|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
45 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
49 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Terse, nimble, white-knuckle thriller,
By
This review is from: Thirteen Hours (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Afrikaner Deon Meyer's latest pulse-pounding thriller hits the ground running--literally. In Cape Town, South Africa, at six in the morning, an American teenage tourist is running for her life. Her best friend's throat was slit in front of her and she is bolting from the perpetrators' clutches. The story hits its stride early and swiftly as events unfold over thirteen-hours. Vicious outlaws and the snarl of conspiracy; Afrikaner, Xhosa, and Zulu crime-fighters; and crooners and corporate fleecers storm the pages of the book. Besides Rachel Anderson, the pursued and wily tourist, there's music industry giant, Adam Barnard, found shot and dead near his hard-drinking, faded-diva wife.
This is my third Meyer book (this is his seventh), after reading Dead at Daybreak and Blood Safari, all set in the author's home country. The narrative is bracing and the characters resonant and ripe. Meyer delivers with sizzle in this dual-crime novel; his terse prose lances the pages, and the pitch-perfect pace purrs and thrums. The reader feels like a detective as fragments eventually pull together from the grime of corruption. You suspect, you speculate, and you quiver. The knot of Barnard's death is teased out concurrently with Rachel's web of intrigue. Meyer is brilliant at interlocking disparate characters, events, and scenes, and at solving parallel puzzles. The crisp story is supported by trenchant characters. Benny Griessel, the Slavic-eyed, bushy-haired Inspector with a sinking marriage and six months sobriety, has a sharp radar and a fox's energy, as well as a tarnished reputation. He pursues the perps with thirsty zeal while trying to keep his inner demons at bay. Can he save his marriage? Can he rescue the girl? Will the lure of drink undo him? Benny struggles to keep it together while people's lives are falling apart. Fransman Dekker, an apt, avid cop with a strident temper, is furious about the racial hiring practice in the department. He's close to losing his cool over the results of affirmative action--not black enough, not white enough, feeling the statistical stab of "eight percent coloured." His nemesis, Zulu Mbali Kaleni, is one of the most delightfully imperious and exotic policewomen I have come across in fiction. She looks like an "overstuffed piegeon," with a "big bulge in front and a big bulge behind in her tight black trouser suit." Dekker, Griessel, and Kaleni, like the other players in the book, are dimensional and sympathetic. Meyer has a knack for fiery characters that vault from the pages while they crackle and burn. The story is taut and the climax is gripping. Although more cinematic and conventional than his previous work, Meyer's brio is seductive, his pointed narrative is spicy. Some parts are predictable, yet without feeling tired and shopworn. He tells the story with a candid depth that is wholly humane and authentic. A primal essence buzzes and hums as he juxtaposes scenes, cutting from one jolting moment to the next. And although I am typically put off by cell phone bits in a novel, Meyer's snappy insertions actually increase the story's tensile strength. The chapters revolve around the clock and the minutes fly with the pages. He controls the fluid narrative with an acid restraint and never goes overboard. It vibrates with soul, but it's not for the faint of heart.
18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"In this country the possibilities were complicated and legion, the agendas inscrutable. It was all antagonism and suspicion.",
By
This review is from: Thirteen Hours (Hardcover)
In his best and most complex novel yet, Afrikaans-writer Deon Meyer recreates thirteen hours of life in Cape Town, South Africa, hour by terrifying hour, revealing more about the city's many criminal cultures than you may want to know. The police who try to keep the criminal underworld at bay are undermanned and undertrained. A series of police scandals has led the National Commissioner to establish a whole new South African Police Service (SAPS), retaining the best and most experienced officers within new departments and hiring new recruits from all racial groups. Racial differences, tribal differences, and changing historical roles add to the complexities here as good people try to prevent crimes in a fraught and changing environment in which the Metro Police are also flexing muscles over control, and private security agencies perform their own investigations.
In the opening pages, a young girl, still in her teens, is tearing through the city, begging for help from people she sees, as she tries to escape five or six young men who are pursuing her. Her companion, who was also trying to escape these men, now lies dead, her throat slit and her backpack stolen. SAPS Captain Benny Griessel and his young, inexperienced staff are assigned to this case, and soon have their worst fears realized. The young victim was an American tourist, with all the governmental complications that entails on all levels. At the same time, the body of a music executive, shot in the head with his own gun, is found at home near his wife, an alcoholic who knows of his flagrant affairs and who has been lying passed out for hours. She appears to have shot him. As Benny and his staff investigate, these separate stories interrupt each other as more information is revealed about each crime in the course of the day. The author keeps the suspense at fever pitch. Rachel Anderson, the girl trying to escape, must evade discovery for many hours, while Benny Griessel must keep all the leads for two separate cases going in the right direction and find Rachel before her pursuers do. The main characters' own backgrounds and family lives unfold and add depth to the novel, showing how they live, for better or worse, in the newly integrated society. As the novel develops further, the ins and outs of the not always honest music business, the roles of Russian owners and managers of clubs and bars, the weaknesses of police officers who may be offered enormous bribes, illegal immigration from other African countries whose governments are in total disarray, the problems of a drug culture, and the corruption which seems to be an unfortunate natural result of power all appear as well integrated themes and plot lines. Despite the darkness of its plot, Afrikaans writer Deon Meyer honors hard-working and honest people of all races in this novel--Benny Griessel (white), bright new detective Vusumuzi Ndabeni (black), no-nonsense female investigator Mbali Kaleni (black), and pathologist, Tiffany October ("coloured"). These people and others like them are the future of the country and its hope, and Deon Meyer, an Afrikaaner, celebrates them within the context of a society in transition. Mary Whipple Blood Safari Dead at Daybreak
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
VERY IMPRESSIVE THRILLER FEATURING DET. INSP. BENNY GRIESEL!,
By Travis Deputy "TheInsatiableBookReader" (Padukee, Keentukee) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Thirteen Hours (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
From I gather, this is the 2nd detective thriller featuring Detective Inspector Benny Griesell. I believe the first one is titled Devil's Peak. It's now officially on my to be read list! Thirteen Hours was an expolsive and harrowing thriller! I'd never heard of Meyer prior to reading this one, but he's on my radar now. Usually I'm hesitant to read an author I'm unfamiliar with unless the book is free. From the opening explosive scenes to the finale this one goes a breakneck speed. It's definitely in the top 5 books I've read this year.
Deon Meyer knows how to spin a story! I won't go in the plot or anything like that as you can read about that in the synopsis or someone who is more adept at giving you and idea about the what the book is about. I will say, as you may have guessed already, is that the book takes place over 13 hours. I will give the basic premise of the novel: A girl witnesses the murder of her friend and goes on the run from the bad guys. Griesell is the one investigating the murder and must protect the girl. Keep in mind this novel is not for the weak of heart: It's very violent! I love Griesell as the main character. He is a complex and tragic character. I also gig the setting, Cape Town, South Africa, which is very unique and intriging in how it is presented. For some reason, even with thrillers this awesome, the price on them doesn't stay up. That's you can now get a nice copy fairly cheap! What are you waiting for? I'd bet that even the most jaded of readers would have a hard time putting this one down. It does everything a detective thriller should and then some. I'm waiting in agony for my copy of Devil's Peak to arrive! Bravo, Mr. Meyer... keep'em coming!!!!!!!!!!!!
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A cross between Peter Temple and 24,
This review is from: Thirteen Hours (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
A fast paced South African crime novel that reads like a cross between Peter Temple and the TV series 24. Benny Griessel is a homicide detective, a recovering alcoholic who is hoping to win his wife back. He is woken early with the news that a American teenage girl's body has been found on the street. He quickly realizes that a second teenage girl is on the run, in fear of her life. His day gets more complicated by a second murder, the husband of a prominent singer. He needs to oversee both criminal investigations. The story takes place over the course of one day and is broken into segments of approximately an hour.
The book is set in Cape Town and the city and its problems - power cuts, heavy traffic, bureaucracy - are an intrinsic part of the novel. There are racial tensions between whites, coloureds, Zulus and Xhosas. There is a large and complicated cast of characters, but they are all interesting, rounded and believable. My only critique is that the pace is somewhat erratic, swinging between breathless action, grinding criminal investigation and social commentary. However the real time element keeps the tension up. This is highly recommended.
23 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
This is a difficult read for someone not familiar with South Africa,
By
This review is from: Thirteen Hours (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
I'm sure this is a wonderful read for those familiar with modern South African culture, society, geography and language. However, as a person who doesn't have that background it was a very difficult and tiresome read. The various sub-plots and characters were not quite interesting enough for me to really enjoy doing the kind of background studying necessary to understand and appreciate the story and its nuances. Obviously this book was written for a South African audience, and I suspect that a reader with the appropriate background would really enjoy it. Unfortunately, I'm not that person.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Completely absorbing - don't forget to breathe!,
By
This review is from: Thirteen Hours (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
One of my favorite genre's is mystery and crime/police procedural and I read pretty widely in it. Recently I started reading authors and stories that take place outside the USA (from Ian Rankin to Henning Mankell). This book very much reminds me of those authors in some ways but is a refreshing change in others. Thirteen Hours stars Benny Griessel, a recovering alcoholic who is separated from his wife, as the main Detective. So far we have the same main character as so many other authors. Here's where this one takes a right turn all the way to the expressway! On this anything but ordinary day Benny is confronted with two crimes - the first an American teen girl missing (so they already know they are screwed politically) as well as the death of a prominent guy by looks like a killer alcoholic wife. At first these two crimes don't seem related and shuffling between them makes for interesting plotting. Since the book spans only thirteen hours you know you are in for the ride of your life when you pick it up - Meyer's doesn't dissapoint!
I found the insight into South African society utterly fascinating. It is not a country I know much about - but it's portrayal here seems almost like another character - albiet a background one - sitting there influencing everything and everybody. It is so vivid, definitely not PC in some places, but brings such an authentic realism you can't help but just fall into it gasping - it sucks you in better than a Dyson! The secondary characters were fine - from the girl running to the other cops - none of them stuck in my head overly much but I think that might be because of the time period of the novel itself. Unlike Mankell's Wallander, Benny G here does not give off any slow and sure vibe - there is not that kind of leisurely pace the Scandanavian novels can have at the beginning. Benny's in it to win it from the get go and you just hang on and hope you can hop off the train before it crashes. This book would make a FANTASTIC film - it would not surprise me if the rights were already signed, sealed and delivered. Utterly compelling with tense, taut action - this one is a DO NOT MISS!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Great story!,
By Cynthia E (Tennessee) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Thirteen Hours (Hardcover)
Thirteen Hours was a very intriguing read and forced me to really focus. The characters are well defined, great detail throughout the book, and the overall story was really good. Everything in this book takes place within a thirteen hour period. The book is a long read at 584 pages, and jam-packed.I know literally nothing about South Africa, which is the setting of the story (Capetown), or the language. Although this book was translated from Afrikaans to English, there were still some words that I had no idea what they meant (maybe they couldn't be translated...I don't know). Some of the names were hard to remember (and forget pronouncing them!) for me, so I made up nicknames for some of the characters. Within the chapters, there is a lot of switching back and forth between scenes, but I found that very necessary being that everything takes place within thirteen hours. It sometimes confused me a bit, but I kept moving on. Even with all the above working against me reading this book, the story is just that good that I had to keep reading. Meyer tells a good story, and I think I see another Deon Meyer book in my future.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
disturbing language,
By
This review is from: Thirteen Hours (Kindle Edition)
Is the f///king langiage a part of that culture whatever I dont like it. know people cuss at times but realy.....
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Short Review for Deon Meyer 13 Hours,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Thirteen Hours (Kindle Edition)
I'm not going to review or comment on the story. This book was offered on my Kindle at a very reduced price, and although I never expect much (have been pleasantly surprised sometimes) from these 1.99 offerings, I downloaded the book.
Well, great book. I actually haven't been able to put it down. I've already looked at the author's other books and picked out what I will get (download, but will buy the hardcover if dl not available) next. I'm not going to get the books from the earliest to the latest because his characterizations are so perfect, I want to follow my favorite characters who appear in spotty offerings. I have no interest in South Africa, but what he had to say was interesting. His great talent is that he tells a really gripping story with incredible characters. OK, on to downloading a really, really good writer!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sorry to see Thirteen Hours end,
By carl vartian (Houston, TX United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Thirteen Hours (Hardcover)
Thirteen Hours was riveting, truly keeping me on the edge of my seat. The new South Africa is relatively unknown to most of us in the USA, but I thought Meyer did a great job of exploring how the (older) white detectives interact with the younger black and colored policemen. He introduces a very powerful character of an intelligent, overweight black police woman, as well as some other younger detectives, that I hope he brings back in future novels. There is even an exploration of the perceived slights inflicted on coloreds by the blacks--not white enough for the whites and not black enough for the blacks. This book has everything--alcoholism, adultery, embezzlement, trafficking, Russian gangsters, murder--and is so fast paced that forensics do not get to play a role. In the post-CSI world where every crime is solved by some forgotten bit of DNA, insect larvae, blood splatter or other esoteric evidence, it is refreshing to see real detectives, when time is of the essence, using shoe-leather investigative techniques, solve crimes the old fashioned way. I'll be reading a lot more Deon Meyer books before I'm done.
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Thirteen Hours by Deon Meyer (Hardcover - April 13, 2010)
Used & New from: $0.33
| ||