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Cargando... Omnibus (Fast One / Seven Slayers)por Paul Cain
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For the first time ever!?two hardboiled classics!?joined at last! First published in 1933, Fast One is the roughest novel of the Black Mask school'praised by Chandler!?hailed by Captain Shaw! A searing tale of underworld Los Angeles, where the only crime is loving too much! To live outside the law you must be honest! Seven Slayers contains seven of Cain's very best short stories written for Black Mask! Each one a pip and a prize! Together in an attractive, readable edition'and for a very low cost'these two books comprise the Omnibus! George Carrol Sims wrote for Black Mask under the nom de guerre Paul Cain. As Peter Ruric, he wrote for Motion Pictures'including 1934?s The Black Cat, a film distinguished by every element except its screenplay, and 1944?s Mademoiselle Fifi, one of the lesser known films produced by RKO's Val Lewton. Sims dated the actress Gertrude Michael, said to inspire the character of Granquist in Fast One. Sims died of cancer in a Hollywood hotel. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Fast One starts off with some confusion - there is no characterization to speak of, and for the first few chapters, it's pretty hard to keep anyone straight, except for the protagonist. There's also the problem that there is no apparent reason for him to fall for the girl in the book - you're just supposed to accept it. Nevertheless, by about halfway in, things start to gel and the fast-paced story grabs you. Basically nihilistic, it's hard to say what the point is - Gerry Kells is a smart guy, but nobody is smart enough in the nightmare world Cain has created.
SEVEN SLAYERS
The title refers to the seven short stories that make up this half of Omnibus. As in the novel, the characterization is thin in all but a couple of stories. Actually, those are pretty thin too, but at least there is enough description that you can keep the characters straight as you read. Cain excels at short, terse descriptions, mood setting, and, to a lesser extent, dialog. No surprise that he was a screenwriter writing under a pen name. Reading most of these stories is like being dropped into a dense fog somewhere and having no idea where you are. These don't make great late night reading because you need to be awake to make sense of things. That said, most of these stories are worth reading, and one, "Pigeon Blood", would make a hell of a movie. Or maybe it already did....
Both the novel and the short stories deliver the true hardboiled noir feeling, if that's what you're looking for. If you enjoyed Hammet's Glass Key, you'll like these. ( )