N Is for Noose
| List Price: |
$25.00 |
| Amazon Price: |
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| Lowest New Price: |
$5.01 |
| Lowest Used Price: |
$2.44 |
| Total New: |
5 |
| Total Used: |
16 |
DVD Details:
- Starring:
- Director:
- Format: Bargain Price
- Rated:
- Studio:
- Theatrical Release Date: Dec 31, 1969
- DVD Release Date: Dec 31, 1969
- Run Time:
- ASIN: B0000632J4
- UPC:
- Sales Rank: 405096
Amazon Customer Reviews:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
    Quick Read with a Tiresomely "Non-Conclusion" Conclusion, 2008-08-13
Sue Grafton writes in an energetic, highly readable style and has the gift for creating memorable characters; at the same time, as the series has progressed it has aquired a formula quality, and where N IS FOR NOOSE is concerned Grafton makes an incredibly gross error that gives the work a distinctly unfinished feeling.
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br /Kinsey Millhone is a no-nonsense private detective whose work usually consists of skip traces, missing persons, and leg work; on this occasion, however, she is summoned from her usual stomping grounds in Santa Teresa to the isolated community of Nota Lake, where she is hired by Selma Newquist to discover why Selma's husband Tom was so peturbed in the weeks before his natural-causes death. As it happens, Tom was an extremely well-respected man and police officer, and his family, friends, and co-workers do not take kindly to an investigation they believe may tarnish his reputation.
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br /As in all Grafton novels, Kinsey is presented as one smart cookie--but as in most Grafton novels in the series, the climax of the story is actually precipitated through Kinsey's incredibly stupid blunder. Even so, the book reads at a fast clip and is quite entertaining until you realize that Grafton has provided no motive for two of three murders that drive the plot. In the first instance the motive is clear; in the second two, however, we are merely told who the killer is and given no idea of how the victims were connected with the killer, much less why they were killed. The result is a non-conclusion, and it not been for this flaw I would have ranked the title slightly higher.
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br /GFT, Amazon Reviewer
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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
    OK nightstand book, 2008-03-11
This is the first Grafton book I've read. It features Kinsey Millhone, a female private investigator who's doing a friend a favor by checking out some suspicions a widow has about her husband's last weeks. The husband died of quite natural causes; what is bothering the widow is how stressed out her husband was.
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br /As with most simple cases, this one is everything but simple. No one wants to talk about the deceased or what might have been eating him. Everyone in the small California town east of the Sierras knows everyone else's business. And someone clearly does NOT want Kinsey snooping around.
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br /The writing was pretty good, though the dialogue didn't sound much like the way people talk. Kinsey is likable enough -- a real woman -- but she almost had me missing Janet Evanovich's bounty hunter Stephanie Plum. Even if I often get annoyed at how girly Plum can be, she's a lot funnier than Millhone.
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br /By the time I got near the end of the book, I wanted to scream at Millhone, because it was quite clear to me who it was threatening her and why, but maybe she couldn't have been expected to see that clearly, given... well, you have to read it yourself and see.
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br /This was an entertaining little diversion -- suitable for the train or beach or vacation or for your 10-minutes-before-you-fall-asleep reading. Not stunning literature, but fun.
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