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The Ferryman Will Be There: An Ellis Portal Mystery
 
 

The Ferryman Will Be There: An Ellis Portal Mystery (Hardcover)

de Rosemary Aubert (Author)
3.5étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2 évaluations de client)
Price: CDN$ 26.51 & se qualifie pour Livraison super-économique GRATUITE pour des commandes de plus de CDN$ 39. Détails
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Amazon.ca

Movie-industry dirt and the inner workings of all-girl street gangs provide a compelling backdrop for The Ferryman Will Be There, the third title in Rosemary Aubert's utterly original mystery series featuring homeless ex-judge Ellis Portal. When a prominent director gets shot dead on the eve of his Toronto Film Festival gala screening, Portal--who is getting his life off the skids but still rates respect on the street--is called in to help track the filmmaker's missing 15-year-old daughter, who is also the movie's fast-rising star. Portal soon learns that the girl may have excellent reasons for hiding, and to find her, his most bankable asset is trust. As he explains, "Alliances formed on the street are like alliances formed among obscure nations. They may not make sense to the powerful; in fact, they may seem foolish and evil. But, hinged on survival, they have an innocence all their own."

In The Ferryman Will Be There, Portal has moved into a rooming house from the ravine he inhabited in criminologist and former romance author Aubert's first two mysteries--including the 1999 Arthur Ellis Award winner The Feast of Stephen--but the lively character of Toronto's streets and diverse neighbourhoods remains central to the plot. The text is filled with T.O. in-jokes, beginning with Ellis Portal's name, which the protagonist shares with a subway train tunnel. --Deirdre Hanna --Ce texte provient de la Paperback édition.



From Publishers Weekly

Canadian Aubert's third Ellis Portal mystery (Free Reign; The Feast of Stephen) is a well-written, if pedestrian, descent into the world of homeless young women. A professional criminologist, the author brings compassionate insight into the pathetic, often terrible, people who inhabit this underworld. These insights, alas, are the high points of the story. Middle-aged detective Ellis Portal, a former judge who fell from grace through drink and drugs, wound up homeless on the streets and re-ascended to the edge of respectability, helps his friend, Det. Sgt. Matt West, to locate a young woman, Carrie Simm. Her father, a Toronto movie producer, was murdered in front of her, in full view of hundreds of people, at a film premiere. Possibly fearing for her own life, Carrie disappeared. She has a history of running away, and West suspects she's hiding with her homeless women companions. He asks Portal to use his contacts to locate her. No surprise Portal soon finds himself looking for a lot more than a missing girl. Too much, perhaps. Aubert introduces so many characters and concerns that Carrie almost becomes a McGuffin. Bland, whiny and self-absorbed, Portal endlessly relives his rise and fall, while his success as a detective is entirely due to incredible luck. Both he and West make some stupid errors in judgment. The worst judgment of all is the author's: her killer never could have gotten away with the method Aubert chooses. A consistently readable, often interesting, but ultimately disappointing book. (June 1)best mystery novel of 1999.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


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L'avis des consommateurs

2 évaluations
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3.5étoiles sur 5 (2 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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4.0étoiles sur 5 An enjoyable read with an different perspective, Jui 24 2004
Aubert's lead character gives you interesting insights into the lives of the homeless. It is nice change to have a bit of an atypical lead character, as opposed to the typical good-looking but hard-nosed cop with a heart of gold that you normally find as the lead of mystery novels.

You won't feel like you already know the answer to the mystery by the 5th page, which is great, and the hints leading up to the final chapter aren't so blatant that they knock you over the head.

The ideal target reader for this book: a Canadian living in Toronto or someone with a love of or interest in Toronto, as Aubert does a superb job of bringing Toronto to life.

Extra kudos to the author for setting this storyline in Canada!

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Great insight into the homeless, but weak characters, Juil 11 2001
Former Judge and former homeless person Ellis Portal descends once again into the world of the homeless to track down a girl who vanished when her father was shot. He discovers teen gangs, evil corporations, drug dealing, and the physical underbelly of Toronto.

I loved the way author Rosemary Aubert described the lifestyles of the homeless, their ability to survive and their schemes to protect themselves. Aubert is certainly a talented writer and THE FERRYMAN WILL BE THERE is a pleasant read.

The problem with this book is that although Portal and the other characters express ample emotions, the reader hears about them rather than feeling them. Aubert missed the chance to increase the reader suspense by giving Portal only a tangential direct stake in the outcome. Because Portal doesn't really care, neither does the reader. Finally, this is supposed to be a mystery. Aubert doesn't give us any misdirection to let the readers buy into the solution.

I enjoyed this book, but I could have enjoyed it so much more.

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