67. Infamous (1995), is the first book I've read of the Mexican writer Fernando del Paso and after that I am convinced EXPERIENCE highly recommended. I admit that I never ventured into any police thriller to meet with this book, which is more than excellent for beginning readers of the genre.
Being a confessed desonocedor the canons of the detective novel, you probably can not dissect this post argument structure of 67 Linda, however I take the space here is to speak even a little I enjoyed reading much.
Its main character David Sorensen, executes a plan to murder his wife and also covered up for ransom by a fictitious kidnapping his millionaire father, a story developed in a context that involves several U.S. locations, Mexico and Europe.
Dave is a playboy who sees the dissolution of the family fortune in Mexico and the United States is an escape the imminent collapse of his life: Linda young millionaire whom he married and who discovers the joy installed the prelude to the famous passage between love and hate.
The author's prose is masterful, carefully highlighting the ability to describe places, particularly streets and surrounding area, to such an extent that experimentthe feeling that when visiting the cities featured in the book, we find everything in the exact spot where he told Del Paso . DEVILS
management also stresses the psychology of Sorensen and how crime machine and then build a series of scenarios that allow the suspect to evade police and his father and extort the millionaire alleged abduction of Linda .
The novelist makes a critique of American society nice and insert items related to Mexico, having its best to paraOlivia cer, the mistress of Dave with whom he wishes to make a new life with $ 15 million in his pocket and reconnect with their roots.
Uta ... is difficult to remember what you had already written ...
XD I can say that the development of the web of crime and consequences accumulate so much stress, that the jump from one line to another becomes suffocating for the faint trail of clues that must follow the police. Very good book.
I had to read Linda 67 in an edition of Plaza y Janes, hardcover and elegant, which certainly makes it pleasurable to read.
A particular data I iESEARCH without much success, is whether the David Sorensen the book has any relationship, at least beyond the nominal, with the eponymous Canadian painter. I knew about David Sorensen, the artist, when I happened to be working on an exhibition of his work called "Horizon Series" here in a mall in Torreon. When you search on it, several of the results sent me to the character of Linda 67 and for a moment I thought that both creators, writer and painter, could be friends. To date I have not been verified.
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