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Cargando... Blood Sport (1967)por Dick Francis
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. I always learn something from Dick Francis. Although the hero in this one isn't involved with horses, although he can ride, the mystery still involves horses. Gene Hawkins is competent at his spy-like job, but severely depressed. His mental illness comes close to crippling him at certain points, but he wins through in the end. Clever, although some of the connections were a little thin. ( ) I love this one by DF. It's different. It takes place mainly in the American west. The hero, unlike most DF heroes is a man who is used to danger. He is a burnt out spy and somehow through the action of the book learns to appreciate life again. Like all DF's books the fun is in watching the hero cleverly foil the bad guys. 2020 reread: downgrading to 3.5* Not one of my favorites of Dick Francis's books but still well above average mystery/suspense book. This one is one of the few in which the main character is not himself really a "horse person" though apparently he grew up riding. What really struck me in this reread was how depressed Gene is (and how well Francis wrote that attitude). English civil servant Gene Hawkins is supposed to be on vacation, but his boss needs his help. A friend of his, Dave Teller, is part owner of a racehorse that was stolen during transport in the U.S. This is the second horse Teller’s had stolen in the last three years. The suicidal Hawkins welcomes the distraction of the investigation, hoping it will keep him alive long enough to climb out of the deep depression he’s in. Gene teams up with insurance agent Walt and hops across the U.S., sometimes in Walt’s company and sometimes in the company of his boss’s teenage daughter, Lynnie. While the suspense of the investigation kept me turning the pages, I never warmed up to Gene. I had a hard time buying his depression. Something about his voice didn’t quite ring true. Gene acknowledged what he was feeling, but not how or why. Francis always includes a romantic interest for his lead, and he really pushes the envelope here since she’s seventeen to Gene’s thirty-eight. He’s more than twice her age. It made me really uncomfortable, and it might be enough to put off some readers. This was the best Dick Francis I've read so far. It grabbed me from the first to the last page. It is about stallions that inexplicably disappear during transport and can no longer be found. If it weren't for Gene Hawkins, a secret agent who is looking for these stallions in the USA after the owner barely escaped death on a boat trip on the Thames. With unorthodox methods and the help of the insurance agent, Hawkins sets out to find them. He soon realizes that he is dealing with an evil couple who do not stop at killing people. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Pertenece a las series editorialesContenido enDick Francis: Four Complete Novels: Blood Sport/Flying Finish/Odds Against/Rat Race por Dick Francis Tiene la adaptaciónPremiosListas de sobresalientes
Fiction.
Mystery.
Suspense.
HTML: English agent Gene Hawkins is restlessly facing three weeks of vacation with only his tormented past for company. So when his boss asks him to help millionaire Dave Teller locate a prized missing stallion, he accepts. But he gets more action than he bargained for when he draws the affection of his boss' beautiful teenage daughter, advances from Teller's socialite wife, and the deadly attention of the horse thieves, who would be happy to put Hawkins out to pasture...permanently. .No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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