Rezensionen: Dennis Lehane, Genichiro Takahashi, Johan Theorin

Julien Védrenne setzt sich mit Dennis Lehanes “Ils vivent la Nuit” auseinander, Kristophe Noel bespricht Genichiro Takahashis mit autobiographischen Zügen versehenes Buch “Sayonara, Gangsters”, und Fabien Maurice hat “Froid mortel” von Johan Theorin gelesen.

Rezension: Dennis Lehane: “Live by Night”

Reading “Live By Night”, a novel that begins in 1920s Boston, one gets the sense that the War on Drugs will one day be considered as foolhardy as Prohibition. Film rights have already been snapped up by Leonardo DiCaprio’s production company.

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Rezensionen: Val McDermid, Declan Burke, Dennis Lehane, Deon Meyer

Andrew Taylor about Val McDermid’s new Thriller “The Vanishing Point”, a standalone thriller, “Slaughter’s Hound”, by Declan Burke, “Live By Night” by Dennis Lehane and the modern south africa thriller “7 days” by Deon Meyer.

Rezension: Dennis Lehane: “Live by Night”

Lehane’s latest, “Live by Night,” functions both as an independent narrative and a loosely connected sequel to “The Given Day.” The story begins in 1926, by which time Prohibition — perhaps the greatest gift to organized crime in the country’s history — is in full swing.

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Rezension: Dennis Lehane: “Live by Night”

“Live by Night” is Crime Noir 101, as taught by the best of its current practitioners. “Some years later, on a tugboat in the Gulf of Mexico, Joe Coughlin’s feet were placed in a tub of cement,” Dennis Lehane writes in this perfect specimen of an opening sentence.

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Rezensionen: Lehane, Kellermann, Locke, Barclay, Connolly

Julia Handford casts an eye over the latest crime books: “Live by Night” (Dennis Lehane), “I’ll Catch You” (Jesse Kellerman), “The Cutting Season” (Attica Locke), “Trust Your Eyes” (Linwood Barclay) and John Connolly’s “Books to Die for”.

Oktober-Ausgabe der Krimi-Couch

Unter anderem mit »Radikal« von Yassin Musharbash, »Die Larve« von Jo Nesbø, »Homicide« von David Simon, »Moonlight Mile« von Dennis Lehane, »Einschlägig bekannt« von Dominique Manotti, dem Krimilabor und vielem mehr …

CrimeMag: Artikel und Rezensionen zur Kriminalliteratur

Dieses Mal mit der Fortsetzung des »Ekelhaften Leichnams«, einer O-Ton-Collage von Henrike Heiland, Carlos Kolumne, Besprechungen zu David Simons Homicide, Cay Rademachers Der Trümmermörder, Dennis Lehanes Moonlight Mile und vieles, vieles mehr.

Kolumne: Leichenberg

Diesmal über Dennis Lehane: »Moonlight Mile«, John Grisham: »Das Geständnis«, Ferdinand von Schirach: »Der Fall Collini«, Norbert Horst: »Splitter im Auge«, Pierre Souvestre und Marcel Allain: »Ein Zug verschwindet«.