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Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Richard Powell, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

Richard Powell (1) a été combiné avec Richard Pitts Powell.

24+ oeuvres 688 utilisateurs 14 critiques

Critiques

13 sur 13
This is a lightweight read, but full of a gentle good humor. I first read it when I was 11 or 12, and thought it was hilarious. While a recent re-reading was not nearly as laugh-out-loud funny—in the intervening years, I’ve learned far too much about the origin of the phrase “banana republic” and the history of U.S. intervention in developing nations—it was still a fine bit of slapstick.
 
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KelMunger | Dec 16, 2023 |
“D for done in, e for extinct, a for assassin, and d for departed.” That spells ‘dead’.

Bill Wayne has a score to settle with five guys who used to be his friends. The same five who put a bullet in his back four years ago in China. Now Bill’s on a cross country bus tour of the United States, a tour that has stops at each of his ‘friends’ locations.

The only problem is that Bill acts completely suspicious, like ALL the time! For no real reason. Which really makes no sense. He also irritates and provokes the investigating sheriff, which really, really makes no sense. If he is meant to be the 'hero' of the story, I'll pass.

On the positive, I did like the book having it's ending in Yosemite! One of my favorite places to visit! I enjoyed reading the descriptions of it as it existed at the time this book was written!½
 
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Stahl-Ricco | 8 autres critiques | Jan 8, 2023 |
tracking one of five who left him for dead, but someone is killing them first
 
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ritaer | 8 autres critiques | Jul 22, 2021 |
 
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encephalical | 8 autres critiques | Aug 28, 2018 |
Richard Powell is most famous for writing"The Philadelphian" which
was later made into "The Young Philadelphians," starring Paul
Newman. Powell's cozy Arab & Andy involve a bantering married couple from Philadelphia. Andy Blake is an antique dealer and army reservist. Arab (Arabella) is a blonde and is fearless. This is the last
chronologically of the four Andy and Arab books. Here, the couple takes a vacation in Florida and accidentally stumbles on an alien smuggling ring. The story reads well, but there's almost too much banter between the couple. It's an easy read and there's a missing 12year old, guns, tridents, boat chases, sharks, Nazis, and more. Somehow Arab and Andy bumble
into the middle of this mess.
 
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DaveWilde | Sep 22, 2017 |
Light-Hearted Beach Murder Mystery

In Shell Game, a 1950 paperback, Powell offers us a light-hearted murder mystery involving an innocent guy on a Shell-collecting vacation and a mysterious woman he finds on the beach. There is murder, deceit, and other complications.

There are a number of humorous scenes where he covers up for Valerie - often right under the police chief's nose- never knowing if he's being a prize chump himself. This would have played well as a movie, particularly with the banter between this oddly matched couple and the hide-in-plain-sight idea. There are a number of actresses who could have pulled this off quite well. This isn't necessarily a deep earth-shattering masterpiece, but it's an enjoyable quick read designed perhaps to have wide appeal.
 
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DaveWilde | Sep 22, 2017 |
It only takes a few notes to know if you'll like a song, just a few frames to know if it's your kind of movie, just a glance to know if you are going to be nuts about a gal. Powell sold me on this book before I
finished page one and I stayed sold until I reached the conclusion the very same evening. This book takes you on a high speed journey and there simply aren't any brakes.

In this case, the publisher's blurb on the cover gets it right. Bill and five buddies were doing business in China when the war ended. The Reds were taking over in 1949 and they had to scram but someone,
one of his buddies, put a bullet in Bill's back and they left him for dead as the Communists took over. Four years later, Bill recovers from his wounds and returns to the States. Immediately, someone shoots him. Someone, someone he thought was his buddy, is out to knock him off.

Bill decides he'll look his buddies up in Cheyenne, in Salt Lake, in Reno, in San Fran, and in LA. He's got a .45 and if he doesn't get answers he likes someone else is gonna take a bullet and be left for
dead. He signs on with a western bus tour that stops in these cities. He's got an alibi now -- just a crazy tourist. He's too bent on revenge to notice the hot blonde tour guide is someone from his childhood, too crazy with anger to convince her he
belongs with the middle aged slobs on the bus trip. Maybe he's getting paranoid. Wouldn't you if someone kept trying to kill you?
Powell writes like someone's hot on his heels. A fantastic piece of
literature. Wow!
 
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DaveWilde | 8 autres critiques | Sep 22, 2017 |
Una saga familiare molto americana, corredata dal consueto happy end, descritta con garbata ironia. Earth of hope and glory a patto di essere bravi, buoni, belli e protestanti e, last but not least, ricchi e di successo. L'A. condivide quest'impostazione? Ah, saperlo, direbbe Dagospoia (absit iniuria verbis). Il libro, comunque, offre innumerevoli spunti di riflessione anche a chi, come me, americano non è.
 
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fortunae | Jul 12, 2015 |
Richard Powell's "Say It With Bullets" was originally published in hardcover by Simon and Schuster in 1953, with a paperback edition released by Graphic Books in 1954. The book subsequently went out of print until it's republication by Hard Case Crime (volume 18) in March 2006. This 50 years gap in publication is a real shame as "Say It With Bullets" is a clever, witty and relentless yarn. The story concerns Bill Wayne who used to be a cargo pilot flying missions around pre-Communist China, with five buddies. When an opportunity comes up to "liberate" some gold Bill isn't up for it and finds himself shot in the back by one of his friends. He survives, however, and back in America after his recuperation he decides to track down his five buddies and ask some questions and if necessary to do some killing. To avoid suspicion he signs up for a bus tour of the Old West, which conveniently stops in the cities where his ex-buddies live. Unfortunately for him the hostess on the trip is pretty blonde Holly Clark, a girl from his past who now wants to get better acquainted. Holly sticks to Bill like glue and when the bodies begin to pile up she starts to put things together. "Say It With Bullets" isn't a deep or complex book but it is a great read full of mystery, intrigue and in Bill Wayne a compelling protagonist. Bill isn't your typical, no scruples hard-boiled hero; instead he's quite a complex character – he wants revenge but he's not 100% sure how to go about it; he wants to confront those who shot him but doesn't know what to say; he wants to kill but is unsure whether he can go through with it or not. Richard Powell cleverly writes Bill as quite a self-aware narrator who has plenty of human foibles. The other main supporting characters are interesting particularly the slightly annoying and clingy Holly and the clichéd cowboy deputy, who may have more to him than the dumb surface he portrays. Powell blends in a decent amount of humour, with the story delivering plenty of sardonic wit and the occasional very clever quip. The action can be a touch formulaic at times but the relentless pace keeps the attention away from the elements that don't work so well. The ending, although satisfying, seems pretty rushed as if Powell ran out of time or energy. Despite these quibbles "Say It With Bullets" is still a very good, fast-paced, cleverly-plotted and witty tale with an excellent central protagonist. Although not amongst the very best from the Hard Case Crime line, this is still a hugely enjoyable read, full of clever mystery and intrigue. Hard Case deserves great credit for rescuing it from 50 years of obscurity.
 
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calum-iain | 8 autres critiques | Oct 25, 2014 |
All'inizio sembra un incrocio tra "Forrest Gump" e "Tre uomini in barca"; poi rimane solo una sorta di Forrest Gump ostinatamente desolante. Senza dubbio risente di tutti gli anni che ha: negli anni '60 di certo faceva un effetto diverso :)
Mi sono fatta una sola singola risata e so che non l'ho letto per ampliare i miei orizzonti ma per confermarmi nella capacità di poter e saper leggere un po' di tutto.
 
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ShanaPat | Jul 14, 2012 |
Another from the same era as "Night Walker", the Hamilton book I just read. Instead of the communist menace, this one was a war time holdover from a bunch that worked in China after WWII. The plot was pretty straight forward, but there were a lot of twists & turns getting there. The basis for them was a little contrived, but all in all it was a good book. There were some coincidences that stained the fabric a bit, but nothing too terrible. Another fun read from HCC.
 
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jimmaclachlan | 8 autres critiques | Sep 25, 2009 |
Bill Wayne ostensibly sets out for vengeance in Say It With Bullets, but the story quickly proves that he's not in control of anything. His bus tour hostess figures it all out, he doesn't actually kill anyone, fate decides to give him a fortune at the casino, and he can't even figure out who the real villain is until it's too late.

Nonetheless, the ride is jaunty and the locations interesting. I'd place this tame novel somewhere in the middle of the pack among the Hard Case Crime novels I've read.½
 
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Wova4 | 8 autres critiques | Jan 19, 2009 |
An incredibly fun, and surprisingly light-hearted old crime novel. Drenched in the sort of over the top hardboiled speak you'd expect.
 
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MarquesadeFlambe | 8 autres critiques | Jan 18, 2007 |
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