Reviews

Yeux de La Nuit by William Irish

felipecayhuan's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional inspiring mysterious reflective relaxing sad fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

paul_arzooman's review against another edition

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2.0

I thought Woolrich did a good job building suspense especially in the first part of the book. The mounting dread was palpable as the backstory was told. However, as soon as the police investigation begins, the story bogs down with over-description of scenes. What works to create an atmosphere of doom early in the novel falls flat as page after page of a dinner or following a suspect or a parlor game creates less suspense than it does boredom. Many passages late in the novel should have been edited much shorter than they were. The characterizations, especially of the detective Shawn, were odd as well -- out of place is the best I could describe it.

I would have given it one more star except that the ending left me flat. Not a good payoff IMHO.

bundy23's review against another edition

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3.0

This could've done with a hell of a lot of trimming... the plot's good, the characters are good and the writing's pretty good except for the pacing... at times it just goes on and on and on and it takes so long to get where it's going...

perasta0112's review against another edition

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dark mysterious slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No

2.5

mh_books's review against another edition

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4.0

A dark atmospheric book that is infused with dread. There is really only two endings it could have and it picked the right one.

Here we have a story similar to a more modern novel [b:The Immortalists|30288282|The Immortalists|Chloe Benjamin|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1493015963s/30288282.jpg|50766250] by [a:Chloe Benjamin|15968276|Chloe Benjamin|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1482438426p2/15968276.jpg] - a death is predicted by a pretty reliable fortune teller. The novel is essentially an exploration of how the protagonists react to this prediction (being Roman Noir you can probably guess they are not too happy about it). Can the police do anything about it? Is it just a scam? Or is the prediction itself a self-fulfilling prophecy. Read and find out.

Warning this book is written in the 1940s and is shockingly classist, sexist and even a little racist in places. How the police treated a former prostitute in order to aid a rich man is just one example. However, if you are willing to overlook these faults you have a gripping Roman Noir where the hero is going to rescue his Dame come hell or high water.

neven's review against another edition

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3.0

Fun and inventive in places, but also overlong, overwritten, overly concerned with its own cleverness at the expense of saying something real—and maybe just too plain silly. Often the case with classic noir!

keary's review against another edition

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5.0

Wow!

Fantastic but not in any way what I expected. A book of colour and theme, not of action. But what writing!

The story of a man who meets a woman one night and saves her from a suicide attempt. She tells her story and he follows her to save her and her father from destiny. Brilliant book.

ellisknox's review against another edition

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3.0

This was a most unusual book with much to recommend it and one aspect that lessened my enjoyment. First the positive.

Which started out as a negative. A police detective is walking home at night when he stops a young woman from leaping to her death off a bridge. A mundane opening, but it's her reaction that threw me. She's afraid of the stars. A thousand eyes. Her deep hysteria just felt so odd, it read almost like melodrama, akin to _Laura_.

The woman tells her story to the cop in an all-night diner, and here's where things got intriguing. I won't go into the details, but there's a strong supernatural element to her story and her attempted suicide starts to be more understandable.

And *then* the story switches gears to become a police procedural, trying to prove that the whole business wasn't supernatural at all, but an elaborate setup to a murder. Cool! I hadn't seen that done before.

The resolution resolves pretty much everything while leaving supernatural elements at least possible. The whole vibe came across as something like Poe or maybe Doyle in his moodier pieces.

Unfortunately, the prose, which was bearable early on, drags the whole story down. When aiming for a mood of horror and suspense, the ornate language--reminiscent of early more than mid-century (20th)--layered up nicely. When describing the basics of tailing a suspect or tapping a room, that language grows tedious.

If you are a fan of modern, terse language, if you are sparing with your similes, this probably isn't the book for you. But if you don't mind strong emotional reactions or lingering descriptions, then by all means scoop this one up. The story itself is clever and memorable. And it has nothing to do with a song by Bobby Vee.

efbeckett's review against another edition

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2.0

A disappointment. Starts off tremendously well, but once the direction of the plot is established it mostly just spins its wheels and spends a ridiculous amount of time describing the spinning. Dramatically it makes no sense for anything to really happen before a certain time of a certain day so there is virtually no suspense. There is some nice noir-ish depiction of predestination vs free will and of someone giving up the will to live once informed that he is to die, but too much time is given over to irrelevant detail, especially during the police's attempts to get to the bottom of things. I'll still keep reading Woolrich because this is the only misfire of his work that I've read so far.

quynh23's review against another edition

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4.0

Sau khi đọc xong cuốn này, mình có thôi thúc viết hai phần review, một vui nhộn, một u ám như màn đêm của cuốn sách vậy. Cornell Woolrich một lần nữa nhuốm tác phẩm của ông vào màu đen của bóng đêm và nỗi ám ảnh trước cái chết.

Phải nói, sau khi đọc Ám ảnh đen và Đêm ngàn mắt, ta mới thấy Định Mệnh đầy quyền lực và khó cưỡng đến thế nào. Dường như nó sở hữu sinh mệnh nhưng không có chủ ý, chính vì vậy mà nó tàn nhẫn và nghiệt ngã vô cùng. Thuyết tiền định được nhấn mạnh hơn trong Đêm ngàn mắt. Qua cuốn sách này, ta mới thấy rõ được ngòi bút tài hoa của Cornell Woolrich, nếu ông không viết trinh thám đen mà chú trọng vào những dòng văn học chính thống hơn, hẳn tên tuổi ông sẽ được lưu danh cùng các tác giả kinh điển.

Còn về phần review vui vui, phải nói rằng giới cảnh sát trong này không ăn hại như đa phần cảnh sát trong các tác phẩm trinh thám khác, luôn ngờ vực nhân chứng và chỉ xuất hiện sau khi mọi sự đã giải quyết xong xuôi. Đội thám tử ở đây hoạt động rất hiệu quả và có kỷ luật, biết lần theo những manh mối cụ thể và tác nghiệp rất “cảnh sát”. Trong lúc đẩy câu chuyện dồn dập lên đến đỉnh điểm, tác giả cũng xen kẽ thêm các mẩu truyện điều tra vào giữa một trường đoạn căng thẳng về nỗi ám ảnh cái chết treo lơ lửng trên đầu nạn nhân, giúp người đọc thư giãn hơn và tránh bị hồi hộp liên tục. Khá là thú khi đọc đến các mẩu chuyện ấy, mỗi thám tử lại có khám phá mới mẻ và bất ngờ riêng của mình.

Tuy Đêm ngàn mắt được xây dựng xuất sắc trên nhiều phương diện, nhưng giống như Ám ảnh đen, mình vẫn có cảm giác truyện vẫn hơi bị thừa, giá tác giả viết gọn lại một chút thì hay hơn. Dù sao, Đêm ngàn mắt vẫn là tiểu thuyết mình ưa thích nhất trong số các tác phẩm của Cornell Woolrich.