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Chargement... Spree (1987)par Max Allan Collins
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Appartient à la sérieFrank Nolan (7) Est contenu dans
The taut, final crime novel in Max Allan Collins's Nolan series. Both Nolan and his friend Jon have retired from the dangerous game of robbery. But a backwoods hoodlum named Cole Comfort kidnaps Nolan's girlfriend and demands he pull one final, huge job. Fast, sexy, brutal. "Max Collins is a damned fine writer!" (The Armchair Detective) Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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The basic plot is that, after pulling off a few capers together, Nolan and Jon have both retired from the business. Nolan runs a restaurant/ nightclub called Nolan's and is shacked up with a twenty-two year old blonde Sherry who is also the hostess at his restaurant. Jon is shacked up with the lead singer of his band, but she is heading off to greener pastures and leaving him without a band and without a home. Meanwhile, the Comfort clan rears its ugly head again. One of them spots Nolan and they figure if they grab the girl, they can force him to pull off the ultimate caper with them. This book feels more like one of Westlake's Parker books than any of the other Nolan books, particularly when it comes to putting together the crew and pulling off the heist and all the double and triple crossing that follows.
This is kind of a different version of Nolan than readers of this series might be used to. "In Nolan's life, right now, comfort was very important." He circulates around his restaurant, greeting patrons, and spends nights sometimes "stretched out on a recliner" and watching a boxing match. He now has a slight paunch and plays golf with other business owners in the community.
Sherry had originally been a waitress at a motel he ran for the mob and he had fired her for spilling coffee on too many customer's laps. "Then she sat on his, and they wound up spending the summer together. When she wasn't in a bikini, poolside, she was in his bed and wasn't in a bikini." Now, she's plotting to get Nolan to Vegas and get hitched.
What makes this book stand out from all the various crime thrillers available is Collins' writing, particularly his character development. For instance, the Comforts are a backwoods redneck family with the patriarch (Coleman Comfort) of the family wandering around in overalls. His airhead son, Lyle, dresses like a Miami Vice character but has the brains of a mosquito. Lyle didn't really like killing people, but he did what Pa told him to do. Lyle's sister is Cindy Lou, a cute curvy strawberry blonde freckle-faced sixteen-year old who dresses in a halter and short jeans and barefeet and comes across as "being somewhere between Daisy Mae and Lolita." The portraits drawn of the Comfort family are just charming. Old Coleman Comfort's wife had been Thedy and she had been all "Georgia peaches and cream." "Thick as a plank she was, but she kept her looks over the years; never ran
to fat." "What did it matter if she thought two plus two was twenty- two, and signed her name with an X?"
In this book as in the others in the series, Nolan realizes that he can never fully retire, that he always is going have to be on his guard, and that the shadows from the past will always haunt him. All in all, this book is exactly what you should expect from Collins: a terrific read that, once you start, you won't put down no matter how late the hour. ( )