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René Appel

Author of Als broer en zus

66+ Works 1,031 Members 37 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Merlijn Doomernik

Works by René Appel

Als broer en zus (2005) 169 copies
Schone handen (2008) 86 copies
Loverboy (2005) 50 copies
Zinloos geweld (2001) 48 copies
Geweten (1996) 47 copies
Weerzin (2008) 46 copies
Amsterdam Noir (2018) — Editor — 43 copies
Tweestrijd (1998) 35 copies
Doorgeschoten (2003) 30 copies
Noodzakelijk kwaad (2002) 30 copies
Misbruik wordt gestraft (2004) 30 copies
De derde persoon (1990) 29 copies
Van twee kanten (2010) 29 copies
Los geld (2006) 28 copies
De echtbreker (1999) 27 copies
Retourtje Hato (2007) 19 copies
Verzwegen (2016) 19 copies
Goede vrienden (2011) 17 copies
Betaalde liefde (2012) 15 copies
De advocaat (2013) 15 copies
Hittegolf (2007) 14 copies
Sociolinguïstiek (1976) — Author — 14 copies
Language Contact and Bilingualism (1987) — Author — 13 copies
Tegenliggers (1998) 12 copies
Overschot (2020) 12 copies
Spanning (1998) 11 copies
Dansen in het donker (2018) 10 copies
Gefangen in Kids City (2000) 8 copies
Foute boel (2000) 6 copies
Handicap 5 copies
De kortste nacht (2014) 5 copies
Geronnen bloed (1994) 5 copies
Met angst en beven (2000) 4 copies
Spijt (1989) 4 copies
Waarom niet (2023) 4 copies
Vlekkeloos (1993) 3 copies
Inleiding tot de psycholinguistiek (1987) — Author — 3 copies
De Nederlandse Thriller Tiendaagse 2016 — Contributor — 2 copies
Los geld 2 copies
Tweede-taalverwerving en tweede-taalonderwijs (1994) — Author — 2 copies
Spanning ; Retourtje Hato (2012) 2 copies
Kippevel 1 copy
Van twee kanten (2012) 1 copy
Voetbaltaal 1 copy
Ja hai, met Mai : een uitgeversprentenboek — Contributor — 1 copy

Associated Works

Stille getuigen : sporen van misdaad in 25 verhalen (2011) — Contributor — 21 copies
Adriaan van Dis : vrijtaal (2003) — Contributor — 2 copies
Mensje 75 — Contributor — 1 copy
Thriller Weken 2023 (2023) — Author — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Appel, René
Legal name
Appel, René
Birthdate
1945-09-19
Gender
male
Nationality
Netherlands
Birthplace
Hoogkarspel, Noord-Holland, Nederland
Occupations
linguist
novelist (thrillers)
Awards and honors
De Gouden Strop

Members

Reviews

This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Won this book thru the Early Review program. Too many other books to read. I choose not to read it (especially after not being able to finish Berlin Noir which I also won, and ultimately gave it away. I gave it a 1/2 star only to indicate in my tracking that it was a DNF. It doesn't indicate the quality of the work itself
½
 
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mahsdad | 10 other reviews | Dec 8, 2022 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Another great collection of crime from the Noir series. I love the way they used the movies as a theme and organizing principle. The stories were varied and fun if you like crime. I have a lot of fun with these books and always find things to enjoy and new authors to explore. It's always a treat and they read quickly too.
 
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bostonbibliophile | 10 other reviews | Dec 2, 2019 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Fourteen of The Netherlands’ premier authors of crime and literary fiction contributed stories to this collection, with the editors—top-rated crime authors themselves—providing the fifteenth. Amsterdam Noir is the latest in Akashic Books’ long-running series of place-based crime anthologies.
If this enterprise is in part intended to impart a vision of the locale and its residents through the lens of crime, this collection is another success. Whenever a story purports to represent a certain place, you can fairly ask yourself, could these events have unfolded this way anywhere else? Geography, history, and culture all affect what can and does take place in a city and the official and unofficial reactions to events.
Appel and Pachter assigned the stories to four broad headings inspired by classic film noir, and below I briefly describe a story or two under each of their headings. The collection includes both well established authors, like Theo Capel, and writers new to the scene, like Karin Amatmoekrim. Meet some of the very best Dutch crime writers, right here in these pages.
Out of the Past
Welcome to Amsterdam by Michael Berg is a story of revenge—a revenge the wronged man never thought he could achieve. It’s pretty strong stuff. Berg was the 2013 winner of the Golden Noose, the award for the best Dutch-language crime novel of the year. Herman Koch, who wrote 2013’s best-selling crime novel, The Dinner, contributed Ankle Monitor, which launches with a brilliant first line: “Maybe it was a mistake to go back to my old neighborhood on the very first day of a weekend leave.” No stopping reading there.
Kiss Me Deadly
All three of these stories are about ill-conceived love and all are written by women, interestingly. Silent Days by Karin Amatmoekrim proves that just because a woman is old and alone doesn’t mean she is helpless.
Touch of Evil
Here you have Satan himself, a pedophile, an alcoholic fratricide, and a man channelling Ted Bundy (for an international touch), plus a hard-working police detective who unexpectedly comes out on top in Theo Capel’s entertaining Lucky Sevens.
They Live By Night
Echoing that film’s theme of inescapable tragedy, most of these stories are from the victim’s point of view, but Abdelkader Benali’s The Girl at the End of the Line is told through the eyes of a Moroccan police officer assigned to find the killer of a Muslim girl. Winner of a top literary prize, Benali opens this story, “A farmer found her with her head facing southeast, toward Mecca, as if in prayer.” It’s an effective reminder of the pluralistic culture of Western European cities today and a strong intimation of the layers of social complexity the story will probe.
… (more)
 
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Vicki_Weisfeld | 10 other reviews | Feb 18, 2019 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This is the second noir compilation I've read from this publisher (I've also read Belfast Noir) and while it wasn't my favorite, it wasn't bad. Some of the short stories in this are clearly better than others, but that's bound to happen when you have fifteen different authors spinning tales of deceit, darkness, murder, and intrigue. The thing I most enjoyed about this collection (and all in this series) is that the setting (Amsterdam) plays such a crucial element in every story. These dark, gritty stories make you feel as if you really are in Amsterdam. Some of the short stories deal with gangs, psychotic episodes, murder, revenge, and twisted fantasies. Again some are clearly better than others, but don't let that get in the way of reading this!… (more)
 
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ecataldi | 10 other reviews | Feb 9, 2019 |

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Statistics

Works
66
Also by
7
Members
1,031
Popularity
#24,978
Rating
3.2
Reviews
37
ISBNs
138
Languages
4
Favorited
2

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