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SHACKLES [Mass Market Paperback]

Bill Pronzini
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent read for mystery fans Feb 6 2002
Format:Mass Market Paperback
I had read a bit of Bill Pronzini, but not one his "nameless detective" series until I picked up "Shackles." This is one great story, divided into two parts. Nameless is abducted by an old enemy, blindfolded, taken to a remote cabin in the Sierras in November, and there chained--though with some food and heat--to die slowly during the long winter months. In diary fashion Pronzini records the physical and emotional trials that "nameless" endures before he finally hits upon the way to freedom.
The second part of the book is how "nameless" goes about tracking down the bad guy. With sparse but hard-hitting prose, the reader can identify with the painstaking steps used to eventually find the would-be killer. This is one mystery which can stand a rereading for the tautness of the prose style and the empathy one has with the protagonist. Read it!
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Format:Mass Market Paperback
Bill Pronzini, Shackles (Dell, 1988)

Bill Pronzini has been writing "nameless detective" mysteries for nigh on three decades, and I never picked one up until a got a bag of books from my mystery-loving mother a few months ago containing Shackles. Comitting the heresy of reading a series novel out of order, I decided to crack the cover and see what all the fuss was about, assuming there is any fuss surrounding a non-A-list mystery writer. There isn't, really, but in this case there probably should be.

Shackles has "nameless" abducted by an old enemy-- we're not sure who until the closing pages-- and spirited off to a remote cabin somewhere in the dead of winter, chained to the wall, and left with thirteen weeks' worth of food, some reading material, a dying space heater and radio, and a cheery warning that suicide is probably preferable to starving to death. Needless to say, this ain't your typical hardboied detective offering. Pronzini carries it off nicely, adapting readily to the slower pace that such a book is bound to have (no pun intended) and keeping the reader's interest nicely. The pages fly on this short novel (roughly 250 pages) as nameless spends his time alternately bemoaning his present state of affairs, trying to figure out who it was that stuck him in this mess, and accepting that the world has probably left him for dead. A fun little book, and a decided change of pace for mystery fans. Worth picking up. ***

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5.0 out of 5 stars "Shackles" will leave you feeling unchained! Mar 23 2001
Format:Mass Market Paperback
"Shackles" is the best novel I've yet read in Bill Pronzini's "Nameless" detective series. Some of the "Nameless" novels tend to be a bit by-the-numbers, but the plot here is truly ingenious. Namless is kidnapped and chained in a remote mountain cabin and left to slowly starve to death. His escape and search for the man who imprisioned him make for some of the best detective fiction ever. As a bonus, Nameless becomes introspective during his imprisonment and confesses much about his childhood and how he became who he is. This book is a MUST read for P.I. fiction fans.
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