Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... Shutter Island: A Novel (original 2003; edition 2003)by Dennis Lehane
Work InformationShutter Island by Dennis Lehane (2003)
Favourite Books (326) » 19 more Unreliable Narrators (52) Best Horror Books (135) Books Read in 2023 (743) Books Read in 2016 (3,528) Books Read in 2019 (2,862) Books Read in 2004 (91) Books Set on Islands (51) Loading...
Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I saw the movie when it first came out in 2010, and I remember loving it and being blown away by the twist. Twelve years have passed since then, and while my memory was fuzzy on the details, I knew what to expect from the book. And yet, despite anticipating the big reveal, I was just as awe-struck and surprised as I had been while I watched the film. At times, Lehane's writing is so fast-paced to be nearly breathlessly frantic. Add to that a dose of noir style, and I was turning pages quicker and quicker as I neared the ending. I flew through the last hundred pages in record time because I HAD to know how everything would wrap up. I'm a devoted Lehane fan, and I can't wait to see what he has in store for us next. Wow!just wow!Dennis Lehane you are a hero!How could you write something like this.You just stole my heart.I never got a chance to see the movie..but now,I'm looking forward to it :) How I found this book.When my vacations started,I just went to the second hand book store and ran my eyes through the shelves..and then I saw it sitting there..with it's nearly broken spine.I was so sad see it in such a condition.I was not sure whether to buy it or not..but I did..one of the best decisions in my life..:-) To the author, The things I loved about this book, 1.Amazing way of writing.It was beautifully crafted.Just wow! 2.Loved the characters.Andrew,Teddy,Chuck,Cawley,Rachel,Dolores,Sheehan,Noyce...and other fictitious ones. 3.Loved the concept of this island.and nice name,by the way,Shutter Island *shudders* 4.Loved those criminally insane characters.Chuck aka Dr Sheehan,oh how can I forget him?I loved his character to the core :) 5.I loved the way author sometimes brought Teddy's dreams into the story.. 6.I loved those codes..it was way in which the author dropped some clues for us. 7.The cliff-hanger end.cool and wicked.. 8.The change of the hero into the villain..and that of his partner into a doctor..and the villain into the savior and the fact that all the things we read until then was rubbish..no,the dreams in the crazy mind of schizophrenic?well,I just loved it :) 9.I was always interested in neurology and surgery..I loved how thew author brought in topics like lobotomy,hallucinations and schizophrenia..actually,the whole book is based on this.It's the core of this amazing book :) 10.Use of acronyms and codes..Well,I'll have to say..Laeddis is a wicked person :) Negatives: well,I loved the book..but there were some parts that seemed to rubbish to be real. 1.The way they tried to make Teddy understand that he was Andrew,an ex-marshal and a criminally insane person.Like just letting him out of the boundaries and waiting for a hurricane to occur..well,I didn't like that part.But I loved the book,so I'll just avoid the negatives :) 2.Too much swearing?well it's a yes from me.I can't tolerate that much swearing in a single book. So,I loved the book I suggest you to read it..Just amazing.It's for someone who can go that long..who is patient and is in for some thrill..toodles!
Moving out from the working-class Boston neighborhoods where his hard-boiled private eyes and blue-collar cops normally conduct their realistic business, Dennis Lehane takes a leap into unknown genre territory in SHUTTER ISLAND (Morrow, $25.95). But whichever genre he's aiming for in this misguided effort -- psychological suspense, cold war thriller or Grand Guignol melodrama -- he misses it by a nautical mile. The primary force of this book comes from Teddy's grief and his anguished memories of World War II, when he helped liberate inmates at Dachau. ... But its hidden power has a different source: Mr. Lehane's insight into his book's most disturbed figures. Suffice it to say that this is a deft, suspenseful thriller that unfolds with increasing urgency until it delivers a visceral shock in its final moments. When it comes to keeping readers exactly where he wants them, Mr. Lehane offers a bravura demonstration of how it's done. Verano de 1954. El agente federal Teddy Daniels llega a Shutter Island, isla en la que está ubicado el hospital Ashecliffe, un centro penitenciario para enfermos mentales. Junto con su compañero, Chuck Aule, se propone encontrar a una paciente desaparecida, una asesina llamada Rachel Solando, a medida que un huracán azota la isla. No obstante, nada es lo que parece en el hospital Ashecliffe. Y Teddy Daniels tampoco.¿Ha ido hasta allí para encontrar a una paciente desaparecida? ¿O le han enviado para investigar los rumores acerca de los radicales métodos psiquiátricos que se utilizan en esa institución? Unos métodos que posiblemente incluyan la experimentación con drogas, pruebas quirúrgicas terribles, contraataques mortales en la guerra encubierta en contra de los lavados de cerebro soviéticos... Lehane takes a departure form his regular series and takes us to Shutter Island. This is a book that stretched both the author and the reader. Lehane called his book, homage to gothic, but also homage to B Movies and Pulp!" Teddy is on Shutter Island to find a missing mental patient. As you travel with Teddy the story becomes more and more about Teddy than about the missing mental patient. The job of the reader is to decide what is real and what is make-believe as you travel with the main character Teddy. You hear the whispering echoes of the past as you find more and more clues. All illusions of control and all surefooted terrain ware away as you get deeper and deeper into the twists of the story. The context of the book has been written once, and then written completely anew, and then twisted once again the third go around of writing this twisted tale. The story line however stays constant and helps one misunderstand the novel. You will read yourself to a knotted rope, for the author has left enough chords to twist around your neck and hang yourself by. Breathing becomes something you need to remind yourself to do as you get caught up in the current of Shutter Island. The story looks at mental health treatments of the past compared to what methods are used today. Lehane asks his readers, "What is the fine line between treatment and sterilization of the mind? Enjoy the twisted mind of Dennis Lehane in his book Shutter Island, A definite cluck cluck cluck. Is contained inHas the adaptationIs abridged inAwardsDistinctionsNotable Lists
Fiction.
Mystery.
Thriller.
Historical Fiction.
HTML: The basis for the blockbuster motion picture directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Shutter Island by New York Times bestselling author Dennis Lehane is a gripping and atmospheric psychological thriller where nothing is quite what it seems. The New York Times calls Shutter Island, "Startlingly original." The Washington Post raves, "Brilliantly conceived and executed." A masterwork of suspense and surprise from the author of Mystic River and Gone, Baby, Gone, Shutter Island carries the reader into a nightmare world of madness, mind control, and CIA Cold War paranoia and is unlike anything you've ever read before. .No library descriptions found.
|
Current DiscussionsNonePopular covers
Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |
I love a good page-turner every now and then, and this novel -- locked-room mystery, ghost story, haunted-house flick, cop thriller, in various amounts -- definitely didn't disappoint. (Especially when you're on a plane.) But the success of the story is wholly dependent on some sleight-of-hand on Lehane's part -- nothing wrong with this, really, except that skillful construction doesn't quite conceal the fact that Shutter Island is missing what Lehane does best. In [b:Mystic River|21671|Mystic River|Dennis Lehane|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/512vgYKeKFL._SL75_.jpg|1234249], with its Shakespearean dramatic arc, or almost any of the Kenzie/Gennaro books (except maybe for the weak [b:Sacred|425124|Sacred (Kenzie & Gennaro, #3)|Dennis Lehane|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1174627469s/425124.jpg|1352373]), one had the sense that Boston and its people were living, breathing, essential characters in the story. (Other than the performances, this rootedness in place is what made Clint Eastwood's Mystic River, and Ben Affleck's vastly underrated 2007 directorial debut, Gone Baby Gone, so powerful.)
Would it be remiss to say that Dennis Lehane's Boston is, albeit in a more limited fashion, as fleshed out as David Simon's Baltimore? (Or Richard Price's "Dempsey"?) It's that sense of vibrant reality that's missing from Shutter Island, the idea that a city and its residents had lived there long before our characters step on the stage. ( )