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Martin Booth (1) (1944–2004)

Författare till Doctor Illuminatus: The Alchemist's Son, Part I

För andra författare vid namn Martin Booth, se särskiljningssidan.

47+ verk 2,576 medlemmar 69 recensioner 9 favoritmärkta

Om författaren

Martin Booth (September 7, 1944-February 12, 2004) was a prolific British novelist and poet. He also worked as a teacher and screenwriter, and was the founder of the Sceptre Press. Booth died after an 18-month struggle with cancer in 2004. (Bowker Author Biography)

Serier

Verk av Martin Booth

A Very Private Gentleman (1990) 283 exemplar
Opium: A History (1996) 238 exemplar
The Industry of Souls (1998) 220 exemplar
Cannabis: A History (2003) 200 exemplar
Hiroshima Joe (1985) 128 exemplar
The Book of Cats (1976) — Redaktör — 106 exemplar
Islands of Silence: A Novel (2003) 50 exemplar
War Dog (1997) 41 exemplar
Dreaming of Samarkand (1989) 34 exemplar
Music on the Bamboo Radio (1997) 26 exemplar
The Jade Pavilion (1987) 22 exemplar
PoW (2001) 21 exemplar
Panther (1999) 13 exemplar
Coyote Moon (2005) 10 exemplar
Toys of Glass (1996) 9 exemplar
Midnight Saboteur (2004) 7 exemplar
Jim Corbett Collection (1991) 7 exemplar
The Iron Tree (1993) 4 exemplar
Black Chameleon (1990) 3 exemplar
Missile Summer (1982) 2 exemplar
The Bad Track (1980) 2 exemplar
Snath (1975) 2 exemplar
THE HUMBLE DISCIPLE (1992) 2 exemplar
The Cnot dialogues 1 exemplar
Killing the Moscs (1985) 1 exemplar
The Carrier (1978) 1 exemplar
Devil's Wine (1980) 1 exemplar
Stand 1 exemplar

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Very interesting novel. Although one would expect lots of action in the story told from the perspective of the armorer who creates unique and specialized weapons for the shadow world of assassins (think that guy from original Day of the Jackal) it is not a case here. Entire novel reads like an intimate conversation with this man who lives off producing unique weaponry wherever and whenever required. We are presented with his reflections on his profession, his experiences and his longing to live a normal life [although he is realist enough to know it is not easy (if at all) to achieve that goal].

Very interesting novel, might be slow to some but believe it is worth the effort. Author must truly adore the Italian landscapes and quiet small towns.

Recommended.
… (mer)
 
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Zare | 20 andra recensioner | Jan 23, 2024 |
A quick read. Keeps you with the story. Very interesting use of history, science, and magic. Alchemy is always interesting. A little bit of good versus evil, and the balance of things. The main characters, twins, Pip and Tim are different enough that you see the story from 2 different angles through them.
 
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LinBee83 | 8 andra recensioner | Aug 23, 2023 |
One more point for the "Book is Better than the Movie" club! The movie in fact, called "The American" and starring one George Clooney, was quite a hair-pullingly dull dud. And let's look at how they got it wrong: gorgeous Italian village setting, tender scenes of peaches and brandy, simmering hints of intrigue and pursuit, an unlikely love story, and that wonderful title and they botched ALL that up. How did they get the movie so wrong? In it, from what I can dimly recall, Clooney moped around spending time caressing various gun parts. Nothing much happened. Then it ended.

But happily in the book, even though not that much happens, one doesn't regret spending time with Signor Farfalle (Mr. Butterfly) as our hero is called by the villagers. In fact the opening scenes hooked me something bad. I wanted to BE there sitting with old Father Benedetto under the peach trees every evening, discussing the meaning of history and drinking armagnac. I wanted to climb all the stairs to the octagonal loggia of the hero's house, watching the Italian night sky alive with fireflies, eating that rose-petal jam or gorging on wild honey. I wanted to mosey around the cafes drinking espresso, chatting with villagers who give me sweet nicknames.

That's where the desires end, though. For our man, you see, is 'very private' for a darn good reason. Slowly he recounts various reasons why we shouldn't actually know anything about him: not the name of the village, not his own name. The way he talks about guns and gun parts tells us plainly that we'd be wise not to ask questions. In fact at times I got the feeling I was reading an actual memoir of an expat in Italy, with liberal recounting of his past lives in other places.

Only towards the end of the book does the relationship with Clara become prominent. This young student moonlights as a lady of the night at the local bordello, and sure enough there's more to her than that. Alas the gentleman has hinted that things won't end well and they don't. Even if the final twist was a tad guessable, it still arrived satisfyingly. A tragedy occurs in the town center, and from it ripple multiple smaller tragedies.

Overall then, an intensely satisfying read for the Italian-village part of the story. Once before I loved a book just for a certain part of its setting, and no surprise that too was an Italian village: I'm thinking of Jesse Walters's Beautiful Ruins. Maybe it's finally time to head there after all; enough time has been spent mooning about and drooling over rural Italy in pictures, videos, movies, and books.
… (mer)
 
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dmenon90 | 20 andra recensioner | Mar 17, 2023 |
A childhood book my partner loved, who grew up in Devon.
If you can look past the sometimes nauseous children, the book is super cute.
Fast paced read, extremely tongue in cheek ( the panther would have torn them to shreds ) and just an enjoyable book to read on a rainy day.
It did make me want to visit Dartmoor again and had a nice nod to urban legends of the area.
 
Flaggad
Alin.Llewellyn | Nov 3, 2022 |

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Statistik

Verk
47
Även av
3
Medlemmar
2,576
Popularitet
#9,978
Betyg
½ 3.7
Recensioner
69
ISBN
195
Språk
13
Favoritmärkt
9

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