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John Peyton Cooke

Autor von Torsos

10+ Werke 238 Mitglieder 5 Rezensionen

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Werke von John Peyton Cooke

Torsos (1993) 77 Exemplare
The Chimney Sweeper (1994) 54 Exemplare
Out for Blood (1991) 47 Exemplare
The Lake (1989) 21 Exemplare
Haven (1996) 11 Exemplare
Serostatus (2010) 3 Exemplare
The Penitent (2011) 3 Exemplare

Zugehörige Werke

Dark Love (1995) — Mitwirkender — 252 Exemplare
The Best American Mystery Stories 2003 (2003) — Mitwirkender — 204 Exemplare
Embracing The Dark (1991) — Mitwirkender — 43 Exemplare
The Valancourt Book of Horror Stories, volume 4 (2020) — Mitwirkender — 15 Exemplare

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#1099 in our old book database. Rated: Indifferent

Adele read #62, 3/10/1996. Not rated.
 
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villemezbrown | 1 weitere Rezension | Nov 2, 2023 |
Mucha gente podía haber querido eliminar a un chapero como Eddie Andrassy. Eddie podía haber sido el blanco de cualquiera: chulos rivales, gángsters, camellos o un cónyuge celoso. Pero eso no explica que su cuerpo quedara reducido a un torso mutilado y sin cabeza. Eddie es la primera víctima del «asesino de los torsos» de Cleveland, al menos eso cree el inspector de la brigada de homicidios Hank «Lucky» Lambert.
Pero, desde luego, no va a ser el último. A medida que van apareciendo cadáveres grotescamente desfigurados y que las presiones políticas y personales aumentan, Hank se da cuenta de que su buena suerte se está terminando… Torsos, de John Peyton Cooke, es una brillante novela de suspense basada en los crímenes de un autor de asesinatos múltiples que sumió a la ciudad en una pesadilla.
Se trata del Cleveland de los años treinta, donde Eliot Ness, el flamante enemigo del hampa que quería imponer la ley a una inestable población de vagabundos y delincuentes, ve que la ciudad se convierte en campo abierto para los perversos y crueles placeres de un hombre.
… (mehr)
 
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ArchivoPietro | 1 weitere Rezension | Oct 27, 2020 |
A sad story about the AIDS crisis.
 
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aulsmith | Dec 9, 2010 |
A compelling story of character growth and coming of age. The main character, Jesse, is ego centered and almost sociopathic when we first meet him as he tries to meet his basic needs with no regard for who is hurt, or has to be killed, in order for him to have what he needs/wants. Ultimately he gives himself up to another for their pleasure in order to gain his basic necessities.
Somehow, by inches at a time, he changes. He finds personal values, the ability to love and be loved, trust and be trusted, and basically his sense of humanity. He even becomes a cop and a positive contributor to society at large.
However, as his murderous past is about to be revisited we find his growth and development might not be complete. His respect for others seems to just be superficial and his inner turmoil is at odds with his new career and values. We begin to discover how Jesse became so conflicted, what horrors in his childhood led him to run away and gave him such a childlike need for others to provide for him with little to no regard for their own needs.
Basically Jesse is someone we aren't supposed to like. We aren't supposed to sympathize with his carnal nature. He can't be "the hero" of this story because he committed murder(s). Somehow though John Peyton Cooke makes you see Jesse empathetically and we begin to see that though the murders are truly unjustified, maybe he has grown and rehabilitated himself through acts of self-sacrifice and committing himself to a life, his calling, of being a good cop and doing good works.
If you think what would have happened if he had been arrested right after the last murder and connected to all the others - no one would have cared about how he became so contemptuous of others - they just would have seen the acts and wanted justice. But John Peyton Cooke is able to make that quick justice seem the real crime because here we see a person can continue to grow and develop even after committing heinous deeds. In Jesse's case he could be said to just have been "acting out" and once the rage and self-hatred were ruptured he was able to move on and begin healing.
But what about the people he killed? Where are their rights? Where is their ability to grow and develop? Is Jesse's evolution enough to justify what happened, what he did? This is not an easy story to digest and isn't going to leave you satisfied with things at the conclusion. But the questions you are left with are good ones. Things we should think about. I don't what John Peyton Cooke's goals were when writing this book, but if he wanted to question the death penalty and out justice system in general, he met his goal. If he wanted to make people see that there can be redemption even for those that have fallen as far as you can fall, the he met his goal.
Bottom line - don't read this for escapism from life, read it to challenge yourself to value life more for what potentials are still out there for all of us as long as we live our lives.
… (mehr)
½
 
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GothicGuru13 | 1 weitere Rezension | Feb 7, 2010 |

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Werke
10
Auch von
4
Mitglieder
238
Beliebtheit
#95,270
Bewertung
½ 3.5
Rezensionen
5
ISBNs
22
Sprachen
1

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