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Dead Before Dying | 
enlarge | Author: Deon Meyer Publisher: Little Brown and Company Category: Book
List Price: £5.50 Buy New: £1.78 You Save: £3.72 (68%)
New (21) Used (7) from £1.76
Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 563978
Media: Mass Market Paperback Edition: Reprint Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 480 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 4.2 x 1.3
ISBN: 0316018694 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780316018692 ASIN: 0316018694
Publication Date: February 1, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW - ***Delivery usually * 4 - 5 * working days - From Aphrohead of SOUTHPORT, Lancs, uk *** . Priority Airmail used Worldwide on International orders. Thanks from all at Aphrohead.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review Hitchcock used to say that one of the ways he made audiences identify with his films was to "put the heroine through it", and the canny South African writer Deon Meyer does just that for his beleaguered hero in this exemplary thriller. After a successful career in the South African police force, Mat Joubert is hitting the skids. When his wife is tragically killed, he takes a sharp downturn into depression. With the twin demons of alcoholism and spiralling weight problems, he's not best equipped to be drawn into the investigation of a serial killer who appears to be murdering at random. But (apart from saving more lives), Mat comes to realise that nailing this killer is his last best hope for reclaiming his own life and exorcising the past. Utilising his journalistic background with quiet skill, Meyer creates the turbulent politics of an over- stretched police department in a vivid and energetic fashion, while Joubert is a sympathetic protagonist (with more than a touch of one of Graham Greene's under- pressure heroes about him). If the serial killer plot is nothing new, the atmosphere of a hot, turbulent country is very vividly evoked and the characterisation is dynamic enough to make the familiar plot come up as fresh as paint in the rainbow colours of the new South Africa. A striking debut novel. --Barry Forshaw
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| Customer Reviews:
Deeply Flawed Story with an Intersting Setting August 5, 2006 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
This South African crime novel was originally published in 1996 and only a decade later makes its appearance in the U.S. It's a shame, because in a sense it would have been much more interesting and exciting to read at the end of the apartheid era instead of now. The setting is Cape Town in the months after the ANC has come to power and the winds of change are blowing across the country. Police captain Mat Joubert of the Murder and Robbery Squad has been nursing a two-year depression since the death of his wife, who also worked as a cop. However, the arrival of a new black superior forces him to confront both his physical (weight, cigarettes, booze) and psychological demons if he wants to keep his job. At the same time, two new cases vie for his Joubert's attention. First, there's a master of disguise holding up banks. And then there's the murder of several apparently unconnected men in different parts of town, linked only by the unusual old handgun used in the killings. As the two cases drag on, the media frenzy and intense pressure and scrutiny from his superiors starts to mount up.
Meyer goes to great lengths to portray Joubert as a giant ball of misery and pain, and it's hard not to see his gradual healing as a metaphor for the new post-apartheid South Africa emerging at the same time. He's a moderately interesting character -- perhaps more so for readers who like their heroes deeply wounded and morose -- and the supporting cast of cops, victims, witnesses, journalists, etc. are all ably sketched. There are, however, a great deal of problems with the story. The most egregious of these is the identity of the killer, which requires one to swallow the most implausible coincidence imaginable. Not only is it a ridiculous coincidence, there's no real reason for the coincidence to exist in terms of the story. It simply comes across like the author was trying for a huge shocker. A second major flaw is that any reader paying a reasonable amount of attention will see what connects the murder victims within the first part of the book and grow increasingly bored waiting for Joubert to catch on -- meanwhile another three or four people die. Thirdly, the bank robber storyline feels tacked on and unnecessary, as if the author felt he should have a subplot with lesser stakes in order to give the reader a breather from the main story. Fourthly, there's a rather clumsy red herring presented early on, where it's stated that the killer "must" be a man because the recoil from the particular gun being used is so powerful. So, fine, we all know that means the killer is a woman. However, when the killer is revealed and has been described repeatedly as having delicate physique, it's never explained how she was able to handle the massive gun. If an author is going to set up a red herring that is so cut-and-dried, they need to explain why it didn't pan out at the end.
Finally, at the end, there is a big moment where it is revealed just why Joubert's pain over his wife's death is so large. However, again, any reader paying attention will have sussed this out very early on, so it lacks almost all its intended impact. All of this is not to say the book isn't entirely readable and reasonably enjoyable for those who like police procedurals. Just be warned that it has plenty of problems, along with some truly overwrought prose at times. I'd be interested in reading further Mat Joubert books to see if Meyer's plotting has improved and the writing is toned down at all. One final complaint that has nothing to do with the author -- the jacket is terrible and has no connection to the story. The tone of the book is very dark and bleak in most respects, and the jacket photo and type reflects none of this.
excellent read with a sympathetic hero and realistic settin December 1, 1999 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I started this book with great reservations as I am not usually sympathetic to the South African Police, but this rings totally true The hero Mat Joubert, is believable, and the flavour of South Africa and the problems the cops face here is vividly drawn Unlike most South African stories, it is not horrific, but nevertheless, paints a vivid picture of the hero and his problems and those of his fellow cops, with great humour and sympathy
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