Pulse en una miniatura para ir a Google Books.
Cargando... Ill Will (2017)por Dan Chaon
» 15 más Books Read in 2017 (347) Books Read in 2022 (2,274) Unreliable Narrators (146) Gimmicks (19) Mystery & Detective (41) To Read (451) USA Road Trip (35) Best Crime Fiction (240) Cargando...
Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. SPOILER ALERT Meandering and overwritten with characters that I didn't care about at all. Passages and passages of text that have absolutely nothing to do with the overall narrative, characters and which contribute nothing to moving the story forward. After 458 pages, the killer of his family and the murder of the boys found drowned in the river, is still to be resolved. Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing. This book was full of unreliable narrators and it was such an uncomfortable read. And that is where I have to admire Chaon. He made it so uncomfortable a read yet it was a book that I couldn't stop reading. It wasn't something I could read and read and read. I had to stop and put it aside but I kept going back to it. Until it was done. And I reckon that's the mark of an excellent writer. Psychologist Deceived into Lunacy And there you have it, all expressed in three words in the headline, the entire meaning and journey in Dan Chaon’s trip from one part of a man’s personal hell to the other inevitable part. It’s not that this is a bad novel; it’s that it is a novel that promises a bit too much and delivers more than a bit too little. You have the mass murder from long ago. You have the search for a modern day serial killer. You have psychological turmoil over the family murder of years ago. And you have a resolution that many will find less than satisfying. Dustin Tillman is a middle-aged psychologist practicing in the Cleveland, Ohio, area. He has to contend with sons, high school and college, who tune him out. He has to adjust to the loss of his wife, who it seems kept everything inside and outside the household together, to early death from cancer. He has to relive and puzzle over the murder of his mother and father and aunt and uncle in a brutal mass killing when he was a boy, when he testified against his adopted brother, Rusty, labeling him and the crime a, perhaps, result of satanic ritual. He has to now fear Rusty who has finally been released from prison and, worse of all, found not to have committed the murders based on DNA evidence. And he has to satisfy himself with a less than stellar practice and ranking in the community of psychologists, after such a promising start to his career, because of an ill-advised excursion into the periphery of acceptable treatment therapies. He’s a man in turmoil (who wouldn’t be?), which Chaon gives you a sense of with dialogue that trails into the vapors and wide gaps just like the one before this thought. Then, into his office walks a dame … no wait, an ex cop who committed an offense and has to visit a prescribed shrink in order to get back on the force. Dustin’s a second psychologist he sees for his own well being and because, clarion call here, he feels Dustin gets him. Gets him so much, Aqil, the ex detective, introduces Dustin to and slowly inveigles him to participate in the cracking of a perplexing case of serial murders of college boys who wander off from bars, disappear for days, and turn up in rivers and streams on dates that appear to hold significance for his killers, murders the various disparate police departments write off to excessive drinking, and which earn the deaths the meme Jack Daniels killer. Dustin tumbles deep, deep into the rabbit hole of delusion, of self-doubt regarding not just the parental murders but also whether his wife really loved, and the fog conjured up by a real murder. This novel is less for crime fans, especially those enamored of the serial killer subgenre. It’s more for those interested in a character study, one examining two troubled minds, one wounded and the other manipulative. But be forewarned, it can become ponderous after a while. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
PremiosDistinciones
"In 1983, Dustin Tillman's family--his parents and his aunt and uncle--were murdered in a shocking massacre. His foster brother, Rusty, was convicted of the crime, in a trial that was steeped in the "Satanic Cult" paranoia of the 1980s. Thirty years later, Rusty's conviction is overturned, and suddenly Dustin, now a psychologist, must question whether his testimony that imprisoned his brother was accurate. When one of his patients, an ex-cop, gets him deeply involved in a series of unsolved murders, Dustin's happy suburban life starts to unravel, as his uncertainties about his past and present life begin to merge"-- No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
Antiguo miembro de Primeros reseñadores de LibraryThingEl libro Ill Will de Dan Chaon estaba disponible desde LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Debates activosNingunoCubiertas populares
Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
|
Mood currently is bleak after the Las Vegas shooting a day ago and reading this creepy and malevolent book kept me in a miserable mood and yet I kept reading. Weird formatting, nutzo characters, drug addled paragraphs, unreliable narrators galore. I *think* I know what happened in the end but really....who knows. I'm not even entirely convinced all the characters we met were real people.
( )