|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Reviewed by Barb Radmore,
This review is from: Fever (A Sergeant Studer Mystery) (Paperback)
Bitter Lemon Press is an London publishing company who specializes in fiction from authors of Africa, Europe and Latin America ."Our books are entertaining and gripping novels which expose the darker side of foreign places. They have a strong sense of place and explore what lies just beneath the surface of the bustling life of Mexico City, Paris or Munich." Fever was originally published in 1937, this is its first time published in English. It is considered a crime classic in Europe- one of the most prestigious awards for German mysteries award is named The Glauser for this reason. Fever is the third book in the Sergeant Struder novel series translated and published by Bitter Lemon. It is the third of the five in this Krimie series.
The Bern policeman, Sergeant Struder, has just become a grandfather. It is an occasion that brings him no joy, the combined feelings that he has lost his daughter for good and is getting old are melancholy ones. It is in this mood that he meets The White Father, a priest who has a tale that foretells the death of two elderly sisters, cities apart. It is the beginning of a mystery that will take him from Paris to Switzerland to North Africa. As pieces of the crime come together through a family history that spans the years, Struder must follow its puzzle to the end. His dreams of youth are embodied in the girl Marie who appears and disappears at every juncture. He follows the tale to the Foreign Legion, again a dream from his youth. In writing style, the book is almost two different tomes in one. The first half concentrates on getting the parts of the mystery together, each piece finding its place in the crime riddle. But as the story moves to the Foreign Legion it becomes more surreal, more other worldly. A scene where Struder watches a gazelle and dog play together in a room is extraordinary. The writing becomes more colorful, vivid and engaging. "The sea was filthy and the waves were like fat old women with not quite clean hair- the scarves fluttered in the air as the women rolled laboriously on." ""In the sky was an improbably white moon, which was vainly trying to wipe away the clouds that kept floating past its flat nose." It is there that Struder solves what he had hoped would be his "Big Case," the one that would regain him his status within the Bern police depatrment. But people and the case are not what they may seem. Friedrich Glauser (1896-1938) was a Swiss writer. Due to schizophrenia and depression and an addiction to morphine and opium he was confined to various psychiatric wards, asylums and prison. It was at the Swiss insane asylum Waldau that he wrote his novels. He was released in 1938 with plans to marry his nurse, Berthe Bendel. He collapsed and died at the dinner the night before their wedding on December 6, 1938. The translation is also noteworthy. It was a very tricky task to be able to translate the subtleties of the Swiss German with its formal and informal forms of address. The du versus the Sie can alter the nuances of a scene but there are no separate words in English. Mike Mitchell has done an admirable job of coping with both an earlier, stylized form of writing and the use of German, Swiss German and French within the book. Coming out September 2006- put it on your wish list now!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Studer left me in the dust,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Fever (A Sergeant Studer Mystery) (Paperback)
I very much enjoy Glauser's economical style. And I liked this book very much but I was slightly dissatisfied with the ending. I thought there might be more about what Studer would do after cracking the "big case".
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very exciting,
This review is from: Fever (A Sergeant Studer Mystery) (Paperback)
Euphoric to learn he is a grandfather, Police Sergeant Jacob Studer knows anyone can see the obvious connection between the deaths of the two elderly women in different Swiss cities though the local cops assume it is an accident anyway. Both died from gas leaks in their respective homes in Bern and Basel, but the prime link is each of them had been married to the same man.
Though only a visitor, Studer accompanies his friend Police Commissaire Madelin to Basel where he helps in the investigation in which clues and suspects vanish rather easily as if someone with power is manipulating the inquiry. Studer focuses on Father Matthias, brother of the victims' late husband, as his prime suspect, but also does not rule out other family members whose motive might be some passion filled vengeance, but who remains just out of reach. This is an English translation of a classic 1936 police procedural first printed in Germany. The cast makes the tale as they are eccentric in many ways driving the free drinking some might say alcoholic Studer to distraction. However, unable to let go, the obsessed cop follows clues that seem to vanish in a nano second to wherever it takes him including North Africa. Readers of off beat convoluted illogical whodunits will want to read the fascinating Studer cases (see IN MATTO'S REALM) in which the protagonist makes for an interesting different type of mystery. Harriet Klausner
4.0 out of 5 stars
Back to 1937!,
By
This review is from: Fever (A Sergeant Studer Mystery) (Paperback)
I looked up this book because Germany's prestigious crime fiction award is named after the author so I figured he must write really good crime fiction, so I decided to try it.This book was originally published in serial form in 1937 in Germany and is a contemporary based police procedural story of the day. It was only published in book form in German in 1996! Pros: Reading this book is like going back in time and reading history - you feel like you're going back in a time capsule to 1937. For 1937, it's surprisingly modern. Apart from cell phones and of course computers, people are still driving cars, riding trains, taking boats, living in houses, drinking wine and beer, and of course solving mysteries. So after reading the book I felt that I could go back in time and not miss too much! Cons: It suffers from two things. One is evolution of the crime fiction. I feel that modern crime fiction authors have learned a lot from previous authors. It's like the accumulation of knowledge from all the crime fiction that has ever been written, i.e. the evolution of plot devices, suspenseful writing, etc. It's a long way of saying that modern crime fiction is just "better" or more exciting than fiction written a long time ago. The plot is still pretty good, and character development is pretty good too, especially the main character Sergeant Studer, who suffers from the same home and office afflictions of a modern police sergeant of 2011. The other thing which suffers is the translation. I was surprised to read that it was translated in 2006, which makes this a modern translation, not one done in the 1930's. However, I felt it was stilted and not easy to read. But not knowing German, it could also mean that the translation was a faithful one, it's just that the original writing was also a bit stilted. Overall, the book was a bit slow, but I liked it enough that I'm going to give the other Friedrich Glauser's books a try. After all, you don't get the crime fiction award named after you for nothing! |
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Fever (A Sergeant Studer Mystery) by Friedrich Glauser (Paperback - November 1, 2006)
$14.95
In Stock | ||