Commentaires client les plus utiles
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4.0étoiles sur 5
Chilling, Aoû 2 2004
Great read. Once I started reading it I could barely stand to put it down. It is writen in such a way that compels you to want to keep flipping the pages to find out what happens next. I also recommend reading Morrell's "The Protector", another fantastic read. Morrell is a fantastic author and I look forward to reading more of his novels.
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3.0étoiles sur 5
Good but not great - 3 1/2 stars, Jui 15 2004
With Long Lost, David Morrell presents a suspenseful, yet profoundly disturbing story of regret and revenge. Brad Denning has grown up with the haunting guilt that he is responsible for the disappearance of his younger brother when they were both kids. After years of tortuous thoughts about what his life and the lives of his family members would have been like if he could have a "do over" on that fateful day, his brother unexpectedly comes into his life. A happy reunion quickly turns sour and Brad finds himself in a life and death struggle. As he searches for his wife and son, he slowly comes to fully understand the path of destruction set in motion after his brother disappeared. It is story of a simple twist of fate with very negative consequences. Although choppy in places and with a subject matter that is clearly not for the squeamish, Morrell effectively uses the first person narrative to tell the story from Brad Dennings' perspective. The frequent twists, turns and action sequences make Long Lost a very quick read. All things considered, Long Lost is good but not great.
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4.0étoiles sur 5
The best Morrell novel that I've read so far, Jui 14 2004
I have hardback (First Edition) copies of "Desperate Measures", "Extreme Denial", "Double Image" and "Burnt Sienna" (and, a couple weeks ago, I borrowed "Assumed Identity" from the Public Library), so when I found copies of "Long Lost" (2002) in the "bargain books" section of Barnes and Noble three weeks ago, I bought a copy without hesitation. I was anticipating reading this novel as soon as I bought it--but in the meantime I had checked out two novels from the Library--and received the chance to read "Long Lost" Sunday night (June 13, 04). I began about 7:30 p.m. and finished about five and a half hours later, at about 1 a.m. "Long Lost" had me hooked from the first two sentences. The book read very quickly and had a ton of action, the quality of which was near horror. "Long Lost" is, I feel, David Morrell's best book, better than the five previous novels I read. "Long Lost" is the first book that Morrell wrote in first-person POV, which worked pretty well for the storyline. In general, the seemingly "good" guy is actually the antagonist (Petey Denning/Lester Dant), who disrupts the life of the protagonist (the first-person narrator, Bradley Denning). Petey is kidnapped at the age of nine--his thirteen-year-old brother, Brad, turned him away when Petey wanted to participate in a baseball game with the old kids, so he pedals his bike home but never makes it there--and lived a horribly tortured life with a crazed, cult-ish "God-fearing, Bible-knowing" family, the Dants, who changed his name to Lester--they had kidnapped Petey to "replace" their son who had died--until he escaped being imprisioned when he was sixteen. For about twenty-five years, he was a derelict, a drifter, whose life had no real purpose other than to cause trouble for people and mooch off them; until one summer day when he encounters his older brother, Brad. Brad can't believe that he found his brother and takes him immediately into his home; Brad feels terrible and guilty and responsible for what happened to his brother. Petey/Lester becomes jealous of Brad's successful life--his wife, Kate, his son, Jason and his home. Because Brad had told him to "Get Lost", Petey never had a good life; Lester (Petey) decides to get retribution against Brad, so Lester kidnaps Kate and Jason. For over a year, Lester gives Brad's wife and son the life that Petey had endured. Six months after they disappeared, the FBI gave up the case, but Brad took it upon himself to continue the investigation and find his family, presuming that Kate and Jason were still alive. The FBI agent (Grady) tried to convice Brad that Lester and Petey were not the same man, but Brad's instincts were correct. Brad risks his life to get his family back, the wife and son that Petey wanted and had successfully brainwashed by torture as his own. The ending is happy; Petey gets what he deserves for having messed up Brad's life. Nevertheless, the crazy Dant couple--who perished when they couldn't get out of their house when Lester set fire to their home and then got away, after about seven years of nightmarish isolation--messed up Petey's life and caused him to be half-crazy, so Petey/Lester simply wanted life to be fair to him. As hard as the novel was to put down (I read it in one sitting), the story it contains is even harder to forget. I guess the moral of the story is about revenge and fairness; how a person's good life can suddenly turn bad and how a person's bad life can end up even worse in an attempt to make life good. All in all, "Long Lost" is a great book. I rate it 4 stars, though, because I feel the story could've been a little richer had the novel been a little longer (say about 400-500 pages, instead of 303 pages). I look forward to reading Morrell's earlier novels, of which there are several. "Lost Long" confirms the fact that, now, David Morrell is my favorite author (having easily surpassed John Grisham and, to an extent, Stephen King). "Long Lost" is a must-read!
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