Photo de l'auteur

Laurie Loewenstein

Auteur de Death of a Rainmaker

3 oeuvres 171 utilisateurs 51 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Laurie Loewenstein

Death of a Rainmaker (2018) 69 exemplaires
Unmentionables (2013) 65 exemplaires
Funeral Train (2022) 37 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Loewenstein, Laurie
Sexe
female

Membres

Critiques

Meandering and boring. 300 pages, nothing actually happens until page 250. After the train goes off the tracks, which was horribly written, nothing else is even remotely interesting.
 
Signalé
BenM2023 | 16 autres critiques | Nov 22, 2023 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Kind of slow, like life in Oklahoma (where I grew up). The description of the train wreck was heart wrenching. Getting to know the characters made you care about them. Haven't finished yet but had to submit some kind of review. Will update when finished. 6/2/2023 Finally finished, well worth the read. I looked up train derailment in Oklahoma and found the exact story on which this book was based. Was fascinating.
 
Signalé
DeanieG | 16 autres critiques | May 20, 2023 |
I bought this book based on reviews on this site. I enjoyed it because I am very interesting in the Dust Bowl era and this book doesn't disappoint. It describes life at the end of the Depression, giving a window in to the struggles of people living in that era and that location. Cozy mysteries are my favorite genre and because of this I felt that the mystery in this book wasn't quite there. I didn't feel the tension or get the usual red herrings. Also felt unsettled with the niece story; no closure there. It was as if they were a means to an end in furthering the mystery.
Overall the story was good enough.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
book58lover | 16 autres critiques | Feb 23, 2023 |
I have yet to read a book written by Laurie Loewenstein that I haven't liked. She has a blend of character, story, and setting that suits me right down to the ground. The opening scenes of Funeral Train are chilling as I was introduced to people on a passenger train shortly before it derailed. Then I was sickened and infuriated when Loewenstein shared some information about passenger trains in the 1930s. (Black travelers had to pay full price to travel in shoddy, flimsy passenger cars commonly referred to as "pine hearses" placed right behind the locomotives while white passengers traveled in comfort farther back in metal cars that were much less likely to be damaged.)

The mystery is a good one, but the real strength of Funeral Train lies in its portrait of small-town life during the double whammy of the Depression and the Dust Bowl. I felt as though I were in Vermillion right along with the railroad detective, Claude Steele, and Sheriff Temple Jennings as they searched for clues among the cranks, gossips, and fine, upstanding citizens there in town. Jennings, who survived the Johnstown Flood as a child, is a mentor to his deputy, Ed McCance, who watches Jennings carefully and writes down what the sheriff says in a notebook. Newly married, McCance not only wants to be sheriff one day but he also wants to stay alive in order to earn the promotion. Jennings and McCance are trying to find a killer, but they also must deal with a noisy dog, the town's blind movie theater owner, and Gwendolyn the cow. Life in all its variety in small-town Oklahoma.

It's hard to describe how much at home I felt while reading this book, but the reason why did occur to me as the pages turned. It is the small details Loewenstein weaves into her story. I grew up among family members who were teenagers during the Depression. The way Loewenstein's characters talk is the way my family members talked. Grain elevators were also the biggest buildings in my hometown, my family also gathered to play pinochle on Saturday evenings, and A Child's Garden of Verses was familiar to me whenever I was sick in bed.

Funeral Train is steeped in its time and place, and its finely delineated characters bring a town and a mystery to life. If you enjoy historical mysteries and have yet to read Laurie Loewenstein, you're missing out. Do something about it!
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
cathyskye | 16 autres critiques | Nov 13, 2022 |

Prix et récompenses

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Statistiques

Œuvres
3
Membres
171
Popularité
#124,899
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
51
ISBN
20

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