Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
THE FAR CRY (Vintage Crime/Black Lizard)

THE FAR CRY (Vintage Crime/Black Lizard)

List Price: $8.00
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A masterpiece of low-key suspense
Review: It's really sad to see this book out of print, and I hope Black Lizard or another reprint series will consider reviving it. This is a masterpiece of low-key suspense. Frederick Brown uses great subtlety to gradually introduce the mystery and draw the protagonist into it. The murdered woman in the story has a ghost-like presence; but the way she haunts the tale is much more credible than a supernatural tale.

The protagonist is fascinating because he seems so banal. He's no hero, and seemingly no villain, but a man forced by circumstances and finances to endure a bland, lonely, meaningless existence. It is this vacuum of meaning in his life that draws him to be obsessed with this murder victim from the past.

This is one of my all-time favorite mysteries.

Brown's other books are also quite worthwhile, especially MY NAME IS DEATH and THE FABULOUS CLIPJOINT.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Noirish tale of murder and obsession.
Review: THE FAR CRY was first published in 1951, and is considered one of Fredric Brown's best mystery novels, which is saying something indeed, considering how many great ones he penned. Slightly different from his famous "Ed and Am Hunter" series of novels about a uncle and nephew team of Private Eyes, THE FAR CRY is more of a downbeat noir type of thriller, dwelling as it does on the main character's growing depression regarding his own marriage and career, coupled with a burgeoning obsession on his part with the mystery surrounding an 8 year old murder of a girl he never knew, but whom he has become compulsively attracted to.

George Weaver is a middle aged Kansas City real estate man, unhappily married, father of two, and recovering from a nervous breakdown. His doctor recommends a summer of peace and relaxation, away from his business and family concerns. To achieve this he rents a small primitive house a few miles outside of Taos, New Mexico. The only problem is that the same house was once the scene of a grisly murder. Eight years previously a young woman named Jenny Ames had come to meet a man who she thought wished to marry her. Instead the same man, an aspiring artist named Nelson, killed Jenny with a kitchen knife and then buried her body a quarter mile from the house, the very house that Weaver is now renting.

Try as he might, Weaver can not get the events of 8 years previous out of his mind. He begins to investigate the murder and the mysterious events leading up to it. At first he believes that he will write an article and profit from it, also that investigating it will help detour his thoughts from contemplation of his own unhappy marriage, but as the summer progresses he finds himself more and more obsessed with the young Jenny Ames. To tell any more of the plot would be a spoiler, simply suffice it to say that Brown delivers as usual. I definitely recommend this one for those who like their noir dished up with believable characters and suspense.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Noirish tale of murder and obsession.
Review: THE FAR CRY was first published in 1951, and is considered one of Fredric Brown's best mystery novels, which is saying something indeed, considering how many great ones he penned. Slightly different from his famous "Ed and Am Hunter" series of novels about a uncle and nephew team of Private Eyes, THE FAR CRY is more of a downbeat noir type of thriller, dwelling as it does on the main character's growing depression regarding his own marriage and career, coupled with a burgeoning obsession on his part with the mystery surrounding an 8 year old murder of a girl he never knew, but whom he has become compulsively attracted to.

George Weaver is a middle aged Kansas City real estate man, unhappily married, father of two, and recovering from a nervous breakdown. His doctor recommends a summer of peace and relaxation, away from his business and family concerns. To achieve this he rents a small primitive house a few miles outside of Taos, New Mexico. The only problem is that the same house was once the scene of a grisly murder. Eight years previously a young woman named Jenny Ames had come to meet a man who she thought wished to marry her. Instead the same man, an aspiring artist named Nelson, killed Jenny with a kitchen knife and then buried her body a quarter mile from the house, the very house that Weaver is now renting.

Try as he might, Weaver can not get the events of 8 years previous out of his mind. He begins to investigate the murder and the mysterious events leading up to it. At first he believes that he will write an article and profit from it, also that investigating it will help detour his thoughts from contemplation of his own unhappy marriage, but as the summer progresses he finds himself more and more obsessed with the young Jenny Ames. To tell any more of the plot would be a spoiler, simply suffice it to say that Brown delivers as usual. I definitely recommend this one for those who like their noir dished up with believable characters and suspense.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates