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Milton K. Ozaki (1913–1989)

Auteur de Enquesta

35 oeuvres 132 utilisateurs 3 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Œuvres de Milton K. Ozaki

Enquesta (1960) 30 exemplaires
Dressed To Kill (1954) 13 exemplaires
Case of the Deadly Kiss (1957) 10 exemplaires
Murder Doll (1952) 9 exemplaires
Wake Up And Scream (1959) 7 exemplaires
Case of the Cop's Wife (1958) 6 exemplaires
Too Young to Die (2019) 5 exemplaires
Sucker Bait (1957) 5 exemplaires
Joy House & City of Sin (1962) 3 exemplaires
Destroying Angel / Never Say Die (1956) 3 exemplaires
The Deadly Pick-Up (1957) 3 exemplaires
The Affair of the Frigid Blonde (1950) 3 exemplaires
La veuve minute (1957) 2 exemplaires
The Scented Flesh (1951) (1951) 2 exemplaires
No Way out (1952) 2 exemplaires
Au pied levé (1958) 2 exemplaires
A Time for Murder (1956) 2 exemplaires
A Fiend in Need (1947) (1947) 2 exemplaires
A Dame Called Murder (2014) 2 exemplaires
Dead Ringer [and] Maid for Murder (1954) — Auteur — 2 exemplaires
A Dame Called Murder 1 exemplaire
Out of the Night 1 exemplaire
The Dove (1951) 1 exemplaire
Murder Honeymoon 1 exemplaire
Deadly Blonde 1 exemplaire
The Dummy Murder Case (1951) 1 exemplaire
Model for Murder 1 exemplaire
Naispaholainen 1 exemplaire
Le coup du colibri 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
Saber, Robert O. (pseudonym)
Date de naissance
1913
Date de décès
1989
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA

Membres

Critiques

In addition to writing over twenty to thirty paperback original titles, Ozaki was a reporter, a beauty salon operator, and ran several phony mail order colleges, according to his biographies. Inquest was published under his own name about midway through Ozaki's writing career. It is a fairly short paperback novel, easy to read, and does a great job of keeping a low reader's attention. It has a great opening sequence when a red haired high - heeled dame busts into a bar, beats the crap out of the bartender and wreaks absolute havoc before disappearing into the night. Rather than a mystery, it's a stunning portrait of a corrupt double dealing county and how the sheriff's department and its cronies conspired to cover up corruption. It is a story told in terse third person narrative from numerous points of view, including a courtroom inquest before a handpicked grand jury. It also takes place in the invented torn of Stilwell, Wisconsin, where a number of Ozaki's novels take place. The town of Stilwell is in some respects similar to Ozaki's own Wisconsin hometown and it is firmly set in the fifties. It is a good story, but if one were to find fault with it, it might be that the narration is often removed and impersonal and loses a bit of the passion and desperation that a first person narration might have.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
DaveWilde | 1 autre critique | Sep 22, 2017 |
Ozaki placed a lot of his dime store novels in the mythical town of Stillwell, Wisconsin, similar to the small Wisconsin town he grew up in. A few of the characters such as the pathologist appear in other novels as well. In this book, Stillwell is the quintessential All-American fifties town with malt shops and five and Dimes. A serial killer is stalking the town and the police are working overtime to catch him. It's basically a police procedural. It's a fine idea and the old fashioned morals are hit on pretty strong here, but the story simply isn't compelling. It's told in a distant third person voice and it's difficult to feel connected to it. It's not a bad little tale but it's not pulpy the way you'd expect something from that era to be. The real action is kind of glossed over.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
DaveWilde | Sep 22, 2017 |
Osaki's book starts off as a rather slimy story about drunken brothers with bladder problems and sex-crazed college students, then settles down into a plot-driven story about a corrupt sheriff's department, a coroner who makes a mistake by going with the flow, a DA, a reporter--well, you name it. There are really too many characters for a book this size, and Ozaki's narrative doesn't do them all justice. He spends a couple of pages providing bios of the members of the coroner's jury, for instance, but none of this info really matters when the inquest actually takes place, because he treats the jurors as basically non-entities. A few other characters seem like good ideas when introduced, but are never fleshed out. Nevertheless, the writing is fluid and the story interesting enough to pull you in and keep you wondering until the disappointing ending, which wraps things up too abruptly and neatly.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
datrappert | 1 autre critique | Apr 16, 2010 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
35
Membres
132
Popularité
#153,555
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
3
ISBN
18
Langues
3

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