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HannibalThe following report compares books using the SERCount Rating (base on the result count from the search engine). |
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Aftersleep Books - 2005-06-20 07:00:00 | © Copyright 2004 - www.aftersleep.com () | sitemap | top |
Red Dragon was the best piece of popular fiction I think I ever read. Silence was an outstanding book. But setting Hannibal Lecter free sounded the death knell for the formula which made both of those books so successful.
And no bad thing either. Just like Hitchcock with Psycho, Harris opened the floodgates for thousands of inferior copies. How many times do you read about a character which 'makes Hannibal Lecter look like Old Mother Hubbard'?
Those police procedurals with a flawed hero facing an omnipotent character, the embodiment of evil, should be put to bed now. Thomas Harris, who never really wrote to that forumula anyway, has done his best to aid this noble cause and has brought us an entirely logical end to the Lecter story.
By bringing Lecter out into the open, Harris immediately lost the fear of the unknown which added an extra pinch of spice to the central plot in the first two books. And to his credit he did not try to regain that element - instead he gave us an entirely logical story.
It's a simple story, it has to be, there are no really diverting sub plots avilable. Instead it concentrates on the search for the man by a number of protagonists. I am not going to delve into the plot further - that is for the reader to do.
I will merely say the ending took my breath away. It was so RIGHT. And to all the hypocrites who beat their pained breast at the 'depravity' of this story - Red Dragon brought us depravity and made it sexy; Silence took that sexiness to a new level; there are no redeeming qualities to either of these books, other than the fact that they are works of fiction, designed purely to horrify. To praise those two and condemn this hints at an inability to separate the relevant issues from society's current general attitude to violence.
My only quibble? The typos!