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5 Reviews
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Profound, moving, timelessalso full of suspense. Classic!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Slam the Big Door (Mass Market Paperback)
John D. MacDonald scored again with this atmospheric, deeply moving novel about a man both coming to terms with the death of his wife and the wilful self-destruction of his best friend. As usual with John D., the sentiments expressed about life, people and the state of the world in the last half of the millenium are timeless. Why aren't these books more readily available? We are in desperate need of classics like this.
9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great jd, but there's better,
By SML "reader in Northridge" (Northridge, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Slam the Big Door (Hardcover)
I have read or own every jd macdonald novel and short story collection.As with any author, some of his books are great, some merely good, and some are even not so good. "Slam the Big Door" is a fairly good one. But don't miss the greats: "The Empty Trap," "The Girl, the Gold Watch and Everything," every Travis McGee (possible exception of "Freefall in Crimson"), "April Evil," "The Good Old Stuff," "More Good Old Stuff," "Linda"-- found in a two-novella collection called "Border Town Girl." So many more very good ones, but might want to avoid "The Last One Left," and "Barrier Island." More personal favorites: "On the Run," "A Bullet for Cinderella," "Clemmie," "The Only Girl in the Game."
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A novel of morals and manners.,
By
This review is from: Slam the Big Door (Hardcover)
That aptly descriptive phrase is taken from the introduction to the hardcover edition of Slam the Big Door. An introduction written by none other than the book's author, John D. MacDonald himself.This well crafted novel contains a number of fully fleshed out characters, all of whom are quite believable. It would be wrong to classify Slam the Big Door as a mystery; all the important events that go to make up the plot take place right out in the open, in full view of the reader. Nor is it a crime story; DUI is just about the most serious violation of the legal system described in its pages. This is a book about relationships, complex human relationships that bind the characters together and, at times, wrench them apart. Mike Rodenska having recently lost his beloved wife, travels to Florida's gulfcoast ostensibly for a relaxing visit with his friend Troy Jamison and Troy's wife Mary. Once there, it becomes abundantly apparent that Troy needs Mike's help a lot more than Mike needs Troy's hospitality. The Jamisons' marriage is very much on the rocks and Troy's latest business venture is about to go belly up. With the use of very detailed and evocative descriptions, MacDonald succeeds in bringing to life the characters who together compose the circle of family, friends and acquaintances inhabiting the Jamisons' not so idyllic world. This is a thoughtfully written novel about friendship, love, self loathing, human fraility and the emptiness of affluence too easily obtained. Recommended to readers interested in exploring the psychological underpinnings of human behavior.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Human Characters and Catastrophes,
By
This review is from: SLAM THE BIG DOOR. (Paperback)
Investigating the lives and the psyches of his characters, John D. MacDonald makes "Slam the Big Door" as engaging as one of his Travis McGee novels. Just like McGee, Mike Rodenska, our protagonist, steps right into someone else's mess. And like any reliable friend, Mike has to try fix things up.Mike's war buddy and good friend, Troy Jamison, is a repeat offender; after trashing his life once, a decade before, Troy's got to try and destroy another marriage and a throw potentially successful business venture out the window. Mike Rodenska is already facing the loss of his wife to cancer, but just the same he's dealing with a damaged friend, mainly because his friend's wife is a good woman who deserves better. And the good wife is also saddled with a young newly divorced daughter as well. A daughter who is happily complicating matters just for `kicks.' Money, madness, adultery and the decay of friendship are almost more than Mike Rodenska can or wants to handle, but John D. MacDonald likes to punish his main characters. He wants them to be human so he makes them bleed a little.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
The Curse of Rodenska,
By
This review is from: Slam the Big Door (Mass Market Paperback)
The curse of Rodenska is that everyone confides in Mike. He has been the recipient of more tales of woe than he can number. Mike Rodenska is an anti-hero. He is visiting Mary and Troy Jamison. The flavor of that marriage isn't quite right.Mike's wife Button died recently and he has received an inheritance from his father and his boys are in boarding school trying to adjust as new students. At an earlier time Troy Jamison had had both a wife and a girl friend. Later Mike rescued Troy, who was alcoholic and malnourished. Now Troy Jamison has a different wife and a different field of work-- real estate development. His previous mishaps made it impossible for him to continue in the field of advertising and public relations. Troy is trying to make his project, Horseshoe Pass Estates, into a success. A group of good old boys is angling to take over the project at little expense by bribing Troy's employees and other machinations. Someone tells Mike that the exclusive sandpits along the west coast of Florida are not in reality filled with Floridians. They have attracted people from other regions. They resemble cruise ships. There is frantic aimlessness. Jamison and Rodinska, both journalists, met in the Marines in the Pacific during World War II. In Troy's pattern of building things up and tearing things down there is a cycle created to defeat his positive actions. |
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Slam the Big Door by John D. MacDonald (Hardcover - June 1, 1987)
$34.00 $25.84
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