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Resurrectionist

Resurrectionist

RRP £6.99
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£1.41

Harper


Number of pages: 400
Language: English (Original Language)
Language: English (Unknown)


RRP: £6.99
Whats the time, gov?
Review date: 2008-03-16 Rating: 8 out of 10

James McGee has in both his books achieved something new and different mainly creating a hero that you can identify with as well as making Regency London real.I have no idea whether it was like this or not, but it makes London seem real and that is all that matters.Hawkwood is human and fallible and I empathised with him. If you want to compare him to other authors,go ahead, I will read his books as enjoyable stories. It's fiction-enjoy it.


Reviews


Sequel to Ratcatcher
Review date: 2008-03-03 Rating: 10 out of 10

James McGee is the pseudonym of Glen Moy, who was born into an army family in 1950. He was educated in Gibraltar, Germany and Belfast, giving him a love of travel, which is evident in his meticulous, vivid portraits of diverse people and places. His varied career has included banking, bookselling, thirteen years in the airline business, and book reviewing.

This is the sequel to the book Ratcatcher, featuring Matthew Hawkwood, a Bow Street Runner, who is not above bringing his own form of rough justice to the slums and drinking dens of Regency London.. Death is their stock in trade, but for one grave robber it comes much closer to home that he would ever have wished.

His violent death brings the gruesome trade to the notice of Matthew Hawkwood, a man whose past life is every bit as tainted as the men he seeks to bring to justice. A new term has started at London's anatomy school and fresh corpses are in big demand. A situation that threatens to spiral out of control. Also a spate of mutilations and murders in Bedlam, the home for the criminally insane leads to clues that suggest the two inquiries may well be connected . . .


Entertaining view of london
Review date: 2007-09-18 Rating: 8 out of 10

James McGee's second Bow Street Runner novel and one that was entertaining. The darkness of London came through as well as allowing the reader to walk the streets (or pound them in this case) as the body snatchers are hard at work. It worked well and one that will keep the readers wondering how the constable will survive the struggles. Also McGee isn't afraid to drop big names or to use locations famous for the times. As the tale progresses the reader will easily become gripped with the way it explores and probes some of the darkest fears of mankind. Well worth a read.

Should have stayed buried
Review date: 2007-04-15 Rating: 6 out of 10

I didn't much like Ratcatcher and I'm not overly impressed with this one, either. As with the previous novel, there is much to be said for the author's description of old London. He does capture the disgusting elements very well. However, as with Ratcatcher, there is no character development again. We do learn a little more about Hawkwood but it's very much preipheral. Strangely, the style of writing is quite different from Ratcatcher which does make it a more mature book. But where's the thrill of the romp? The reader knows how the arch-criminal escapes long before the Bow Street Runner. We know who's doing the killing, the body-snatching and why. There are just too many pages filled with gore and needless descriptions of bits of bodies. Who cares? This is not a medical journal nor is it a horrifying travel through London's underworld. Hawkwood is no Bond nor is he as described by the author when giving a little background to his war-time exploits, a Richard Sharpe. Pity. It might have livened up the action and given the reader a chance to empathise with him. As is stands, rather like the old bones in the resurrectionist's vaults, Hawkwood has very little flesh on him.

Too gory for its own good
Review date: 2007-04-09 Rating: 4 out of 10

I liked ratcatcher. I thought it's plot collapsed under its own weight, but there was good period feel and good atmosphere.

This one is weaker. There are good passages - particularly the description of an early operation (which will have every bloke crossing his legs), but far too many elements have been seen in other novels.

The 'cutting off of the face thing to escape from prison' is from Silence of the Lambs; the 'smells of the city defines it' is from Perfume and the body part surgery reeks of Lovecraft's Re-Animator and, for that matter, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.

The most shocking part of the book is the historical note, where the author reveals how much of the medical practice is true. He also, rather revealingly, says he ommitted some details about the storage of dead bodies because he could not work it into a credible story. In my view, the whole book suffers from this. Body snatching ain't nice. Early medical experiments ain't nice either. This is meant to be a period romp, it's meant to be fun, but it's way too grisly. At the end of the novel, I had to ask myself, is such gore and slime 'entertaining?' Really, I didn't think so.

The denoument isn't clever; it's just our boy Hawkwood shooting people. Two hundred pages of characterization and, bang, you're dead. The sidekick character - Jago - is an afterthought and worked into the action for no good reason whatsoever.

I am genuinely surprised that people are comparing this stuff to Bernard Cornwell, a writer who combines exciting plots with characters you care about. At the end of this, I was just glad it was over. I certainly didn't want more.

The irony is that the author has created a decent character who really should become a series, maybe he will, but these are getting worse.


Product Details/Specifications


Authors:
James McGee

Recording label: Harper
Manufacturer: Harper
EAN: 9780007212712
Binding: Paperback
ISBN: 0007212712
Number of pages: 400
Publication date: 2007-09-03
Language: English (Original Language)
Language: English (Unknown)

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