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Cargando... Graves in Academe (1985)por Susan Kenney
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. professor realizes that her syllabus is being used as a pattern for murder Literature prof Roz Howard is called in by Canterbury College (Maine, USA) to replace a don who has died in a tragic accident and arrives just in time to witness a string of additional accidents that - of course - turn out not to be accidents at all. Will she solve the puzzle before the killer comes after her? Admit I seek out mysteries set in academic milieus, perhaps because I think it would be cool to be a professor but also because I enjoy a good scholarly discussion. Howard's specialty is early world lit and it's clear the author, Susan Kenney, is well-schooled in the topic. I like, too, that Kenney actually works the literature into the mystery; the references to Beowulf, Canterbury Tales and Shakespeare aren't just showing off, they actually end up working as clues to the mystery. What I didn't like is Kenney's narrative style, which was WAY too reliant on introspection. Whatever happened to "show, don't tell"? Instead, we get page after page of internal monologue as Roz speculates about colleagues and campus events and puzzles over things that may or may not be clues. I resented being walked through every event ad infinitum, as if I couldn't be trusted to spot the clues or the implications myself. Another problem with this narrative style is that it places the narrator (Roz) in the uncomfortable situation of being intelligent enough to spot clues but not intelligent enough to figure them out (thus allowing for plot development, more murders, etc.). When the big reveal comes, you may or may not have figured out the killer, but one thing you'll know for sure is that it won't be whoever Roz has been suspecting all along. Other irritations: (1) Roz is lifted straight from the "Mary Anne" school of heroines, perfect in every way (as is her impossibly perfect inamorata Alan); (2) the red herrings are WAY more interesting than the eventual denoument; and (3) the book's "woman's lib" theme is embarrassingly dated. Not an awful book by any means, but I find it significant that one of the words in the tag cloud for this book is "donate," which is just what I'll be doing with my copy. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
At New England's Canterbury College, feminist professor Roz Howard realizes with a mounting sense of panic that several on-campus murders are being committed in ways parallel to her course's syllabus. 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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