Raffi Yessayan
Auteur de Eight in the Box: A Novel of Suspense
2 oeuvres 185 utilisateurs 10 critiques
Œuvres de Raffi Yessayan
Étiqueté
!wws_rev! (2)
A lire (8)
AF (1)
Boston (4)
Boston (Mass.) (2)
Calibre (7)
college students (2)
College students - Crimes against (2)
Crime (2)
Crimes against (2)
Detectives - Massachusetts (2)
Détective (2)
electronic-library (2)
Fiction (10)
for-review (1)
fortune cookies (2)
Good Formatting (2)
général (5)
hall5top (1)
Import Calibre (2)
Kindle (2)
legal; serial killer; thriller (2)
Livre électronique (6)
local-library (2)
Lu (1)
Massachusetts (2)
Meurtres en série (2)
Mystery & Detective (2)
Mystère (2)
N/a (1)
police drama (3)
première édition (2)
Roman d'espionnage (2)
Roman policier (1)
roman policier (2)
Roman à suspense (5)
Serial murderers (2)
Suspense (6)
Suspense (6)
Tueur en série (4)
Partage des connaissances
- Sexe
- male
- Nationalité
- USA
- Lieux de résidence
- Massachusetts, USA
Membres
Critiques
Signalé
MarkPSadler | 6 autres critiques | Jan 17, 2016 | “2 in the Hat” By: Raffi Yessayan
Yessayan introduces a complicated police procedural divided into three parts. He pulls on experience in the district attorney’s office in Boston to guide us through the various districts that make up the Emerald District. His characters and story are utterly believable as the passionate dark side of the serial killer is unleashed on the police and the reader.
The story follows the outline of a Pattersonesque thriller; short chapters with occasional inserts to provide clues to the anonymous Prom Night Killer. A very effective method, however the lack of a central protagonist to the story left me a little confused until the third section. The mix of point of views makes it so complex that I had to spend time flipping back to try to recall where the pieces fit to keep the many characters straight.
Just when you think you know who did it I guaranty a new clue will leave your head spinning. Once the story takes off in part three it really finds its pulse and surges ahead to bring a climactic ending that will leave you scrambling to keep up.
Reviewed by Mark P. Sadler, Author of “Blood on his Hands” for Suspense Magazine
… (plus d'informations)
Yessayan introduces a complicated police procedural divided into three parts. He pulls on experience in the district attorney’s office in Boston to guide us through the various districts that make up the Emerald District. His characters and story are utterly believable as the passionate dark side of the serial killer is unleashed on the police and the reader.
The story follows the outline of a Pattersonesque thriller; short chapters with occasional inserts to provide clues to the anonymous Prom Night Killer. A very effective method, however the lack of a central protagonist to the story left me a little confused until the third section. The mix of point of views makes it so complex that I had to spend time flipping back to try to recall where the pieces fit to keep the many characters straight.
Just when you think you know who did it I guaranty a new clue will leave your head spinning. Once the story takes off in part three it really finds its pulse and surges ahead to bring a climactic ending that will leave you scrambling to keep up.
Reviewed by Mark P. Sadler, Author of “Blood on his Hands” for Suspense Magazine
… (plus d'informations)
Signalé
MarkPSadler | 6 autres critiques | Jan 17, 2016 | “2 in the Hat” By: Raffi Yessayan
Yessayan introduces a complicated police procedural divided into three parts. He pulls on experience in the district attorney’s office in Boston to guide us through the various districts that make up the Emerald District. His characters and story are utterly believable as the passionate dark side of the serial killer is unleashed on the police and the reader.
The story follows the outline of a Pattersonesque thriller; short chapters with occasional inserts to provide clues to the anonymous Prom Night Killer. A very effective method, however the lack of a central protagonist to the story left me a little confused until the third section. The mix of point of views makes it so complex that I had to spend time flipping back to try to recall where the pieces fit to keep the many characters straight.
Just when you think you know who did it I guaranty a new clue will leave your head spinning. Once the story takes off in part three it really finds its pulse and surges ahead to bring a climactic ending that will leave you scrambling to keep up.
Reviewed by Mark P. Sadler, Author of “Blood on his Hands” for Suspense Magazine
… (plus d'informations)
Yessayan introduces a complicated police procedural divided into three parts. He pulls on experience in the district attorney’s office in Boston to guide us through the various districts that make up the Emerald District. His characters and story are utterly believable as the passionate dark side of the serial killer is unleashed on the police and the reader.
The story follows the outline of a Pattersonesque thriller; short chapters with occasional inserts to provide clues to the anonymous Prom Night Killer. A very effective method, however the lack of a central protagonist to the story left me a little confused until the third section. The mix of point of views makes it so complex that I had to spend time flipping back to try to recall where the pieces fit to keep the many characters straight.
Just when you think you know who did it I guaranty a new clue will leave your head spinning. Once the story takes off in part three it really finds its pulse and surges ahead to bring a climactic ending that will leave you scrambling to keep up.
Reviewed by Mark P. Sadler, Author of “Blood on his Hands” for Suspense Magazine
… (plus d'informations)
Signalé
MarkPSadler | 6 autres critiques | Jan 17, 2016 | I enjoyed reading this book. I probably would have given it a 3.5 if there was that option. I was oblivious to the twist and it kept my curiosity through to the finish.
Signalé
gma2lana | 6 autres critiques | Aug 28, 2011 | Vous aimerez peut-être aussi
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 2
- Membres
- 185
- Popularité
- #117,260
- Évaluation
- ½ 3.3
- Critiques
- 10
- ISBN
- 9
- Langues
- 1
Yessayan introduces a complicated police procedural divided into three parts. He pulls on experience in the district attorney’s office in Boston to guide us through the various districts that make up the Emerald District. His characters and story are utterly believable as the passionate dark side of the serial killer is unleashed on the police and the reader.
The story follows the outline of a Pattersonesque thriller; short chapters with occasional inserts to provide clues to the anonymous Prom Night Killer. A very effective method, however the lack of a central protagonist to the story left me a little confused until the third section. The mix of point of views makes it so complex that I had to spend time flipping back to try to recall where the pieces fit to keep the many characters straight.
Just when you think you know who did it I guaranty a new clue will leave your head spinning. Once the story takes off in part three it really finds its pulse and surges ahead to bring a climactic ending that will leave you scrambling to keep up.
Reviewed by Mark P. Sadler, Author of “Blood on his Hands” for Suspense Magazine
… (plus d'informations)