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Cargando... Ax (1964)por Ed McBain
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Slightly disappointing entry in the 87th series, it’s not that it’s bad, just not as great as most of the stories. It’s a simple, lean tale with little room for the delicious characterisation that makes McBain’s books so good. There’s just the one mystery to solve and little detail about the lives of the cops that are working it. Good payoff though. ( ) A very graphic and gruesome beginning. A man is found murdered with an ax buried in his skull. Hence the title. And the opening nastiness. “To tell the truth, it was all pretty goddamn gory.” A good story, with a quick pace and interesting characters! Carella and Hawes are the main detectives in this one, and they meet a lot of dead ends, no pun intended! By the way, what does rhyme with April? Steve Carella and Cotton Hawes are called to the scene of a gruesome murder where a building superintendent has killed, with an ax left stuck in his head. With their usual aplomb, these two try to find out whodunnit, looking at his crazy wife, agoraphobic son, the players from a small time card game, his war buddies, his "slow" helper at the apartment building who chops wood. McBain eventually reveals a key detail linking suspects, which turns out to be a ruse. The eighteenth installment of the 87th Precinct, AX is a straight-forward whodunit focusing on Carella and Cotton as they try to figure out why anyone would want to take an ax to an elderly janitor. Plenty of hostile interviews, dead ends, and much to Carella's chagrin, mothers. McBain's attention to the struggles and pitfalls of methodical police work is one of his strong points, and Ax is a perfect example of this. An interesting angle to this story is how investigating the murder of an individual can dredge up all kinds of past secrets, whether or not they eventually have anything to do with the crime, and how this can complicate an already difficult investigation. Danny the Gimp plays a role in this investigation (But why is he afraid of revolving doors?), and Carella appears to have finally disembarked from the emotional roller-coaster he was on for the last few novels. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Pertenece a las series87th Precinct (18) Pertenece a las series editorialesIl giallo [Mondadori] (889) Contenido enThe Pusher por Ed McBain The 87th Precinct: The Cop Hater, The Mugger, The Pusher por Ed McBain (indirecto)
An ax murderer has taken root in the 87th Precinct.... Will Detectives Hawes and Carella be able to stop him before he kills again?"Imagine your favorite Law & Order cast solving fresh mysteries into infinity, with no re-runs, and you have some sense of McBain's grand, ongoing accomplishment." --Entertainment Weekly"McBain forces us to think twice about every character we meet...even those we thought we already knew." --New York Times Book Review No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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