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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
One of Francis' best.,
By
This review is from: Wild Horses (Paperback)
Dick Francis, Wild Horses (Jove, 1994)Wild Horses is Dick Francis on top of his game. It stands as one of the highlights of the long and somewhat distinguished career of one of Britain's best-known mystery novelists. The tale is that of Thomas Lyon, ex-jumps jockey and presently filmmaker. He's been signed on to make a movie based on a novel based on a twenty-six- year-old police case regarding the alleged suicide of a trainer's wife. In the small British racing world, Lyon and the trainer are connected through various channels, and Lyon, along with the film's reluctant producer O'Hara, idly speculate that maybe, in the making of the film, they might actually solve the case. As all this is going on, an old friend of Lyon's dies, leaving Lyon all of his racing-related books and ephemera. A number of others want to get their hands on this material, and will stop at nothing to do so, including viciously beating the man's elderly sister. Lyon realizes that everything's tied in a lot closer than it seems, and the chase is on. Wild Horses has a readability factor that some of Francis' less consistent books lack. He puts everything in front of the reader in a non-nonsense fashion, adding enough deception to keep the reader wondering what's a clue and what's a falsity, throws in suspects by the score, and lets Lyon go on about making his movie. (Perhaps the fact that the sleuth not only has another job, but actually pays attention to it as the mystery is going on, is one of the book's strongest points; too often it seems amateur detectives suddenly find themselves with more than enough hours in the day when things get underway.) Them's good reads, folks! A must for any fan of Francis (or any other writer of racing mysteries), and a good intro to him for other mystery readers who haven't yet discovered his work. ****
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Dick Francis Remains Excellent 30 Years On,
By
This review is from: Wild Horses (Mass Market Paperback)
Great nostalgia for me here as I recall hearing Dick Francis novels serialized on BBC Radio 4 back in the 1970s. Evidently he remains master of his unique genre of mysteries set to a horse-racing background. And what a career--this is his 33rd novel!"Wild Horses" satisfyingly has no loose ends. The pacing is excellent. At no point was I bored. The characters of Thomas Lyon, the director; O'Hara, the producer; Nash, the star, and Valentine, Lyon's old friend are all nicely developed (one gets a good feel for Valentine even though he dies early in the book as we continue to see him through Lyon's memory). The movie-making is well done. The one race scene is great. Thoroughly entertaining. Good, clean fun.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
More believable & in-depth than most,
By
This review is from: Wild Horses (Mass Market Paperback)
This is my 7th Francis mystery novel. It departs from what seemed to be his standard formula a bit. Often his hero is battered taking an unnecessary risk. Here, he actually has a reasonable plan--but gets battered anyway! So much for planning. In addition the reader has a better chance at analyzing the mystery than some of Francis' other works. As usual the hero slides into the mystery almost without volition, & as usual Francis spotlights a particular field of interest--in this case film making. He also has an element of horse racing per his own professional background. I liked this book & thought it one of the best of the few I've read (though I've read less than 1/4 of his works). I think his description of the film in process was excellent, even more in-depth than he usually provides. His characterizations, especially viewed from the Director's perspective, were very fine indeed. His hero and several supporting characters are very likable, and some others not very likable at all. Some of his ploys--such as the help of the doctor in protecting the hero--were very clever. This is a fine, enjoyable, even educational read. Enjoy!
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