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Fury
  

Fury (Paperback)

de G M Ford (Author) "In the year when summer never came, the spring rains lasted through July and then into August and September, until finally, with the leaves still..." En savoir plus
4.2étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (18 évaluations de client)

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From Publishers Weekly

Frank Corso, a renegade journalist with a conscience and a penchant for solitude, makes a winning debut in this new series from the author of the Leo Waterman novels (The Bum's Rush, etc.). Booted out of New York City and nearly out of journalism because of a nasty libel suit, Corso is taken on by the third-rate Seattle Sun and its proprietor, the steely Natalie Van Der Hoven. One of Frank's early pieces for the Sun examined the investigation of the "Trashman" crimes, a series of gruesome rapes and murders. The suspect, Walter Leroy Himes, was unsavory enough, but Corso wasn't convinced that he was the Trashman. Now Himes's execution date is fast approaching, and his principal accuser suddenly reveals that she was badgered into fingering Himes. As soon as Corso asks a question or two around the Seattle police department, the whole place starts alternately squirming and blustering. Corso enlists Meg Dougherty, a freelance photographer with legal training, as his assistant. Meg is covered head to toe with bizarre tattoos, thanks to a malicious boyfriend and one night of drugged sleep. More importantly, she's sharp and tough. Instead of ending with the pair sniffing out the real Trashman, Ford tweaks his tale a few more times, with missing evidence, secret lovers and a parent gone mad with grief. There's a love story here, too, tender and solid, that sneaks up on the reader and on the couple in question. Only a master could serve up such a fine story and then some. (May 1)Forecast: With a blurb from Harlan Coben, plus the popularity of the six Leo Waterman novels, this one could push Ford onto mystery bestseller charts.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.


From Booklist

Ford, the author of half a dozen deservedly popular Leo Wasserman mysteries, introduces Frank Corso, a defrocked journalist who was fired from the New York Times for fabricating a story and is lucky to be working as a columnist at the lowly Seattle Sun in Washington. The curmudgeonly Corso is glad to be toiling in relative obscurity, especially because he's making a pile of money on the side as an author of crime novels, but all that changes when the publisher who hired him calls in her favor by thrusting him back into the spotlight. There is new evidence that Seattle's finest may have arrested the wrong man to close a grisly serial murder case, and Corso is assigned to investigate. The problem is that the admittedly despicable Walter Lee Himes is due to be executed in six days, and neither a public bent on retribution nor a police department anxious to save face is in a mood to tolerate delays. The race against the clock lends urgency to Ford's narrative, but the most interesting plot twists come after time expires. This is a strong start to what promises to be another absorbing series from one of the mystery genre's most skilled writers. Dennis Dodge
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

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In the year when summer never came, the spring rains lasted through July and then into August and September, until finally, with the leaves still green on the trees, people bowed to the inevitable and abandoned their memories of the sun. Lire la première page
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18 évaluations
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4.2étoiles sur 5 (18 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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4.0étoiles sur 5 A tough journalist looks into a death penalty case., Déc 26 2003
Par E. Bukowsky "booklover10" (NY United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Fury Mm (Mass Market Paperback)
Frank Corso is a journalist who tells it like it is, and his honesty has repeatedly landed him in trouble. After becoming a successful author with a bestselling book to his credit, Corso decides to give up journalism and live a reclusive and peaceful life on his houseboat. However, when a key witness decides to recant her testimony in a death penalty case, she insists on telling her story to Corso. He is back in the game.

Along with Meg Dougherty, a gifted photographer and a decent investigator in her own right, Corso reviews the case of Walter Leroy Himes. Himes is about to be executed for murdering women across Seattle and leaving their bodies in dumpsters. Although Himes claims that he never killed anyone, most of the victims' family members, the police, and a large segment of the public want Himes executed. Although Himes is a thoroughly nasty individual, Corso believes him to be innocent of these particular crimes, and he decides to explore and analyze the evidence himself. Reopening the case will make a good newspaper story, and it will also give Corso an opportunity to avert a possible miscarriage of justice.

Corso is a terrific character. Sharp-tongued, intelligent, brusque, and tough as nails, he is defensive when anyone tries to penetrate the shell that he has built around himself. Dougherty has also had her share of hard knocks in life, and she is a good match for Corso. "Fury" is fast-paced and Ford's writing is often colorful and amusing.

The only flaw in "Fury" is the hackneyed plot. How many times have we read about murder cases being reopened because the wrong man may be on death row? There are dozens of books out there with this same plot, and it has been done once too often. In addition, some of the story's twists and turns are a bit too contrived.

However, Frank Corso redeems "Fury" with his strength, integrity, and compassion. He is one cool dude, and his character is one of the best protagonists in any detective thriller around. If you can overlook the warmed-over plot, you will get a big kick out of this perceptive, straight-talking, and world-weary journalist.

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Not Sure I Really Like Frank Corso, Sep 10 2003
Par Craig Larson (Maple Grove, MN USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Fury Mm (Mass Market Paperback)
G. M. Ford's _Fury_ is the first in a new series featuring disgraced journalist Frank Corso. Corso has relocated to Seattle and is writing a column for a third-rate paper, the _Sun_, following some sort of scandal at a paper in New York--there's mention of a libel suit, as well as Corso having made up a story, but the real trouble is never that clear. Regardless,
Corso has fallen a few rungs on the ladder, lost his CNN reporter-girlfriend, and now is content to hide out on his boat, writing the occasional book and turning in his columns, whose syndication fees help keep the paper afloat.


At the beginning of the book, Leanne Samples, a somewhat simple though good-hearted girl, comes to the _Sun's_ offices to recant her testimony in the trial of Leroy Himes, the prime suspect in a series of "Trashman" rape/murders three years previously. Leanne had thought at the time to accuse Himes of rape and save herself the embarrassment of dealing with an unwanted pregnancy and the hassle of confronting her overprotective parents. She insists on talking only to Corso, because he was one of the few people to treat her kindly during the trial.

Corso himself had had his doubts about Himes' guilt and written a column to that effect, but it seems as if everyone else in Seattle is content to move forward with Himes' execution, only a few days away at this point. When he gets involved, Corso suddenly has an exclusive and people start buying the _Sun_ again. As he digs further, in the company of his partner, freelance photographer Meg Dougherty, an unfortunate woman who was tattooed all over her body by a vengeful boyfriend, Corso discovers that the police are trying to cover-up a pair of new murders that fit the MO of the previous string and which, coupled with Leanne's recantation, pretty much guarantee Himes' innocence.


I enjoyed the book, though it was hard to warm up to Frank Corso. He's got a rough, hard-edged exterior, although he's always got a kind word and a ready ear for life's losers, like Leanne or Himes. He's just a bit too prickly and unfriendly to the other people in his life for him to be an attractive character. He's especially mean to Meg, which makes the scene where the two of them fall into each others' arms that much harder to believe.


This was the first Ford book I've read since his debut Leo Waterman mystery _Who in Hell is Wanda Fuca?_ and Waterman makes a brief appearance in this book, tying the two series together. Ford draws a great picture of Seattle, though I'm still trying to decide if I want to spend any more time in Frank Corso's company. I guess I'd have to give this one a rather mixed recommendation.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 The start of another great series for G.M. Ford., Janv. 29 2003
Par nobizinfla "nobizinfla" (Windermere, Florida USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This review is from: Fury Mm (Mass Market Paperback)
G.M. Ford's "Fury" is an attention getting noirish ticking clock mystery---from page one I was hooked.

Newspaperman/true crime author Frank Corso is the protagonist in Mr. Ford's second series. He's a hard boiled, cynical anti-hero who prefers his solitude.

He is a clever, resourceful and relentless archangel type---undaunted in his quest for justice as defined by his sense of right and wrong. Fiercely loyal to his friends, he is a commanding presence.

Mr. Ford's atmospheric writing places the reader right in Seattle as Corso and his allies have six days to clear a venal death row inmate.

It is a riveting plot that moves at a breakneck pace, told from multiple points of view.

Mr. Ford has created another series peopled with characters you care about. "Fury" is the initial entry---highly recommended.

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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 "In this dreary and comfortless region..."
Sometimes my loyalties get in the way of good sense. When I think G. M. Ford, I think Leo Waterman, the slightly haphazard private investigator and the crew of alcoholics that... Read more
Publié le Nov. 22 2002 par Marc Ruby™

5.0étoiles sur 5 Fury
Reclusive Frank Corso, disgraced ex N.Y. Times journalist, is working as a freelance syndicated columnist for the lowly Seattle Sun. Read more
Publié le Nov. 13 2002 par Barbara J. Frayser

4.0étoiles sur 5 Fury, Fast & Furious
Thereï¿s lots of anger in this book, nicely diffused by the authorï¿s deft sense of humor. He gives us a brooding sense of place in a Seattle that has seemingly skipped summer... Read more
Publié le Juil 4 2002 par sweetmolly

3.0étoiles sur 5 Renegade journalist works to stop execution of innocent man
This title is the lead of my review of this journalism expo set in Seattle, starring non-conformist, recluse journalist Frank Corso. Read more
Publié le Jui 5 2002 par mary1anne2

5.0étoiles sur 5 GREAT NEW FACES ON THE SEATTLE CRIME FIGHTING SCENE
FURY
by
G. M. Ford

For six books I have read and enjoyed G. M. Ford's exploits of Seattle private investigator, Leo Waterman. Read more

Publié le Avril 1 2002 par Robert Edler

4.0étoiles sur 5 A Damn Good Adventure Genre Read
Author Ford is one of those rare and gifted writers who pen books that have you looking forward to his subsequent works. Read more
Publié le Janv. 21 2002 par Joseph L Burke

4.0étoiles sur 5 G.M. Ford a welcome find
FURY is the first G.M. Ford novel I've read, so I have no comparisons to make between his Leo Waterman series and this first Frank Corso, although my enjoyment of FURY may send me... Read more
Publié le Nov. 3 2001 par Kathryn R. Wall

5.0étoiles sur 5 Outstanding -- can't wait for Frank Corso to return!
Was this just the right book at the right time? I don't think so, but it was an enjoyable page-turner for me. Read more
Publié le Sep 19 2001

5.0étoiles sur 5 A nice break
I have loved G.M. Ford's Leo Waterman books since my mother-in-law lent me Cast in Stone. Ford just has such a sense of place and style. Read more
Publié le Aoû 21 2001 par David Roy

3.0étoiles sur 5 Slam-Dunk Conclusion
This story, about down-at-the-heels newsman Frank Corso. Kicked out of the NY Times, Corso now plies his trade in Seattle. Read more
Publié le Jui 8 2001 par edwardn

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