Guilty Parties

Guilty Parties
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مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
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فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2014

نویسنده

Barbara Hambly

نویسنده

Martin Edwards

ناشر

Allison & Busby

شابک

9781780105345
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

June 2, 2014
The short story is alive and well in England, judging by this Crime Writers’ Association anthology assembled by Edwards (Deadly Pleasures). A few of the 23 selections are exceptional, notably Paul Freeman’s “The Franklin’s Second Tale,” a brief Chaucerian fable in verse that’s fun to read. Also outstanding are Peter Lovesey’s quietly engrossing “Reader, I Buried Them,” set in a contemporary London monastery, and Christine Poulson’s “What’s the Time, Mr. Wolf?,” which focuses on women who take the law into their own hands. Bernie Crosthwaite’s “The Death of Spiders” is creepy in a way that has nothing to do with how many legs a creature may have. Phil Lovesey’s absorbing “The Last Guilty Party” looks at an old man and his lifetime of despair, while Kate Rhodes’s “The Wide Open Sky” packs an emotional wallop in a mere five pages. Other contributors include Christopher Fowler, John Harvey, and Frances Brody.



Kirkus

August 1, 2014
This year's collection of two dozen new stories by members of the Crime Writers' Association (Guilty Consciences, 2012, etc.) shows just how far familiar recipes will take the contributors-and when they need to go the extra mile. Take the familiar tale of the murderer passing on a criminal legacy to a more-or-less unsuspecting accomplice. Ricki Thomas and L.C. Tyler both develop this story generationally; Laura Wilson, making her crook and his legatee about the same age, finds something deeper in it. Bernie Crosthwaite, Kate Ellis and Peter Lovesey all avail themselves of a famous cliche indelibly associated with Agatha Christie, but Lovesey's sly tale of murder in a monastery is the most successful of the three for reasons that have nothing to do with the cliche. Carol Anne Davis, Jane Finnis, Kate Rhodes, Yvonne Eve Walus and Paul Freeman all tackle the demanding form of the short-short story- Freeman's Chaucerian pastiche is written in verse, Finnis' entry is only two pages-and all but Freeman's pack quite a punch. As their titles indicate, Phil Lovesey's "The Last Guilty Party," Ragnar Jonasson's "Party of Two" and Paul Johnston's "All Yesterday's Parties" use a series of reunions to dramatize the disastrous declines of their characters; Lovesey and Jonasson produce highly finished anecdotes, Johnston, in the best story here, a fable so drastically compressed that it moves off to entirely more original territory. Originality also seems to be a matter of degree (the third degree, presumably) rather than a got-it-or-doesn't quality in the contributions by John Harvey, Christopher Fowler, Frances Brody, N.J. Cooper, Judith Cutler, Christine Poulson, Chris Simms, C.L. Taylor, Aline Templeton and editor Edwards. Though Johnston's story is the standout, the others are never less than professional and surprisingly varied, even when they're working the very same conventions.

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