family—ended up becoming a prostitute in the first place.”

This passage summarizes the main mystery in the book and sets up the reader for a richly engrossing and atmospheric ride in 1930s Budapest. Full disclosure: I love noir. I love Budapest as a setting. I love fiction set during this era. So yes, I may be a wee bit biased on this one, but I loved this book. As I read, I kept waiting for protagonist Zsigmond Gordon, a crime reporter, to arrange a clandestine meeting with an Edward G. Robinson character on a foggy night at the Citadella. (Okay, so Robinson was Romanian, but work with me here.) Sadly, that never happened, but there was more than enough comparable material to keep me turning the pages. And this is true noir, and not something else labeled as such because someone thinks the word is fashionable and hip, or any such thing. What that means is that things don't all end happily ever after and gift-wrapped with Disney paper and pretty bows. But then again, very few stories from Budapest in 1936 would have ended any other way.… (más)
 
Denunciada
jimgysin | 11 reseñas más. | Jun 19, 2017 |
Un policier comme c'est la mode, sur l'entre deux guerres... Avec ceci en plus que V. Kondor ne tombe pas dans le piège du complot politique... donc on obtient un ouvrage sensiblement au dessus de la moyenne.
½
 
Denunciada
Nikoz | 11 reseñas más. | Jan 25, 2015 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
15
Miembros
183
Popularidad
#118,259
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
12
ISBNs
41
Idiomas
8

Tablas y Gráficos