Yhodie Hendra Zaldi Hendra Zaldi itibaren Ogorodniki, Beyaz Rusya
this book seems interesting. hope to find a copy of it at the library
this is my homage to Becky. We read this together off-and-on all through Jr. High. Learned a lot of life lessons.
Excellent book. It was interesting to see what the life of Adam de la Halle could have been like. And Catherine was a good strong woman... nice heroine even if she is a little hardheaded. Thanks again to Joyce Elson Moore for signing my book!
Started of pretty well but ended really stupid. The main character became extremely unlikable and somewhat psychotic and the "mystery" was similar to an Agatha Christie novel...unsolvable!
I have a big complaint about Ian Rankin’s early Rebus novels, and it is a complaint that continues to taint my enjoyment of the series. D.I. John Rebus is too erudite. He’s impossibly well read, he knows and loves fine wine, and he’s a big jazz fan; he’s way too cultured to be a D.I.. So for that reason alone I find it impossible to enter the “really liking” territory with these books. Yet I can’t really attack Rankin for his early decisions because the guy diffuses the bomb in his forwards to Knots and Crosses and Hide and Seek. He’s his own biggest critic when it comes to the early characterization of Rebus, and he claims that he fixes the problems as the series continues. I have to believe him until I see for myself, so my criticism is a waste of time. I can complain, however, about Rankin’s borderline cheesy need to cleverly reference classic literature. In this book alone he has characters named Holmes, Watson and Macbeth. He has an illegal boxing club named after Edward Hyde (and by coincidence, Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic just happens to be the book Rebus picks out of a pile to read while in the middle of his investigation). We know you’re well read, Ian. Enough already. Even with all this nitpicky criticism, though, I really enjoyed Hide and Seek. Rankin knows how to spin a mystery, even at the early stage of his career, and while he didn’t really keep me guessing, he kept me reading. And at the heart of that desire to continue is D.I. Rebus. He may be the biggest son of a bitch who’s ever been the leading detective in a mystery series. He is corrupt, self-righteous, hypocritical, misogynistic, violent, egomaniacal, bullying, and delusional. But he is smart, effective and predatory when the hunt is on. It seems to me that he’s the real deal. Not a caricature, but a character of real depth and complexity. Quite something when you consider that I’ve only reached the second book in the series.