Photo de l'auteur

Donald James (1931–2008)

Auteur de Monstrum

20+ oeuvres 594 utilisateurs 17 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Notice de désambiguation :

(eng) Donald James Wheal wrote his biographies "World's End" and "White City" under his own full name, used the shortened form of Donald James for his thrillers including the Inspector Constantin Vadim series, used the pseudonym of Thomas Dresden for "Missing", "Queen's Ransom" and "Talking to a Stranger" and also wrote books with co-author Tony Barwick using the combined pseudonym of James Barwick.

Séries

Œuvres de Donald James

Monstrum (1997) 240 exemplaires
Fall of the Russian Empire (1982) 87 exemplaires
La magicienne de Mourmansk (1999) 70 exemplaires
Vadim (1770) 64 exemplaires
Walking the Shadows (2003) 29 exemplaires
The House of Janus (1990) 17 exemplaires
White City (1702) 12 exemplaires
A spy at evening (1977) 9 exemplaires
The House of Eros (1991) 7 exemplaires
Queen's Ransom (1979) 7 exemplaires
Once a Gentleman (1987) 5 exemplaires
Schritte in der Nacht (2000) 5 exemplaires
Ne te retourne pas (1997) 5 exemplaires
Gledens hus (1995) 3 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Wheal, Donald James
Autres noms
Dresden, Thomas
Barwick, James (Donald James, Tony Barwick as co-authors)
Date de naissance
1931-08-22
Date de décès
2008-04-28
Sexe
male
Nationalité
UK
Lieu de naissance
Chelsea, London, England
Lieu du décès
London, England
Lieux de résidence
London, England, UK
France
Ireland
Études
Sloane Grammar School
University of Cambridge (Pembroke College)
Professions
non-fiction author
television writer
novelist
teacher
Organisations
British Army
Notice de désambigüisation
Donald James Wheal wrote his biographies "World's End" and "White City" under his own full name, used the shortened form of Donald James for his thrillers including the Inspector Constantin Vadim series, used the pseudonym of Thomas Dresden for "Missing", "Queen's Ransom" and "Talking to a Stranger" and also wrote books with co-author Tony Barwick using the combined pseudonym of James Barwick.

Membres

Critiques

World War, 1939-1945
 
Signalé
BooksInMirror | Feb 19, 2024 |
He should have built the plot more
 
Signalé
David_Masumba | 2 autres critiques | Oct 14, 2020 |
When it was first published back in 1997 this novel painted an intriguing image of what the future might hold for Russia. Set in what then seemed a fairly distant 2015, Russia was emerging from a bleak and bitter civil war between the Nationalist regime and Marxist-Anarchist insurrectionists. The Nationalist regime had emerged triumphant, but the country had been devastated by the war, and the economy had been wrecked.

Police inspector Constantin Vadim had seen out the war in his native Murmansk. His position is, however, somewhat equivocal because his estranged wife Julia had been a general in the defeated Anarchists’ army. Now on the run, she has managed to contact Vadim, and seeks his help for her escape.

Vadim’s oldest friend from school and student days is Roy Rolkin, now a major (but soon to be a colonel) in the Cheka, the ever-present secret police, which in 2015 is just as deeply feared as at any other time in Russia’s history. Vadim knows that Rolkin’s friendship is a very thin, and immensely fragile veneer, that could be eroded by even the merest hint that he has been helping his ex-wife.

Vadim does have one unexpected asset – his close resemblance to Leonid Koba, formerly head of the Cheka and now Vice President, but understood by everyone to be the focus of real power in the nationalist government. Vadim fins himself selected for the role of one of Koba’s doubles, and. After minor cosmetic surgery, finds himself being conveyed around the country to participate in minor ceremonies as the Vice President, leaving the real Koba to concentrate on the work of reconstruction that the country so desperately needs.

To facilitate his participation in this deception, Vadim is transferred to Moscow, and installed as head of the homicide division. This does not prove to be the sinecure that Vadim had envisaged as a serial killer is on the loose. Three women have been killed, with their bodies mutilated, and the assailant has been given the nickname of ‘Monstrum’. Vadim finds himself heading the investigation, and soon learns that there have been far more than three victims. The killings started during the civil war, but evidence of the killings had been covered up under the ensuing mayhem.

Vadim is an enigmatic character. Far from flawless, with a long track record of near alcoholism and womanising, he does retain some vestige of culture and decency. He is appalled by the Monstrum killings, but also by the dreadful conditions in which much of the population of the poorer areas of Moscow are condemned to live. But he is also a pragmatist, and quickly learns when and where to turn a blind eye.

Donald James conjures the atmosphere of a war-torn Russia very effectively, and one can almost feel the bitter cold that pervades every scene. However, while the story is well thought through, and the plot is soundly constructed, the book is far too long, being unnecessarily drawn out. Vadim is reminiscent of Arkady Renko, protagonist of Gorky Park and Martin Cruz Smith’s other crime novels set in Moscow. Although, to be honest, I thought that those books were unnecessarily lengthy, too.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Eyejaybee | 4 autres critiques | Aug 18, 2020 |
Not a bad story overall but a little slow to develop, and we have to sit through 50 pages of how the main protagonist is a pathetic sniveling excuse for a man before we can move on to the actual story. The relationship with his sister is rather unsavoury and unnecessary to the story.
½
 
Signalé
adam.currey | 1 autre critique | Sep 17, 2018 |

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Statistiques

Œuvres
20
Aussi par
2
Membres
594
Popularité
#42,287
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
17
ISBN
95
Langues
9

Tableaux et graphiques