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Cargando... The Hook (2000 original; edición 2001)por Donald E. Westlake (Autor)
Información de la obraThe Hook por Donald E. Westlake (2000)
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. That was a quick, easy read. I got interested in Donald Westlake because Dan Simmons had dedicated a book to him, so I looked him up and read two of his books. This one was published in 2000, and was similar to the other in that Westlake's fiction is easy reading, and things that seem like they should be harder to make happen, happen very easily. Fiction. "The Hook" is a clever and amusing work that seems like it could have been as much fun to write as it is to read. It features two writers of fiction who make a Faustian deal that gets the better of them. Bryce Proctorr is a successful author with a bad case of writer's block, not to mention a trophy wife who is taking him for all she can get in their pending divorce. Wayne Prentice is a fading author who can't interest publishers in his manuscripts. Bryce offers a deal: if Wayne gives him is unpublished manuscript, he'll publish it under his own name, and the two can split the profits. But there's a catch: Wayne also has to murder Bryce's soon-to-be ex wife. Things go right, up to a point, and then they go very wrong -- the plan was a good one, but didn't take into account the flaws and peculiarities in the two protagonists. To say more would ruin the story, but suffice to say that the ending -- five chilling words -- is both shocking and funny. The similarity to Highsmith's "Strangers on a Train" is purposeful, and gives the tale a Hitchcockian flavor, but with elements of wit. Westlake has fun with his two main characters; they are (in effect) two sides of same coin, or better still, represent the two personas that each struggling writer wrestles with. The characters have similar names (Proctorr and Prentice), and tongue-in-cheek hints to their twinness abound, e.g., with titles of their past books ("The Two Faces in the Mirror," "The Shadowed Other," "The Domino Doublet, "An Only Twin," "Two of a Kind," and "The Pollux Perspective."). Westfall is a novelist that I've only recently sampled, but he is now on my list of popular writers not to miss. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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Historia de dos hombres que habitan en un mundo de ficción,entre la imaginación y la cruel realidad de la lista de losmás vendidos. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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He coincidentally meets up with an old college friend, Wayne, who is also a writer, albeit less successful than Bryce. Wayne was considered a "mid-list" author, and ultimately, as his books began to sell fewer copies, published several books under various pseudonyms to modest success. Now, however, Wayne can't find a publisher for his latest book under any name. Bryce tells him, "You have a book and no publisher....I have a publisher and I don't have a book." You see where this is going. And a plot is hatched.
Bryce will submit Wayne's book as his own; it will be a sure-fire bestseller, and Bryce and Wayne will split the proceeds. But there is a condition: "With one condition," Bryce said..."My wife must be dead."
I'm a newcomer the works of Donald Westlake, who was very popular in the last 25 years or so of the 20th century. The two or three books I've now read by him remind me in tone very much of Patricia Highsmith, and I would recommend him if you are a Patricia Highsmith fan. I enjoyed this particular book.
3 stars ( )