Fotografía de autor

Ann Turner (3) (1960–)

Autor de The Lost Swimmer

Para otros autores llamados Ann Turner, ver la página de desambiguación.

7 Obras 109 Miembros 11 Reseñas

Obras de Ann Turner

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1960
Género
female
Nacionalidad
Australia
Lugar de nacimiento
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Ocupaciones
director
novelist

Miembros

Reseñas

Rebecca Wilding is Professor of Archaeology at a coastal university in Australia and is happily married to Stephen, her husband of 25 years. However, her life is about to get shattered when she gets accused of fraud by her boss Priscilla, who seems to have it in for Rebecca. To add to her misery, Rebecca suspects that her husband is having an affair and is desperate to find out who he is seeing.

Rebecca and Stephen decide to get away from it all on a working holiday to Greece, but while she is there her situation only gets worse and she has to uncover the layers of deceit and confusion that have followed her across the world.

I had high hopes for this one; I used to read thrillers all the time, but these days not so much. But there is nothing like a good mystery to draw me into a book and this certainly had all the hallmarks of a story I could lose myself in. Unfortunately though I was disappointed and got quite frustrated with this.

A main character doesn’t necessarily have to be sympathetic or even likable (an extreme example is Bret Easton Ellis’s ‘American Psycho’ which I loved, and which had a monstrous main character) but Rebecca was just plain irritating. For someone who is presumably meant to be a strong and intelligent woman to have achieved her position in her career, she came across as weak, indecisive and inconsistent. She decided that her husband was having an affair because…why? I’m not sure – her suspicion seemed to arise from nothing and then she became obsessed with the notion.

Accused of a serious banking fraud, she decides that taking off to Greece is a better idea than staying put, cooperating, and trying to clear her name, and some of her actions while in Greece are totally illogical (and thinking about it now that I have read the book, there are actually a number of plot holes and loose ends that were never explained).

Her husband Stephen goes missing while swimming – this is not a spoiler as it is in the blurb on the back of the book and is presumably the reason for the book’s title – but this doesn’t happen until 2/3 through the book. There are also several examples of minor characters behaving strangely which are never explained.

Despite all of this, I did want to keep reading to see what would happen in the end, but it was all an anti-climax.

There seem to be very mixed reviews to this one on GoodReads and LibraryThing which are my go-to book websites, so maybe this is quite a polarizing book. Unfortunately, not one for me.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
Ruth72 | 4 reseñas más. | May 8, 2023 |
An interesting mystery that takes place almost entirely in the Antarctic treaty zone. A researcher is sent to evaluate a long-deserted whaling town which for many decades has been off limits to all humans because of the extraordinary breeding colonies thriving there. There is interest in opening the town to tourists, and Laura is meant to report back on her assessment of what that would do to local animal populations. She is to be based about 12 miles away at separate research facility, but on her arrival the community reacts to her suspiciously and threateningly, and her drink is spiked her first night there. With no idea what's going on, Laura proceeds to make daily trips to the whaling station, photographing and taking notes. What she finds both disturbs her (the animals' reactions to her presence are unusually aggressive) and intrigues her (many of the houses look like the inhabitants just left). And then even more strange things start happening, such as a young boy appearing behind a wall of ice when she explores an underwater cavern.

The descriptions of the ice are wonderful. The content about how whaling was done is not wonderful, but probably accurate. The secret of what's going on is nasty, and some of it highly unlikely (for Antarctica). But, definitely worth a look, especially if you like mysteries set in extreme environments.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
auntmarge64 | 5 reseñas más. | Mar 5, 2019 |
Laura Alvarado, an environmental scientist doing a stint in Antarctica, is asked to write a report on an old, abandoned Norwegian whaling station. The report would recommend, or not, opening the station and it’s community buildings to public tourism. While diving in an ice cave, Laura thinks she sees the ghostly image of a young boy. Could he be real? Other things seem somewhat out of place in the well-preserved station and back at base camp, other odd things seem to be happening. Laura, filled with dread and an urgent need to discover the truth, begins an investigation that will take her from the icy realm of Antarctica to Nantucket and Venice.

This thriller begins slowly, introducing to the reader not only our human characters, but also that of Antarctica, very much another character in the story. Turner’s descriptions are, as the book cover touts, “cinematic” and one gets a thorough introduction before the real action begins. The story will turn away from the icy continent as Laura’s investigation moves to other shores, before returning for the action-packed climax. Admittedly, I was far more enamored of the first two thirds of the book than with the last third. The scenes in Venice seemed somehow out of place, the uncovered mystery a bit over-the-top. and the attempt to also make the tale about “the meaning of family” seemed a bit forced. Yet, despite those disappointments, I did enjoy the book and would recommend it for those intrigued by our southernmost continent its history, landscape and wildlife.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
avaland | 5 reseñas más. | Feb 5, 2019 |
I imagine it’s thanks to her screen writing background that Ann Turner is a dab hand at depicting a strong sense of physical place in her novels. In this, her second standalone thriller, Turner takes us to Antarctica which she brings alive in a way that few novels set there manage to do. There is, of course, the usual focus on ice and wildlife but by setting a good portion of the book in an abandoned Norwegian whaling village Tuner provides a human scale to the place which, perhaps paradoxically, makes it all the more wondrous. Showing the village as a place where whole families once lived and played in between working hard in an industry most would now find abhorrent is well done and offers a genuinely fascinating view of this little-understood part of the world.

Alas, for me at least, the remaining elements of the book were not nearly as successful.

Turner’s heroine, scientist Laura Alvarado, is asked to make a report about the possibility of removing the aforementioned whaling village, Fredelighavn, from the Antarctic Exclusion Zone and opening it as a tourist destination. Although Laura is against the idea at the outset it is assumed by those who matter that she will be objective and so she is cajoled into agreement. Her problems begin when she arrives at the scientific research base nearest to the village and is treated like some kind of pariah by most of the people there. Who just happen to be men. Is it a sexism thing? Then in the village itself (a relatively short ride away from the research base) odd things start to happen. It seems like people have been there recently even though no one is meant to be there without permission. And Laura thinks she sees actual people. Is that a real woman or the ghost of the last whaling captain’s wife? And is there really a teenage boy trapped in an ice cave or is Laura going ‘toasty’ (the phrase used to describe the particular kind of madness that strikes people who have stayed too long in Antarctica)?

My problem was that I didn’t care. I was bored early with Laura who is meant to be around 30 and behaves, mostly, like a particularly petulant and juvenile 14 year old. She rushes to judgement, swoons like a schoolgirl on multiple occasions and behaves erratically or stupidly almost all of the time. I know that might be realistic as far as human beings go but it’s just not very interesting to read about. And the fact that she does a decade’s worth of maturing over the course of the last 25 or so pages of the book make it worse somehow. There are a lot of other characters but none really are developed beyond a single dimension so they didn’t offer much in the way of engagement for me.

As for the the storyline…I found it to be absurd and not in a good, Douglas Adams-y way. More like someone threw a magnetic poetry kit at the nearest fridge door and used the resulting randomness as the basis for a plot. I know we are readers are meant to suspend disbelief when reading fiction but I’d have need to put my critical faculties in a blender to swallow the credibility gaps here. I’m not even concerned with the main “strange things going on in a really hard to get to place” element of the plot which I could have lived with. But all the little things surrounding that just didn’t ring true. Mostly because they were based on Laura’s random conjectures and/or official organisations or their representatives behaving in ways that wouldn’t happen. And you don’t want to get me started on the sappy, daft ending.

I did enjoy the parts of OUT OF THE ICE that depicted the historical use of Antarctica. which included a nice little side-trip to Nantucket to meet with the last whaling captain’s granddaughter. But as a work of narrative thrills I was sadly disappointed.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
bsquaredinoz | 5 reseñas más. | Aug 23, 2017 |

Listas

Premios

También Puede Gustarte

Autores relacionados

Estadísticas

Obras
7
Miembros
109
Popularidad
#178,011
Valoración
3.0
Reseñas
11
ISBNs
147
Idiomas
1

Tablas y Gráficos