Rating: Summary: TWO THUMBS UP. Review: A collection of fiction you can't possibly put down. The book is full of variety and suspense; the stories are unpredictable and original. There is not a second rate story in this collection.
Rating: Summary: Twisted Reading Review: After reading Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less and A Twist in the Tale, I'm ready to proclaim Jeffrey Archer King of the Twist. Every story in this collection turns on some unexpected event, point of view, or premise, and about the only thing you can count on is that you will be surprised. While not great literature, A Twist in the Tale does provide some entertaining reading. Though the characters are largely forgettable, Archer's narrative voice provides you with just enough distance that you can enjoy what happens to them and how it happens (Not The Real Thing, Just Good Friends). Some of these stories are reminiscent of Edgar Allen Poe (A Perfect Murder, Colonel Bullfrog). In short, entertaining reading. The kind of book you might pick up at a ski lodge and be able to finish in one sitting.
Rating: Summary: Twisted Reading Review: After reading Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less and A Twist in the Tale, I'm ready to proclaim Jeffrey Archer King of the Twist. Every story in this collection turns on some unexpected event, point of view, or premise, and about the only thing you can count on is that you will be surprised. While not great literature, A Twist in the Tale does provide some entertaining reading. Though the characters are largely forgettable, Archer's narrative voice provides you with just enough distance that you can enjoy what happens to them and how it happens (Not The Real Thing, Just Good Friends). Some of these stories are reminiscent of Edgar Allen Poe (A Perfect Murder, Colonel Bullfrog). In short, entertaining reading. The kind of book you might pick up at a ski lodge and be able to finish in one sitting.
Rating: Summary: this is poor writting from a good author Review: Archer is one of the authors who started with the potential of Graham Greene but fizzled out later. It seems his writing career is following his political career and it is quite a downhill journey. Short story writers tend to give that twist at the end and the art is to make it implicit. In this books the plots are good but the twists are extremely explicit - short stories should have sleekness and probably Chekov was the king of this. From Britain we have read Roald Dahl - who also has twist at end of every story and that is really what you wait for. The author should be able to keep you guessing and finally bring down the curtain without hitting the bull's eyes. There should be some gray area to provoke our thinking but here more or less in all his stories Archer has hit the bull's eye. One story called "A Chapter of accidents" is really original - rest of the stories are pretty mundane. I think this is a pretty average books and especially compared to his first collection "A Quiver full of Arrows"
Rating: Summary: Short Stories with Unexpected Endings Review: I am a big fan of Jeffrey Archer. I love his long novels and deep characterizations. This book was a bit different for me. When I first purchased it, I didn't know it was a collection of short stories. After reading the first story, I left it sitting by my beside for several weeks, then picked it up and read the rest in two days. The only reason I set it aside was that it surprised me when the first story ended--that's when I discovered it was a book of short stories. (I enjoy Jeffrey Archer so much that I bought it quickly, just looking at his name on the cover, passing through an airport, not noticing this book was not a novel like all his others.) Most of these stories can be read in 30 minutes, while the first story might take one hour. The book is very appropriately named, because the very end of each story has a bizarrre "twist" that you don't expect. The twist happens literally in the last sentence or two of each story, and the reader is completely surprised. Compared to most novels, these stories move incredibly fast. In spite of that, characterization is revealed well, as the stories move. There is quite a variety in the stories presented--in one story, he even writes as a woman. I highly enjoyed this book. Anyone who enjoys either short stories, or loves Jeffrey Archer's novels will enjoy it, too. The only reason I have rated it four stars instead of five, is that I personally enjoy novels much more than short stories-short stories end far too quickly for me.
Rating: Summary: Another collection of short stories Review: I am looking at the UK paperback edition which is 269 pages. It is a collection of 12 short stories of varying length, subject matter, and quality. As the author notes, 10 of the stories are based on real incidents. Like most collections, the reader will like some of the stories better than others. It is another collection that I refer to commuters, airline travelers, etc., who are looking for some light reading. The stories, as the collection title implies, have some interesting twists.
Rating: Summary: Archer aims at Maugham Review: Jeffrey Archer's 1988 collection of twelve short stories is not entitled *A Twist in the Tale* for nothing. The concluding paragraphs of each story--sometimes just the final sentence--inevitably offer the reader some kind of surprise, whether slight and easily swallowed ("A La Carte") or groan inducing ("Just Good Friends") or the product of a sort of dishonest storytelling that leaves one feeling ill treated ("The Perfect Murder"). Among the best of the lot are "A La Carte"--the story of a young man compelled by his father to delay entering his chosen profession--and "Honor among Thieves," in which a wine connoisseur is put to the test by a "humbug." But all of the stories (ten of them are reportedly based on actual events) are worth a read. Archer writes in a commendably straightforward style that is easily digested: it is not surprising that, as the jacket copy of the book informs us, Archer has been hailed as "the natural successor to Maugham."**
**See Somerset Maugham's autobiographical *The Summing Up* for his discussion of the three qualities for which he strove in his writing: lucidity, simplicity, and euphony.
Debra Hamel -- book-blog reviews
Author of Trying Neaira: The True Story of a Courtesan's Scandalous Life in Ancient Greece
Rating: Summary: Good short stories! Review: The 12 stories were all good but I specially liked the first (the Perfect Murther) and the last stories (Cristina Rosenthal, which made me cry).
Rating: Summary: Whets your appetite and leaves you gasping for more Review: The inimitable Jeffrey Archer's unravelling of an intricately-woven web of stories in A Twist in the Tale results in an unpredictable, albeit lightweight, mosaic of twelve short stories which bursts forth with tension and exercises a vice-like grip on the reader. Once again, Archer's mastery of the dramatic form, his ear for the way people talk and his sardonic wit make the book an interesting read. One thing is for sure, though, he is one of those [very] good writers for whom boredom is a cardinal transgression and who seems unable to put his foot wrong. After churning out a spate of bestselling novels, like Kane and Abel, The Prodigal Daughter, Shall We Tell The President?, First Among Equals, A Matter of Honour and Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less, Archer has come up with his second collection of short stories; the stories here are nicely paced and neatly concluded, with characters and scenarios that leap from the pages with a vibrancy and raw intensity seldom found in short stories of such nature. The whole collection does not totter on tedium; neither does it lack coherence nor structure; in fact, the pleasure of this work lies in its depiction of the ordinary and mundane. This time, a murky broth of marital tryst, Machiavellian cunning and duplicity, promiscuity, sexual peccadilloes, fraud, corruption, murder, treachery and webs of cunning deceit are all grist to Archer's story-spinning mill. Nothing is what it seems to be and the unexpected never happens at all. The tension never relaxes but keeps on mounting in most of the stories and one reads ravenously, dreading the moment when it all comes to an end. What is more, the conclusions catch you unaware and never cease to surprise with their savage twists. In “The Perfect Murder”, a philandering husband calls unexpectedly on his mistress and sees another man leaving her apartment. Accusing her of unfaithfulness, an altercation ensues. In a moment of unbridled rage, he clenches his fist and takes a swipe at her. She dies of a broken jaw and lacerations of the skull. He leaves the scene unobserved and tips off Scotland Yard so that the other man is detained and charged with his mistress' murder. Has he committed “the perfect murder”? Indeed, a tantalising and skilfully contrived appetiser to A Twist in the Tale. From this moment, Archer has the reader in his grip and under his spell. Consider also a touchingly full-bodied Jewish-Gentile love affair in “Christina Rosenthal” with complex emotional consequences where secrets of the past can change the pattern of the future forever; a heated altercation in a golf clubhouse bar between two cronies in “The Loopholes”; a rivalry rooted in a childhood obsession with eating cornflakes and collecting the top flaps of cornflake boxes in “Not the Real Thing”; a sexy game of chess with an equally sexy stranger in “Checkmate” where the stakes are far, far higher than money; and the ritual of wine-tasting with a bizarre flourish in “Honour Among Thieves”. These are some of the better vignettes found in this marvellously entertaining collection of short stories, a collection that whets your appetite and leaves you gasping for more. With Archer's usual display of panache, humour and tremendous imaginative strength, each story is tightly packed with more richness and humanness than many good writers manage to achieve in a single novel. His observation of human quirks and eccentricities is acute, and some of his insights are unusually penetrating. His storytelling flows with ingenious fluidity so that the tales and the characters that people the landscape of his vivid imagination seem to sparkle and come alive, all of which makes this collection consistently entertaining. A Twist in the Tale is a witty and immensely varied collection of short stories well worth putting together. Much of the collection is a joy to read; it is worth reading for its prose alone, which is refreshingly crisp, taut, understated and peppered with irony, and a slightly twisted sense of humour. Archer's sort of prose has a light touch, the hint of a sparkle and an underlying seriousness as evident in his first collection of short stories, A Quiver Full of Arrows. The narrative thread that runs through the fabric of the whole collection is taut, and the tales Archer spin are intriguing, bristling with just enough plot twists and ironies, savage wit and sharp sensory details to hold the reader's interest. Though, indeed, a spare, slender volume, A Twist in the Tale is imbued with excitements and surprises, mirth and wickedness.
Rating: Summary: Make that a Sting in the Tale Review: These twelve stories each have an unexpected twist. Sometimes funny, sometimes tragic, always enjoyable. This book is the first Jeffery Archer I have read, but it won't be the last.
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