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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good, solid read, but lacks the depth of High and Low., March 21, 2005
King's Ransom seems like a very unlikely source of material for Japanese director Akira Kurosawa, better know for his samurai epics. However, Kurosawa pulled it off brilliantly, making one of his best films. The source book, by Ed McBain, is solid and well written -- and exciting read. However, it lacks the depth and the staying power of High and Low. The story, as told by McBain, is a straightforward detective story. There are no larger issues contemplated than whether Douglas King should pay the ransom for his chauffer's son, mistakenly kidnapped in place of his own son. Kurosawa, in contrast, turned the story into an indictment of Japanese society with its rigid views of where everyone fits in the caste system. We understand Douglas King's motivation, but he never generates the sympathy we feel for Toshiro Mifune's equivalent character in High and Low. It's a good book, but unlike High and Low, it doesn't really stay with you afterwards.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
GREAT READING!!!1, March 31, 2002
I know of no one else who can pack so much action into such a short period of time. This is book ten and I am trying to read them in order. The story in nearly all the books take place in a day or two. The books are short and make for a quick read. They are very enjoyable. A boy is kidnapped, but it is the wrong boy. They were supposed to get the son of Douglas King, a very wealth man, but they got the son of his chauffeur instead. King has all his money tied up in buying controling interest in a shoe company and if he pays the ransom he loses the shoe company. The men from the 87th are trying to find who took the boy but if King does not pay they think the boy will be killed. Every thing moves at a very fast pace, will King do what is right and pay up? Will Carella and company find the boy? Makes for a good read.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
A king's Ransom Indeed., July 13, 2008
A vintage McBain, if there is such thing for McBain's 87th Precinct stories are timeless. The detective crew of the 87th are always fresh, the characters are so well drawn that if I'd meet Steve Carella, Artie Brown and unfortunate Bert Cling on the street I would not only instantly recognize them but would greet them as old friends. I could not bestow a higher praise on this work than to call it, what I did in the first sentence, "A vintage McBain."
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