Those Who Feel Nothing
Brighton Series, Book 5
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
July 28, 2014
Guttridge’s fifth Brighton mystery (after 2013’s The Devil’s Moon) combines a straightforward police procedural, told in third-person omniscient voice, with a nebulous second-person narrative, about a vengeance-obsessed man tracking down the mercenaries who killed his wife in Cambodia decades ago. When a prominent member of the Brighton community—the director of the Royal Pavilion—gets caught in a scandal involving the unearthing of long-dead female corpses, the police, headed by the formerly disgraced but newly elected Police and Crime Commissioner Bob Watts, discover a cache of invaluable relics looted from Cambodia’s Angkor Wat hidden in the tunnels beneath the Pavilion. As Watts and crew investigate further, the connection between the two seemingly unrelated story lines becomes evident. The taut, richly detailed plot will carry readers along until the rushed and disconnected conclusion.
August 15, 2014
The Brighton police discover a connection between a scandal at the Royal Pavilion and looting at Angkor Wat.After losing his job over a raid gone bad, former Chief Constable Bob Watts has just been appointed Brighton's first police commissioner when his ex-lover DI Sarah Gilchrist and her brainy detective sergeant Bellamy Heap catch a case that reveals that Bernard Rafferty, Director of the Royal Pavilion, has long been digging up women's graves. Many of the mummified remains are posed around his house, all dressed up for a party. When the police check out storerooms in the Pavilion, they find bags of bones, sealed-up tunnels and crates of unauthorized Asian artifacts. Half a world away, in Southeast Asia, Watts' old service buddy, security expert Jimmy Tingley, is pursuing the man he thinks caused the death of his Eurasian wife. In the chaos following the fall of Cambodia, Tingley went in with a team sent to rescue several captured sailors from a prison notorious for torture. Also imprisoned there were his wife and her archaeologist father. Tingley was betrayed and abandoned by his companions, who had actually come to steal Cambodian treasures. He followed them but eventually heard they were killed along with his wife. Now Tingley asks Watts for help because he thinks the man he seeks is using a Brighton antique shop as a cover for smuggling artifacts and maybe something more dire. The two cases merge in a startling denouement. Guttridge brings back several favorite characters from earlier installments (The Devil's Moon, 2013, etc.) in a clever puzzle that links more of Brighton's secrets to the ongoing dilemma of protecting cultural treasures from theft or destruction by armed conflict.
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August 1, 2014
Brighton's new police commissioner Bob Watts tries to deal with his recently created position and a scandal from the Royal Pavilion. When looted antiquities from Cambodia are discovered, a mysterious man and a murder embroil Brighton's finest in a mystery that dates back decades. Guttridge's fifth (after The Devil's Moon) effort delves into the intricacies of war lootings and cultural artifacts.
Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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