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A Terrible Beauty par Graham Masterton
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A Terrible Beauty (édition 2003)

par Graham Masterton (Auteur)

Séries: Katie Maguire (0.5)

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1457188,185 (3.59)Aucun
There are things I need to know... On a farm in southern Ireland, the dismembered bones of eleven women are found in a common grave, buried eight decades ago. Detective Superintendent Katie Maguire is used to bloodshed, but this ivory litter of human remains is unimaginable butchery. Of other worlds apart from this... In isolated darkness not far away, an American tourist is at the mercy of a serial killer. His tools are a boning knife, twine, and a doll fashioned from nails and fishhooks. The murder of his victims is second only to the pleasure of their pain. Darker places inhabited by evil monstrosities... As an eighty-year-old mystery unfolds, so does a modern-day ritual that's marked Katie Maguire as its next victim. For what happened once in this small picturesque village is happening again. It's more than a series of horrifying crimes. It's tradition. Take me there.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:burritapal
Titre:A Terrible Beauty
Auteurs:Graham Masterton (Auteur)
Info:Pocket Star (2003), Edition: First Paperback Edition, 384 pages
Collections:Votre bibliothèque, En cours de lecture
Évaluation:*****
Mots-clés:Aucun

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Katie Maguire par Graham Masterton

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Affichage de 1-5 de 7 (suivant | tout afficher)
I liked "a terrible beauty" for several reasons. It takes place in Ireland, and my ancestry is irish. Its protagonist is a woman detective sergeant, and while I don't like cops, I like having a woman protagonist in a traditionally men's role. And also because it centers around Celtic pagan Legends, a fascinating subject for me.
In this case the murderer must kill 13 women in a very specific manner, and afterwards, arrange their bones in a certain place and in a certain way, and only then will he be able to raise mor-rioghain, the Irish counterpart to Morgana, the English witch. When this happens, he will be able to ask her for whatever his heart desires.
Some readers may be put off by the violence to the human victims, but I have watched so many slaughterhouse videos and read so many books, ie "Every Twelve Seconds: Industrialized Slaughter and the Politics of Sight"
Book by Timothy Pachirat, that I no longer feel such dread when I read about violence against humans. It's not that I don't have sympathy towards human victims, but the disinterest I observe by carnists towards the violence and cruelty that the animals they eat suffer, has changed my own outlook significantly.
Katie the protagonist is married to a loser. They had a baby together years ago that they lost to sudden infant death syndrome. She's only trying to keep her marriage together, so that she doesn't have to sell the house and lose the nursery room where her baby lived, and she also doesn't want to split up their CD collection.
A glossary of Gaelic terms and slang is provided in the front of the book, but I only used it a couple of times. The meaning was easy to understand within the context. I will be reading more of this author, because I loved it. I wonder if they have the same problem with racist cops in Ireland as we do here under the Imperial power?
I liked how the murderer compared pagan gods to the Christian God.
Mr and Mrs Kelly have come from California to identify their daughter Fiona Kelly's remains (her flesh was scraped from her bones). Lucy, a professor from UC Berkeley who specializes in ancient religions, is lending her talents to Katie's investigation.
Lucy:
2003, Hardcover, Simon & Schuster
P.236:
" ...'you need to relax more, Mr kelly. You should open your mind to other realities. If you believe in heaven and hell, why can't you believe in The invisible kingdom?'
Mrs Kelly looked anxious, and took hold of her husband's hand.
Lucy said, 'the answer to your daughter's death lies right here. She was sacrificed to the witch mor-rioghain by somebody who thought that they could summon the witch from the land of the fairies and ask her for anything their heart desired. Somebody who truly believed that it was possible.'
'whoever it was -- they must have been out of their mind.'
'do you think you're out of your mind, because you get down on your knees every Sunday and pray to a Divine being that you've never heard, and never seen and for whose existence you have absolutely no proof whatsoever?' "

P.243:
"Lucy said, 'if I'm really excited about this case, I hope you don't think that I'm being ghoulish. This is only the second time I've come across a contemporary ritual sacrifice.'
'what was the first?'
'the first?'
'the first ritual sacrifice. Before this one.'
'that -- oh, that. A farmer in Minnesota sacrificed his whole family to the wendigo. That's a kind of weird creature that's supposed to live in the woods. It's similar to the Irish Banshee because it only appears when people are about to die.'
'What did the farmer do?'
'you really want to know? He threw his wife and their three children one by one into the grinding machine that he used for pig food. Alive. The coroner reckoned that they were still conscious even when they were minced right up to their waist. His defense tried to plead insanity but I was brought in as an expert witness, and I showed that everything he had done was in strict accordance with native American stories about the wendigo. You're insane when you kill people for no reason whatsoever. but you're not insane if you're scrupulously observing some specific mythological ritual with the express intention of gaining some advantage out of it. In this case, the farmer was almost bankrupt and he believed that the wendigo would kill his creditors for him. Wacky? For sure. Disturbed, yes. But not clinically insane. He was convicted on murder 2 and given life imprisonment.' " ( )
  burritapal | Oct 23, 2022 |
Slightly schizophrenic novel that can't seem to decide if it's crime or horror. I suspect this is very much down to the waning of popularity for the genre making old hand Masterton try his hand at crime instead. It's entertaining enough but neither nasty enough to be an enjoyable pulpy horror read or mysterious enough to be a decent detective novel. ( )
  whatmeworry | Apr 9, 2022 |
Pretty good police procedural involving serial murders based in Irish folklore. The main plot reveal is not as much a surprise as it should have been, due to a particular character being suspicious upon introduction. This book would probably appeal to readers of Thomas Harris or Jeffery Deaver. ( )
  chaosfox | Feb 22, 2019 |
A Terrible Beauty
5 Stars

A well-written and relentlessly gripping plot with an intelligent, strong and likeable heroine.

That said, the descriptions are quite graphic and disturbing so the book is definitely NOT for the squeamish or faint of heart.
( )
  Lauren2013 | May 24, 2018 |
What a fantastic and scary read, prob one of the best horror books I have ever read. The graphic images stayed in my mind a long time after racing towards the conclusion. If you truly love good horror and want to be frightened late at night....then read this book...and keep looking over your shoulder! ( )
  runner56 | Dec 27, 2010 |
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Published in the U.K. as A Terrible Beauty
Republished in 2013 as White Bones
Previously released as A Terrible Beauty
This version has been revised, do not combine with A Terrible Beauty
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There are things I need to know... On a farm in southern Ireland, the dismembered bones of eleven women are found in a common grave, buried eight decades ago. Detective Superintendent Katie Maguire is used to bloodshed, but this ivory litter of human remains is unimaginable butchery. Of other worlds apart from this... In isolated darkness not far away, an American tourist is at the mercy of a serial killer. His tools are a boning knife, twine, and a doll fashioned from nails and fishhooks. The murder of his victims is second only to the pleasure of their pain. Darker places inhabited by evil monstrosities... As an eighty-year-old mystery unfolds, so does a modern-day ritual that's marked Katie Maguire as its next victim. For what happened once in this small picturesque village is happening again. It's more than a series of horrifying crimes. It's tradition. Take me there.

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