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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
This can't be written by the Philip Kerr I've read before,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Five-Year Plan (Mass Market Paperback)
Although I missed his Berlin noir trilogy, I found Philip Kerr'S "Philosophical Investigation" to be a truly provocative book written by an author of intellect, existential wisdom and intriguing speculations of life in the near future. Kerr's "The Grid" screams screenplay, but as a Hollywood action film, could be one of the better offerings and was an absorbing, good read. "Esau," exploring still another sub-genre in the thriller category(mountaineering/anthropology etc.) to me, further affirmed Kerr's versatility and talents. I genuinely relished all three novels and eagerly anticipated Five-Year Plan.I thought my disappointment with "Five-Year" Plan was unique, but upon perusing readers' comments here on Amazon, others seem to have also felt Kerr shows himself as an Elmore Leonard wanna be in this prosaic and sometimes banal, gangster farce. The gratuitous scatological obsessions appearing with little reason other than to offend, definitely distracted from any merits the plot may have had. The characters went beyond stereotypical into cardboard caricatures. If this had been the only book of Kerr's I'd read, I would not ever have known he was a gifted, literate writer. I hope Kerr's intellect returns from its hiatus for his next venture.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
This was the tie breaker. 3.5 stars I rounded up.,
This review is from: Five-Year Plan (Hardcover)
Unlike many other reviewers, I discovered Mr. Kerr's work much later, so my experience is in working back from "The Shot". I am not surprised by the reviews as few Authors can maintain a level that marks the best of their abilities book after book. Readers not only want the new work to be as good as previous efforts but even better.Of the 3 I have read, "The Shot", "ESAU" and now "A Five Year Plan", it's 2 out of three and I plan to continue working my way back through his work. If the other reviewers are correct, the reading experience should be even better. The enjoyment in this book was the dialogue. It was the strength of the work and ironically was responsible for the poorer parts as well. When good it reminded me of "Get Shorty", when bad, which was very infrequent, it was the result of trying to retain a level of cleverness for too long. One-line remarks are great, but there is a definite limit as to how long they can be sustained, and in 3 or 4 instances I Believe Mr. Kerr pushed too far. It's a fine line from a great run of dialogue to one line too many that kills the entire passage. Like "ESAU" the Governmental Authorities were moronic with the exception of the Female lead. They are not even interesting in how empty-headed they are. Creating a character that is boring, annoying, but interesting to read is a challenge, if the Author misses you get the same reading enjoyment as you would if you were actually dealing with the character. And some of them seem to be uncomfortable in their roles, as they don't have anything to do in the book; they have little to nothing to do with the story. My ranking of this book is on the dialogue at or near it's best, and happily that is the majority of the time. The plot is average as there is nothing so new or clever to keep your attention. The dialogue is very very good, it is also quite off color, bawdy, or really crude depending on your taste. So if you don't care for humor that at times may make you wince, this isn't for you. There is nothing that bad, but for some, there will be just too much. I'm glad I stuck it out for a third book. I hope to enjoy the others as much as other reviewers.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Only one suprise is too few for a Kerr Novel,
By TEBAYNES@AOL.COM (Rural Central Florida) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Five-Year Plan (Hardcover)
After reading March Violets, I was a Kerr fan. Pale Criminal and German requiem were outstanding and then the slide began. Philosophical Investigation and Dead Meat were just a little off center. The Grid tried but didn't have the snap, Esau slowed and then Five Year plan is the least interesting. Too much moralizing became corny or cant and while four letter words can add snap, in this case they bacame as boring as "ahh". THere are interesting parts to this tale, but I would rather reread Berlin noir.
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