Immagine dell'autore.

William Kent Krueger

Autore di Ordinary Grace

39+ opere 16,657 membri 947 recensioni 29 preferito

Sull'Autore

William Kent Krueger grew up in the Cascade Mountains of Oregon. A former logger, construction worker, freelance journalist, & researcher in childhood development, he is the author of two other acclaimed Cork O'Connor novels, "Iron Lake" & "Boundary Waters". (Publisher Provided) William Kent mostra altro Krueger was born in Torrington, Wyoming on November 16, 1950. He attended Stanford University for one year before losing his academic scholarship for participation in a takeover of the president's office in protest of what he saw as the University's complicity in weapons production during the Vietnam War. He wrote short stories and sketches for many years. His first novel, Iron Lake, won the Anthony Award for Best First Novel, the Barry Award for Best First Novel, the Minnesota Book Award, and the Loft-McKnight Fiction Award. He writes the Cork O'Connor series. In 2005 and 2006, he won back-to-back Anthony Awards for best novel. Ordinary Grace won the Edgar Award for Best Novel in 2014. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra meno
Fonte dell'immagine: www.vjbooks.com

Serie

Opere di William Kent Krueger

Ordinary Grace (2013) 2,721 copie
This Tender Land (2019) 2,092 copie
Iron Lake (1998) 1,571 copie
Boundary Waters (1999) 894 copie
Purgatory Ridge (2002) 728 copie
Blood Hollow (2004) 680 copie
Thunder Bay (2007) 661 copie
Copper River (2006) 603 copie
The River We Remember (2023) 580 copie
Mercy Falls (2006) 574 copie
Red Knife (2008) 556 copie
Heaven's Keep (2009) 511 copie
Vermilion Drift (2010) 500 copie
Northwest Angle (2011) 455 copie
Lightning Strike (2021) 448 copie

Opere correlate

Elevator Pitch (2019) 489 copie
Mezzanotte di sangue (2010) — Collaboratore — 325 copie
Games Creatures Play (2014) — Collaboratore — 208 copie
Death Do Us Part: New Stories about Love, Lust, and Murder (2006) — Collaboratore — 127 copie
Twin Cities Noir (2006) — Collaboratore — 84 copie
USA Noir: Best of the Akashic Noir Series (2013) — Collaboratore — 84 copie
The Best American Mystery Stories 2017 (2017) — Collaboratore — 59 copie
Odd Partners: An Anthology (2019) — Collaboratore — 53 copie
Deadly Anniversaries (2020) — Collaboratore — 53 copie
Reader's Digest Select Editions 2000 v01 #247 (2000) — Collaboratore — 42 copie
RDSELP v110 A Walk to Remember | Boundary Waters (1999) — Autore — 21 copie
Reader's Digest Select Editions 2007 v06 #294 (2007) — Collaboratore — 17 copie
Nice Girl Does Noir, Volume 1 (2010) — Prefazione; Prefazione — 17 copie
The Atria International Book of Mysteries (2012) — Collaboratore — 15 copie
Reader's Digest Select Editions 2018 v05 #359 (2018) — Autore — 3 copie
Reader's Digest Select Editions 2019 v04 #366 (2019) — Autore — 3 copie

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Utenti

Recensioni

Fox Creek is a well thought out and researched book. Climate Change and the horrible fight for mankind to survive is the underlying premise for this story. The people most affected by the loss of resources are of course the poorest, the people of the First Nation in North America. Five stars were given in this review for the consistently good thrilling story. Enjoy!
 
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lbswiener | 23 altre recensioni | Apr 12, 2024 |
The River We Remember, William Kent Krueger, author; CJ Wilson, narrator
When the novel begins, a body is discovered that has seemingly been eaten by catfish, after falling into the Alabaster River. This river is a sight to behold at certain times when it magically turns a brilliant white in the moonlight. As the victim’s death is analyzed, the cause is not what it at first appears to be. So, why does the sheriff clean the scene of the crime of any evidence to indicate who killed the man or why he was killed?
As the story proceeds, the reader is introduced to many characters, some that do not fit the mold of some of the townspeople. There is a Japanese woman resented because of her country’s part in the past war. There is the Native American, Noah Bluestone. who married Kyoko. He is maligned unfairly as a lawless man. There are veterans of different wars who are suffering from PTSD, there are widows of the war’s victims. There are young teenage boys influenced by their own lives and issues which make them stand apart. There are poignant legends of the Native American. There are men and women with monstrous secrets in their past history of abuse, neglect, brothels and murder. There are men who are amoral and there are drunks. There is Charlie, a compassionate, female lawyer at a time when there were few in the profession. There is the abuse of the weaker sex and the young. Who are vulnerable. Then, there is the richest man in town, whose body had just been discovered, brutally mutilated by the fish. His poor reputation, as that of an arrogant man and cruel taskmaster, preceded his still unexpected demise. Though it was thought that many harbored animosities toward him, because of his behavior toward them, one suspect stood out among the rest, because of a stereotypical and hypocritical mindset, prejudice, jealousy and perhaps greed.
This is not a town used to violence, so Jimmy Quinn’s death, though it may not be mourned as it would have been if he had been a kind man, it is still viewed with fear and doubt. Who would have done such a thing? Even if there were many people with motives, not many were capable of murder.
The book has drama, romance, mystery, humanity, compassion, and evil. It is also a coming-of-age novel for certain characters and it is a distinct illustration of morality and the lack of it, courage and cowardice. It is a picture of human frailty and human strength at their best and worst.
It is an examination of the horrors of war, the quest for survival at all costs, the flaws of society, the damaged human beings that need help, the bullies and the saints. Is everyone a bit of both?
The sheriff, Brody Dern, who seems like an honorable man has secrets. The woman, Angie, who runs the Wagon Wheel Café has secrets. The sister-in-law of the sheriff, Garnet, has secrets. The dead man has many secrets. Many of the townspeople suffer from nightmares because of their pasts.
As the secrets and characters are revealed, the story evolves seamlessly, even with its twists and turns. The very nature of humanity is explored, and the very flawed nature of humanity is revealed, along with its goodness. The tragedy of war is exposed. Not only the river remembers its history, each of the characters carries the burden of theirs and must deal with it.
The novel plays out in Jewel, in Black Earth County, Minnesota, with ordinary people who have the ordinary problems of life and then some. Their memories haunt them. Their dreams sometimes become nightmares. Like the Alabaster River that appears white only at certain times, they often appear differently at different times. However, the true character of people will come out, eventually. Nothing can remain hidden forever. What shapes us, our history, will eventually be revealed. We all experience both the harm and benefits of our past, but we all stay true to ourselves, in the end.
… (altro)
 
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thewanderingjew | 28 altre recensioni | Apr 12, 2024 |
DNF. It’s too depressing. I read the plot summary after deciding not to finish, and it seems to stay depressing. Decent writing, interesting idea, but so much could have been done better here.
 
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jnoshields | 127 altre recensioni | Apr 10, 2024 |
Book number 7 in the Cork O'Connor world--I think it's the best one so far. It deals with the backstory on Henry Meloux with a large dose of O'Connor family thrown in. It's exciting, the characters are good and believable. Excellent, satisfying series.
 
Segnalato
buffalogr | 35 altre recensioni | Mar 27, 2024 |

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Statistiche

Opere
39
Opere correlate
33
Utenti
16,657
Popolarità
#1,356
Voto
4.0
Recensioni
947
ISBN
355
Lingue
6
Preferito da
29

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