Home :: Books :: Mystery & Thrillers  

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 Mind-Murders (Grijpstra-De Grier Series/Janwillem Van De Wetering)

The Mind-Murders (Grijpstra-De Grier Series/Janwillem Van De Wetering)

List Price: $12.00
Your Price: $9.60
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Take some time and thought to read this.....
Review: Although I've arguably had a bit too much to drink this evening, I'm more than able to critique van de Wetering's work. Many people have told me that his style is a bit difficult to work through, and this may be true. Having been to Holland, however, I find the logic easy to follow and the dialogue and character profiles more than intriguing. I am, at this point, depressed because I feel van de Wetering has had more than enough of his characters, Grijpstra and de Gier, and that he will publish no further novels involving them. This would be one of the great tragedies of my life, although the author is very elderly, because I don't feel that I have any closure on the characters...perhaps it would be better that way...hm...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Take some time and thought to read this.....
Review: Although I've arguably had a bit too much to drink this evening, I'm more than able to critique van de Wetering's work. Many people have told me that his style is a bit difficult to work through, and this may be true. Having been to Holland, however, I find the logic easy to follow and the dialogue and character profiles more than intriguing. I am, at this point, depressed because I feel van de Wetering has had more than enough of his characters, Grijpstra and de Gier, and that he will publish no further novels involving them. This would be one of the great tragedies of my life, although the author is very elderly, because I don't feel that I have any closure on the characters...perhaps it would be better that way...hm...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: We live in patterns
Review: It was a Friday night in the summertime. Grijpstra and DeGier were faced with a stuck window. They had overstayed their shift and the weekend had really started.

Police constables may have thrown a handicapped man into a canal. The constables are called Ketchup and Karate. Grijpstra and DeGier take off in search of Rea Fortune since her belongings have vanished. They interview their suspect, Frits Fortune. His wife had wanted him to sell his business and he did not want to. It would vary his routine. A corpse is found on the roof of his house, that of his dog Babette.

The detectives run down Fortune's relatives, Aunt Coba and Uncle Henry. They are dressed in antique unisex. They say that as a child Fortune had beheaded his toy bear. Grijpstra believes that Rea Fortune is a woman of unfulfilled fantasy. Ketchup and Karate, the constables, contend that Fortune's relatives are mad.

One of the characters reports that everyone has gone to the beach to annoy the tourists. Amsterdam seems deserted. Rea Fortune appears. She is charged with attempted murder of her husband. Perhaps Mrs. Fortune was merely persuading her husband to sell his business. DeGier is giving up smoking and his suffering is detailed in the book. At one point he wants to snatch a nearly full pack of cigarettes from someone.

Two dead people have been found in trunks of cars in Amsterdam. The first was an accidental death, an overdose. The other death was from natural causes, an ulcer. Ulcers may be caused by a malfunctioning of the mind. It turns out that the police officers had seen the second person staggering on the previous day.

DeGier goes to see a female constable, Asta. Mr. Boronski, the ulcer case, was found dead in Karl Muller's car. Muller said the men did business together. DeGier and Asta interview Muller. Asta takes notes. The two interview the hotel manager. Asta points out that the hotel is hollow, not what it seems. DeGier plays flute and Grijpstra plays some drums he has gotten from the police lost and found department while they discuss the Boronski case with Asta. The two police officers, trailing Muller, catch some street muggers.

Asta arrests Muller. She goes into the canal to retrieve Muller's dropped case. The officers suspect cocaine. First they had a murder and no corpse and now they have a corpse and no crime except for drugs which is not their department. German police officers appeared to subject Muller to some rough interrogation. The Commissaris describes to DeGier and Asta how fear strengthened one man and destroyed another. The solution is that someone did a secret favor. This series is tops. The author is masterful.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: We live in patterns
Review: It was a Friday night in the summertime. Grijpstra and DeGier were faced with a stuck window. They had overstayed their shift and the weekend had really started.

Police constables may have thrown a handicapped man into a canal. The constables are called Ketchup and Karate. Grijpstra and DeGier take off in search of Rea Fortune since her belongings have vanished. They interview their suspect, Frits Fortune. His wife had wanted him to sell his business and he did not want to. It would vary his routine. A corpse is found on the roof of his house, that of his dog Babette.

The detectives run down Fortune's relatives, Aunt Coba and Uncle Henry. They are dressed in antique unisex. They say that as a child Fortune had beheaded his toy bear. Grijpstra believes that Rea Fortune is a woman of unfulfilled fantasy. Ketchup and Karate, the constables, contend that Fortune's relatives are mad.

One of the characters reports that everyone has gone to the beach to annoy the tourists. Amsterdam seems deserted. Rea Fortune appears. She is charged with attempted murder of her husband. Perhaps Mrs. Fortune was merely persuading her husband to sell his business. DeGier is giving up smoking and his suffering is detailed in the book. At one point he wants to snatch a nearly full pack of cigarettes from someone.

Two dead people have been found in trunks of cars in Amsterdam. The first was an accidental death, an overdose. The other death was from natural causes, an ulcer. Ulcers may be caused by a malfunctioning of the mind. It turns out that the police officers had seen the second person staggering on the previous day.

DeGier goes to see a female constable, Asta. Mr. Boronski, the ulcer case, was found dead in Karl Muller's car. Muller said the men did business together. DeGier and Asta interview Muller. Asta takes notes. The two interview the hotel manager. Asta points out that the hotel is hollow, not what it seems. DeGier plays flute and Grijpstra plays some drums he has gotten from the police lost and found department while they discuss the Boronski case with Asta. The two police officers, trailing Muller, catch some street muggers.

Asta arrests Muller. She goes into the canal to retrieve Muller's dropped case. The officers suspect cocaine. First they had a murder and no corpse and now they have a corpse and no crime except for drugs which is not their department. German police officers appeared to subject Muller to some rough interrogation. The Commissaris describes to DeGier and Asta how fear strengthened one man and destroyed another. The solution is that someone did a secret favor. This series is tops. The author is masterful.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates