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Chargement... Quand la ville dort (1949)par W. R. Burnett
Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. The Asphalt Jungle by W.R. Burnett is a classic crime novel, and a great heist story. Set in the gritty streets of a large Midwestern city, the powers-that-be take note when a known criminal mastermind is released from prison. They are right to be concerned as he immediately starts planning a big job and gathering his crew. I struggled a little getting into this story, I think there was too much time taken up with introducing the various characters. Typical with most hard boiled stories most of these characters were unlikeable but I also found many of them rather uninteresting as well. The actual heist was fascinating but went by very quickly. The book followed the whole cycle of crime, from the planning stages to it’s execution and the final outcome. It was hard to root for either the criminals or the police as I didn’t find much to choose from either of them. I am usually a huge fan of this type of book, but something felt lacking in this one as it fell a little flat.. The writing was strong and colourful but as the story wound down it felt like it was running out of gas. I think I would like to try some of this authors other works like High Sierra or Little Caesar. I suspect the film adaptation might be the better way to go with The Asphalt Jungle. La clásica historia de un robo a gran escala, vista desde los ladrones. El foco va pasando de unos a otros, conforme van apareciendo en el centro de la historia, desde el "manitas" que ya estaba retirado al cerebro de la operación, pasando por el tahur que los financia, el que se encargaría de vender los diamantes (y que resulta ser el que lo echa todo a perder porque, pese a sus apariencias, está en la ruina) hasta el "guapo" (es decir, el matón, el encargado de cepillarse a quien venga a estorbar), que progresivamente va cobrando más importancia y cuya única obsesión es poder volver a su pueblo. La parte final, con él herido de muerte y su novia (a la que despreciaba, pero que resulta ser la única persona que le ayuda) buscando por las carreteras su pueblo hasta encontrar que la finca de su familia ha sido vendida y su hermano y su madre viven en una triste casa de ciudad, es un tanto patética, pero con mucho lo más interesante. Hasta los gangsteres más duros tienen su corazoncito. Easily the least of Burnett's three most famous crime novels that were turned into seminal American movies (the other two being Little Caesar and High Sierra), The Asphalt Jungle is a multiple point of view caper novel with some existential overtones set in a nameless Midwestern city that just might be St. Louis or Cincinnati (it's definitely not Cleveland or Chicago). A newly released German criminal mastermind with a predilection for nympholepsy immediately seeks out underworld contacts to assemble a crew who can assist him in looting a fortress-like jewelry store to help out his old cellmate (still imprisoned) and himself to finance his retirement. An assortment of ne'er-do-wells, dead-enders and vainglorious greedheads coalesce around the unfailingly polite little German, and everyone proceeds to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. Rififi it ain't, and Stanley Kubrick would get more mileage out of The Asphalt Jungle's basic set-up and plot trajectory with his 1956 film The Killing (also starring The Asphalt Jungle's Sterling Hayden, based on Lionel White's novel Clean Break, with dialogue by noir master Jim Thompson), but it's not a bad time-killer, if you like this sort of thing. Burnett's cornpone, salt of the earth background for the down-on-his-luck hardcase Dix wears thin long before the climax (it feels like a weak echo of a similar background for his Dillinger stand-in Roy Earle in High Sierra), and even at a little over two hundred pages one is painfully aware of how cliched all of the characters are; still, the endings are efficiently crafted, and if Burnett's "Mary Sue" character here -- an irascible, auto-didactic newspaperman named Farbstein, who book-ends the novel -- throws pearls before swine by sententiously quoting Paradise Lost, well, like the cub reporter Young Bryan, you just gotta laugh. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
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Dans la vie secr©·te et nocturne de la grande ville, s'agitent de dr©þles de corps. Gus le petit bossu, moiti©♭ criminel, moiti©♭ h©♭ros. Dix, le tueur solitaire, qui, © ses heures, fait du sentiment. Doll, l'entra©ʼneuse vieillissante et qu'attend le ruisseau. Et puis Riemenschneider, l'infatigable, le patron, silencieux et courtois, qui ne quitte une prison que pour entrer dans une autre. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813.5Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th CenturyClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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Whatever, a crook, Erwin Riemenschneider, often known as "the doctor" is released from prison. The cops see him, but only briefly. They're sure he's up to no good, but can't follow him. "The little doctor" gathers some other crooks around him and pull off an amazing jewel heist. It's almost a perfect crime, but there's a slip up, a gun goes off accidentally, people bleed all over the place,...and so forth. We have all the classic stuff of noir crime novels: corrupt cops, bookies, shyster lawyers, fancy gals, brute thugs, etc.
I believe that I read W. R. Burnett's more famous novel, Little Caesar a few years ago. Personally, I found this book to be much better written and much more engaging.
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