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Night train by Martin Amis
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Night Train (original 1997; edition 1998)

by Martin Amis

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973198,123 (3.02)32
Member:dylanwolf
Title:Night Train
Authors:Martin Amis
Info:Vintage (1998), Edition: New edition, Paperback, 160 pages
Collections:Your library
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Tags:Amis Martin, tbr

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Night train by Martin Amis (1997)

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Don't read this pot boiler. If you're an Amis fan, you'll only be disappointed. It's cack. It could be called "Cagney OR Lacey" since there is no character and no plot. Actually, that would be fine if this were any other of Martin's books. The steal is: no dazzling language abounds. Not a bit. Yeah, "I am a police..." - the opening sentence does set up some kind of literary expectations - which are soon foiled. God knows why he wrote this. I'd say, to fulfil some ghastly contractual situation with the publishers. When my cousin sent it to me in proof copy, I was rubbing my hands with delight. By page 20, though, I was staring out of the gift horse's arse. ( )
  Philip_Lee | Apr 1, 2013 |
Good writing. Good philosophical vignettes. Good research. Interesting take on the police noir. Motifs more than interesting. Overall plot, not quite believable. Still a good read. ( )
  TJWilson | Mar 29, 2013 |
Appreciated the writing more on this second reading. Still, a strange Amis take... again, characters not lovable and trapped in their lives. This time I got the ending. ( )
  ReneeGKC | Mar 1, 2013 |
This was recommended to me as a perfect book by a woman and author whom I respect so I took it home and read it. I loved it for its immediacy and rawness. Amis puts you in the head of a police, a woman named Mike, as she investigates the suicide of a young, beautiful woman, the daughter of a high-ranking police. Needless to say, the plot is grim but the writing is excellent. To me it felt very American and very real. I thought Amis, a British man, did a great job of bringing a complex character to life with a sense of immediacy. I didn't read this book as a mystery but as a character study and it succeeded admirably. ( )
  ccayne | Jan 13, 2012 |
Amazing book. One of those that makes you really look at people and wonder and, at times, avoid their eyes completely. It may be a temporary effect but it's powerful. I loved Amis' The Information for its clever language and plot. But I'm appreciating his range now. Night Train appears to be merely an effective detective novel but becomes an intense psychological suspense story as well. Another bonus is that Night Train doesn't have you searching for your dictionary as is sometimes the case with Amis. ( )
  nbsp | Jul 23, 2010 |
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to Saul and Janis
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I am a police.
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0375701141, Paperback)

On a beautiful night in a second-tier American city, a beautiful astrophysicist with the clichéd everything to live for shoots herself dead with a .22. Tough-talking detective Mike Hoolihan, quickly summoned to the scene, has witnessed every sort of victim: "Jumpers, stumpers, dumpers, dunkers, bleeders, floaters, poppers, bursters." But this case is different. Mike has known the young woman for years--she's the daughter, it turns out, of Mike's mentor, Colonel Tom Rockwell. And the colonel is desperate to find a perp, despite massive evidence to the contrary.

In Night Train, Martin Amis has fixed his sights on the American female--with a difference. Mike is in fact a woman--a hulking, chain-smoking, deep-voiced alcoholic who comes complete with a squalid family background and a none-too-happy foreground. She even lives in a building next to the proverbial night train and can't survive without her tape with eight different versions of the R & B "hymn to the low rent."

Did this novel begin as narrative flexing, yet another test the hypertalented author--and number-one Elmore Leonard fan--wanted to pose to himself? If so, he has passed with flying colors. True, Mike's search occasionally pushes her up against pulp pathos, but mostly the genre keeps Amis true. "Police are pretty blasé about ballistics. Remember the Kennedy assassination and 'the magic bullet'? We know that every bullet is a magic bullet. Particularly the .22 roundnose. When a bullet enters a human being, it has hysterics. As if it knows it shouldn't be there."

Mike spends her time weighing the evidence, wishing it would point to murder, and letting us in on some current police realities. Whatever television tells us, in real life (not to mention postmodern crime fiction), there's no neat solution. Even that old standard, the good cop-bad cop approach, no longer works: "It's not just that Joe Perp is on to it, having seen good cop-bad cop a million times on reruns of Hawaii Five-O. The only time bad cop was any good was in the old days, when he used to come into the interrogation room every ten minutes and smash your suspect over the head with the yellow pages." With such discourses, Amis is stretching the rubber band of his book's realism. But in the end, all his fancy footwork doesn't stop us from admiring and pitying his heroine, and hoping she won't board the ultimate night train: suicide.

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:51:29 -0500)

(see all 3 descriptions)

An investigation into the suicide of Jennifer Rockwell, a woman with everything going for her--health, looks, man--plus a job as an astrophysicist. Question is, can a person shoot herself in the head three times? As she investigates the victim's background, policewoman Mike Hoolihan thinks she can. By the author of The Information.… (more)

(summary from another edition)

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