The detective roderick thorp pdf download


















I wanted to escape the terror, but I couldn't stop turning the pages. Horrifying and disgusting, Lockman is a character I'll not soon forget, as much as I may try. The main cop character, neither detestable nor very likable, did move the story along nicely and added interesting insight into police work and politics.

Disclaimer: I know nothing about police work or politics I had to give it 5 stars after reading the ending. In the p Thorp took me into the thoughts and actions of a serial killer. In the past, I've knocked a star off for ridiculous endings on otherwise perfectly written books May 24, Caleb Edison rated it liked it.

I picked up this book and finished it only a couple of days later. For that, I give it a mandatory 3 star. Ehhh, the lead detective is kind of gross in my opinion. The killer is constantly touching himself and the author spends a lot of time talking about sex and penises.

The ending raises ethical questions that I didn't really appreciate as someone who was hoping to find the plot at least somewhat tied to the actual justice system. Really, by the end of the book, I found myself loo I picked up this book and finished it only a couple of days later. Really, by the end of the book, I found myself looking at the picture of the author on the back and thinking, "what a pig.

May 04, Bob Box rated it liked it. Read in A fictional solution to the unsolved murders of 50 some prostitues in the Pacific Northwest in the 's. Dec 04, Catten rated it really liked it. Roderick Thorp. Who's that? Think of a book called Nothing Lasts Forever. Doesn't ring a bell? How about the movie Die Hard? That's the book the movie was made from.

I confess that I'd never heard of Thorp or his book until my mom passed the paperback along to me. I was visiting family in the Pacific Northwest when I started reading it. While it's a bit unsettling to follow the activities of a serial killer in places familiar, I hav Roderick Thorp.

The chapters switch from one's world to the other's without becoming confusing. Thorp's talent lies in his storytelling. He's worked as a private detective for his father and as a crime reporter, and it shows. His research is great, he keeps a good pace throughout, and he draws the reader right into his trap, complete with a surprise - if somewhat "Hollywood" - ending.

That he could pull off having just two main characters when the real investigation had as many as 56 officers in , is impressive. Oct 08, David rated it liked it. Another great police suspense story from Mr. Taking place in the Pacific Northwest, Thorpe delivers a little bit of "meta-fiction" in this story--taking actual events of the Green River serial killer and incorporating his characters into the action.

Definitely a page-turner. Lori Micho rated it liked it Feb 07, Chris rated it did not like it Apr 14, Jerry Williams rated it it was amazing Apr 27, Justin rated it liked it Aug 16, At its core, it is a character study of immense proportion.

And Hollywood has done some amazing work in that regard: just look at Citizen Kane , widely regarded to be one of, if not the, best film ever made. Nothing about his interpretation of Joseph Leland is anything other than Sinatra being himself, from his suit to his fedora. And I was over-exaggerating Sinatra only giving us different shades of yelling as his acting ability.

After he berates Tesla into giving a confession, he mopes about for a bit and fucks his wife after yelling at her, of course.

Then he continues to be aloof and mopey. I understand that emotionlessness is what Sinatra thought was awesome, but it makes Leland seem like a selfish bag of dicks. The particularly galling thing about this is that almost every other actor in the film is actually pretty good — Jack Klugman, Robert Duvall, and Sugar Ray Robinson are examples of other cops that outshine Leland in personality and skill.

Gone is the World War II plot, Stephanie vanishes from the story altogether, the timeline is super compacted, and most of the interviews vanish into the ether. While I can certainly understand that liberties need to be taken, the resulting script leaves so little room to breathe that we never really understand Leland as a character outside of the most superficial of designations. In the book, almost everything Leland does is through the frame of how his daughter may interpret it.

He loves his wife, but his relationship with her is toxic. Norma is massively important to him and the overall plot. Even a minor character, such as his secretary, is still a valuable part of understanding Leland as a character — she is actually given P.

These scenes, though, do nothing to flesh out Leland as a character. He looks the other way for a prostitute so she can visit her family on Christmas — okay, so what? He excoriates his boss about the arrest of civil rights protestors. He sucker punches an asshole cop who is beating up on some poor gay transients. The preposterous thing about everything that had been stripped out of the book is that film still clocks in at just under two hours.

The movie somehow manages to be completely rushed and fevered while at the same time feeling insipid and dull-as-dishwater. For instance, some scenes sound like they were recorded in a cave. Set design is fucking boring, which is especially noticeable because the audience is desperate to engage with anything other than the better actors desperately chewing their way through what remains of the plot.

The director of photography does get a special commendation for shot composition being serviceable rather than incompetent, but I doubt that will ever be brought up on the special edition re-release. Ultimately, the movie was clearly just a soulless cash grab. There was either no care or understanding about what actually made The Detective unique.

Thanks to the utterly inept handling of The Detective as a medium of visual entertainment, the book is far and away the winner. There are countless things wrong with the movie, but at its heart it failed to engage its audience on a meaningful level. Joseph Leland of the book is a human being with flaws and personality, while the movie version is a thin veneer of machismo over an empty shell terrified people will eventually see through it.

You are commenting using your WordPress. You are commenting using your Google account. You are commenting using your Twitter account. You are commenting using your Facebook account. Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email. Twenty-Four Pages Per Second. Skip to content. Home Meet the Reviewers. Reviewed by: Jonathan B. Business Visionaries.

Hot Property. Times Events. Times Store. Facebook Twitter Show more sharing options Share Close extra sharing options. Thorp died Wednesday in Oxnard of a heart attack, according to his son, Roddy Thorp. He was



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