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Fata Morgana (1977)

de William Kotzwinkle

MembrosResenhasPopularidadeAvaliação médiaMenções
2623102,214 (3.6)6
From the award-winning legend of speculative fiction, "a witty sendup of the detective story" with "a richness of invention that doffs a hat to Dickens" (Chicago Tribune). At a fashionable salon, Parisians line up to have their fortunes told by Ric Lazare's amazing machine. The predictions arrive with unerring accuracy, as if the invention were imbued with some sort of wondrous sorcery. The police, however, have a different opinion. They suspect that Lazare is a con man. Accordingly, they've sent one of their own to investigate. Unfortunately, the man they send is Paul Picard.   His methods are unconventional. His appetites--for lemon tarts, and for prostitutes--are legendary. And he is no stranger to the dark side of Paris. But Inspector Picard is entirely unprepared for the string of murders that pulls him across the continent. As the killer's seductive knot tightens around him, he learns once and for all that there's more to the glimmering world of high society than first appears.   Winner of the World Fantasy Award for his novel Doctor Rat, William Kotzwinkle reaffirms his reputation as one of the most captivating and original American authors of the last half-century with this "elegant entertainment" of magic and mystery in Paris (The Washington Post).   "Gaudy, decadent, smoothly polished, this beguiling novel is . . . a feat of stage magic, well rehearsed and well performed by a fine craftsman." --The New Yorker   "Alternately dark and glittering . . . a first-rate vaudeville turn." --Chicago Tribune   "Pure magic." --Playboy  … (mais)
  1. 00
    World of Wonders de Robertson Davies (ehines)
    ehines: Kotzwinkle's book isn't quite World of Wonders--a bit more of a pastiche--like World of Wonders it makes magic . . . well, magic. In an intelligent way.
  2. 00
    The Deptford Trilogy de Robertson Davies (ehines)
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In 1861 Paris Inspector Paul Picard is investigating a con man and magician named Ric Lazare. As he tracks Lazare's movements throughout Europe Picard becomes aware that Lazare has had previous names and lives, and there's a suggestion of immortality about him.

Picard is an especially rich character with many flaws. His warning to a doctor early in the story, "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing," comes back to haunt him, and becomes his own undoing.

The story is atmospheric, dreamlike, and has aged well. ( )
  Hagelstein | May 27, 2020 |
Didn't love this ... not the plot, not the characters, and it would be only two stars if it weren't for the actual writing which was occasionally lovely.

This book falls into a genre I think of as 1970s sensual foggy pseudo-fantasy ... it doesn't read as sharp and crisp (think Jane Austen) but more dreamlike and swoony (which in other hands can be terrific--I loved The Unconsoled, for instance).

But this story ... it may have seemed edgy when written (and I've been meaning to read it since then!) but now, just kind of draggy, not sexy, not interesting (when I picked up my Kobo I kept feeling disappointed that it was still this book), and the ending was infuriating.

(Note: 5 stars = rare and amazing, 4 = very good book, 3 = a decent read, 2 = disappointing, 1 = awful, just awful. I'm good at picking ones I'd like so I do end up with a lot of 4s!) ( )
  ashleytylerjohn | Sep 19, 2018 |
A very fine novel--kind of like Robertson Davies' World of Wonders meets Maigret in the 19th century. ( )
1 vote ehines | Aug 8, 2009 |
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From the award-winning legend of speculative fiction, "a witty sendup of the detective story" with "a richness of invention that doffs a hat to Dickens" (Chicago Tribune). At a fashionable salon, Parisians line up to have their fortunes told by Ric Lazare's amazing machine. The predictions arrive with unerring accuracy, as if the invention were imbued with some sort of wondrous sorcery. The police, however, have a different opinion. They suspect that Lazare is a con man. Accordingly, they've sent one of their own to investigate. Unfortunately, the man they send is Paul Picard.   His methods are unconventional. His appetites--for lemon tarts, and for prostitutes--are legendary. And he is no stranger to the dark side of Paris. But Inspector Picard is entirely unprepared for the string of murders that pulls him across the continent. As the killer's seductive knot tightens around him, he learns once and for all that there's more to the glimmering world of high society than first appears.   Winner of the World Fantasy Award for his novel Doctor Rat, William Kotzwinkle reaffirms his reputation as one of the most captivating and original American authors of the last half-century with this "elegant entertainment" of magic and mystery in Paris (The Washington Post).   "Gaudy, decadent, smoothly polished, this beguiling novel is . . . a feat of stage magic, well rehearsed and well performed by a fine craftsman." --The New Yorker   "Alternately dark and glittering . . . a first-rate vaudeville turn." --Chicago Tribune   "Pure magic." --Playboy  

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