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Slam the Big Door (1960)

par John D. MacDonald

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1995136,272 (3.89)3
When Mike Rodenska, a former journalist and recent widower, visits his old friend Troy Jamison in Florida, he's shocked at what he finds. For despite the parties, the shapely women, the devil-may-care air that surrounds Troy and his friends, Mike can see a life slowly coming apart. The only question is: why? Putting together the pieces of his friend's life -- and downfall -- turns an ordinary visit into a mystery that Mike Rodenska is compelled to solve . . . .… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 3 mentions

5 sur 5
Maybe 3.5 stars .,,, characters are well developed and it is a good read. I think you have to be a certain age range to appreciate this book, but I may be wrong. I grew up in the 60's and 70's, so I could relate well to the culture of that period. ( )
  rjdycus | Dec 19, 2022 |
After writing a few average SF short stories and novels MacDonald turned to Thrillers and never looked back. Thank God for John D. MacDonald. If ever a writer had his finger on the pulse of the human animal it was him.

Great 1950s thriller by an author who was just getting started. ( )
1 voter ikeman100 | Feb 3, 2021 |
This book combines a morality play with MacDonald's is at the dispoiling of Florida by developers. World war two and the wealth it brought America in is aftermath changed many values in America. At the time many people questioned the changing values. To some extent every generation goes through that. The pill set the stage for even more dramatic change.
Post traumatic stress disorder was yet to be recognized. She'll shock an extreme and acute version had become part of the vocabulary but as a society we had yet to realize the chronic burden many carried at wars end. That is part of what MacDonald addresses here. MacDonald was there and saw what it did to the combatants, including himself. It probably did him good to get some of that of of his chest.
The scene of action for the novel is an amalgam of a couple of places on Florida's West coast - probably nearer Sarasota. It is interesting to hear him speak of a getaway to Marco. A much different place when the novel was written than it is now. At best it was a sleepy Beach town and fishing village. Having lived on the West coast of Florida for the last fort years I identify with MacDonald's disappointment with all the changes he saw take place.
No doubt one of the reasons I enjoy MacDonald's books is that so many are set in Florida. ( )
  waldhaus1 | Jul 27, 2018 |
This book was written in 1960, but not published until the 80's
He demanded that it be hardcover but the publisher refused.
Rodenska and Jamison served in the war together. Jamison went thru a lot and it carried over to current life.
He became involved in a big land deal in SW Florida in 1960 so that is the setting of the book. It is a family tragedy . Since I live in Florida and grew up on the east coast during an earlier period I really enjoyed the descriptions of Fl. during that period. ( )
  pgabj | Nov 30, 2016 |
This hardback edition came out a few weeks before MacDonald. Maybe that is why he was uncharacteristically blunt about the book, his modus operandi in writing, and how he feels when it is done. his story is kind of a modern fairy tale. Mike comes to Florida to heal from his wife's death and to help friend Troy. At the end of the book, everything that Troy had is Mike's, and all because Mike is a terribly nice guy and the rest of the scumbags in the book are not. ( )
  andyray | Sep 23, 2009 |
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The big house - the house of Troy and Mary Jamison - was of stone and slate and glass and redwood - with contrived tiltings and flarings of its egret-white roof.
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When Mike Rodenska, a former journalist and recent widower, visits his old friend Troy Jamison in Florida, he's shocked at what he finds. For despite the parties, the shapely women, the devil-may-care air that surrounds Troy and his friends, Mike can see a life slowly coming apart. The only question is: why? Putting together the pieces of his friend's life -- and downfall -- turns an ordinary visit into a mystery that Mike Rodenska is compelled to solve . . . .

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