The Master of Rain pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi

The Master of Rain电子书下载地址
内容简介:
在线阅读本书
Book Description
For Richard Field, a young Englishman new to the international police force, Shanghai represents a brave new world away from the past he is trying to escape. But his naivete is quickly dashed when he is called to the scene of a brutal crime, in which a young Russian woman, Lena Orlov, has been found sadistically murdered in her bed. Field's idealistic instincts push him to investigate the case, but his attempts are met with apathy - then menace - from his colleagues. He beings to recognize that some cases in Shanghai are intended to remain unsolved, and, in a matter of days, he glimpses the murky depths that lurk beneath a luminous city.
Field's drive to find the murderer leads him to Lena's neighbor, Natasha Medvedev. A stunning beauty who fled her charmed life in tsarist Russia, Natasha escaped the Revolution but landed, like many of her counterparts, in a treacherous life in Shanghai. Natasha travels in an elite circle - one that orbits, Field knows, around the city's most feared drug lord, Lu Huang. As Field's attraction to the beguiling Natasha grows, he is faced with a piercing question: Can he trust someone whose only goal is self-preservation? And is it wise to fall in love with a woman who may herself be the next victim?
Trusting only his Chicago-hardened American partner, Caprisi, Field follows leads that run into the heart of a lawlessly corrupt city, slowly uncovering a web of deception that will leave him reeling.
Publisher Comments :
Shanghai, 1926. A city glistening with decadence and rife with corruption--a humid, bustling society at the cultural crossroads of British civil servants, American gun runners, Russian princesses, and Chinese gangsters.
For Richard Field, a young Englishman new to the international police force, Shanghai represents a brave new world away from the past he is trying to escape. But his naiveté is quickly dashed when he is called to the scene of a brutal crime, in which a young Russian woman, Lena Orlov, has been found sadistically murdered in her bed. Field's idealistic instincts push him to investigate the case, but his attempts are met with apathy--then menace--from his colleagues. He begins to recognize that some cases in Shanghai are intended to remain unsolved, and, in a matter of days, he glimpses the murky depths that lurk beneath a luminous city.
Field's drive to find the murderer leads him to Lena's neighbor, Natasha Medvedev. A stunning beauty who fled her charmed life in tsarist Russia, Natasha escaped the Revolution but landed, like many of her counterparts, in a treacherous life in Shanghai. Natasha travels in an elite circle--one that orbits, Field knows, around the city’s most feared drug lord, Lu Huang. As his attraction to the beguiling Natasha grows, he is faced with a piercing question: can he trust someone whose only goal is self-preservation? And is it wise to fall in love with a woman who may herself be the next victim?
Trusting only his Chicago-hardened American partner, Caprisi, Field follows leads that run into the heart of a lawlessly corrupt city, slowly uncovering a web of deception that will leave him reeling.
In The Master of Rain, Tom Bradby weaves a taut, atmospheric crime novel that doles out surprising turns until the last suspenseful page.
Amazon.com
Tom Bradby's third novel (though his first to be published in the U.S.) is a feverish work of historical noir, a labyrinthine thriller set in a vicious world where everyone--as in Bogart's Casablanca--has a reason for hiding. The year is 1926; the city is Shanghai, a swamp of organized crime, corruption, turf wars between British intelligence and street-level law enforcement, Communist sympathizers, and East European refugees from Bolshevik atrocities. Into this sweltering, cutthroat port city steps Richard Field, an idealistic policeman from Yorkshire looking to distance himself from a painful past. Ill-suited to Shanghai's heat and shocking violence, Field nevertheless throws himself into investigating the grisly murder of a Russian prostitute, the latest in a line of dead women who lived in the orbit of a powerful Chinese mobster. Slowed by official roadblocks, Field learns that the only man in his department he can trust is a tough Chicago detective, Caprisi, a touchstone of sanity even as Field loses his rookie head over another doomed Russian call girl.
Bradby, a seasoned correspondent for Britain's ITN television network, has obviously spent considerable time researching 1920s Shanghai. His feel for the city's Byzantine society and exotic textures is matched by his accessible vision of Shanghai as a junction of international fallout and internal intrigue. Less compelling, if not outright distracting, is Bradby's more contemporary emphasis on ghastly serial killings with a sex-crime edge. But in the end, the book's remarkable prose and density of experience are uniquely rewarding.
--Tom Keogh
Amazon.co.uk
Every once in a while a book comes along that combines larger-than-life epic adventure; idiomatic, pungent historical detail and genuine storytelling panache. Tom Bradby’s The Master of Rain is such a book, carrying the reader headlong into a breathless tale of double-dealing and murder in 1920s Shanghai. What’s more, Bradby never allows his sprawling canvas to overwhelm his beleaguered characters who always remain in keen focus.
Richard Field, Bradby’s resourceful protagonist, has been seconded to the police force in the turbulent city of Shanghai. He finds a jostling mélange of British Imperial civil servants, American gunrunners and vicious Chinese gangsters. The grisly case he is landed with involves the mutilated body of a young White Russian woman and Field discovers that her neighbour, Natasha Medvedev, is somehow crucial to the investigation. But Natasha’s only agenda is self-preservation and Field finds himself unwisely falling in love with her. Can he crack the mystery before the next victim falls--particularly as the signs are that it is to be Natasha?
This is splendidly evocative writing from the author of the first-rate Shadow Dancer. Masterly in its depiction of a beautiful, dirty and corrupt city and a population in thrall to the imperatives of the market: human life, like everything else in Shanghai, has its price. Field is the perfect conduit for the reader through the glittering decay of the city and his relationships (both with the beguiling Natasha and the panoply of quirky, dangerous characters he encounters) are adroitly handled by Bradby. The book is nearly 500 pages long but the reader will find that it has the pace and compulsiveness of a short story.
--Barry Forshaw
From Publishers Weekly
British TV newsman Bradby used his time in Hong Kong to do some research on 1920s-era Shanghai, the result of which is this hefty first novel of corruption, debauchery and decaying colonialism. Richard Field, a young policeman from Yorkshire, lands a job in the Special Branch of Shanghai's police department circa 1926. Honest but naeve, the Englishman falls into a snake pit of corruption and rivalry, revealed when a Russian prostitute is savagely murdered by a maniac. The trail leads to local gangster "Pockmark" Lu Huang, a powerful opium smuggler; when evidence begins disappearing and mysterious cash deposits are made to his bank account, Field knows the department is dirty, but can't get support from anyone except his sidekick Caprisi (a pugnacious American transplant who cut his teeth fighting Capone in Chicago). What's more, Field falls hard for the dead Russian's neighbor, Natasha Medvedev, who is one of "Lu's girls" and therefore, as Field discovers, highly likely to meet a fate similar to her neighbor's, which Field learns is only one in a string of such homicides. But when Field's investigation threatens Lu's opium ring, Lu lashes out at the foreign police force and the body count rises precipitously. The novel works better as a multilayered mystery than as a period piece, as the background historical issues are obscured by the more modern focus on frenzied sex and death. Likewise, the obvious film noir look the author goes for is undermined by the late 20th-century serial-killer shtick he injects into the plot. Despite the periodic glimpse of Western elitism and building Chinese sympathy for communism, there is remarkably little use of local color (language, food, local customs) to satisfy readers of historical thrillers, though the mystery plot doesn't disappoint. Major ad/promo; author tour.
From Library Journal
A foreign correspondent for British TV's ITN, Bradby takes on Shanghai in 1926, where an English cop discovers that he is not supposed to solve the murder of a young Russian woman.
From AudioFile
The conventional elements of the gritty whodunit--the fledgling cop, the politically volatile station house, the criminal mastermind, the sexy dame in distress, drugs, smuggling, corruption--are spiced up by an exotic locale and taut writing. In 1920s Shanghai, an idealistic British novice on the force and his partner, a street-smart Chicago expatriate, investigate the murder of a Russian prostitute, the "property" of a Chinese underworld kingpin. West End veteran Steven Pacey serviceably impersonates the run-of-the-mill characters of various nationalities, despite his shaky handling of accents. Even more successfully, he plays the rhythms of the slick narrative structure and journalistic prose, which so effectively keep the listener riveted to the action. Y.R.
About Author
TOM BRADBY is a foreign correspondent for the British television network ITN. He has spent the last eight years covering British and American politics, as well as conflicts in China, Ireland, Kosovo, and Indonesia. While living in Hong Kong and writing this novel, Bradby researched historical records and archives of 1920s Shanghai. He now lives in London with his wife and three children.
Book Dimension:
length: (cm)24.1 width:(cm)16.1
书籍目录:
暂无相关目录,正在全力查找中!
作者介绍:
暂无相关内容,正在全力查找中
出版社信息:
暂无出版社相关信息,正在全力查找中!
书籍摘录:
暂无相关书籍摘录,正在全力查找中!
在线阅读/听书/购买/PDF下载地址:
原文赏析:
暂无原文赏析,正在全力查找中!
其它内容:
书籍介绍
在线阅读本书
Book Description
For Richard Field, a young Englishman new to the international police force, Shanghai represents a brave new world away from the past he is trying to escape. But his naivete is quickly dashed when he is called to the scene of a brutal crime, in which a young Russian woman, Lena Orlov, has been found sadistically murdered in her bed. Field's idealistic instincts push him to investigate the case, but his attempts are met with apathy - then menace - from his colleagues. He beings to recognize that some cases in Shanghai are intended to remain unsolved, and, in a matter of days, he glimpses the murky depths that lurk beneath a luminous city.
Field's drive to find the murderer leads him to Lena's neighbor, Natasha Medvedev. A stunning beauty who fled her charmed life in tsarist Russia, Natasha escaped the Revolution but landed, like many of her counterparts, in a treacherous life in Shanghai. Natasha travels in an elite circle - one that orbits, Field knows, around the city's most feared drug lord, Lu Huang. As Field's attraction to the beguiling Natasha grows, he is faced with a piercing question: Can he trust someone whose only goal is self-preservation? And is it wise to fall in love with a woman who may herself be the next victim?
Trusting only his Chicago-hardened American partner, Caprisi, Field follows leads that run into the heart of a lawlessly corrupt city, slowly uncovering a web of deception that will leave him reeling.
Publisher Comments :
Shanghai, 1926. A city glistening with decadence and rife with corruption--a humid, bustling society at the cultural crossroads of British civil servants, American gun runners, Russian princesses, and Chinese gangsters.
For Richard Field, a young Englishman new to the international police force, Shanghai represents a brave new world away from the past he is trying to escape. But his naiveté is quickly dashed when he is called to the scene of a brutal crime, in which a young Russian woman, Lena Orlov, has been found sadistically murdered in her bed. Field's idealistic instincts push him to investigate the case, but his attempts are met with apathy--then menace--from his colleagues. He begins to recognize that some cases in Shanghai are intended to remain unsolved, and, in a matter of days, he glimpses the murky depths that lurk beneath a luminous city.
Field's drive to find the murderer leads him to Lena's neighbor, Natasha Medvedev. A stunning beauty who fled her charmed life in tsarist Russia, Natasha escaped the Revolution but landed, like many of her counterparts, in a treacherous life in Shanghai. Natasha travels in an elite circle--one that orbits, Field knows, around the city’s most feared drug lord, Lu Huang. As his attraction to the beguiling Natasha grows, he is faced with a piercing question: can he trust someone whose only goal is self-preservation? And is it wise to fall in love with a woman who may herself be the next victim?
Trusting only his Chicago-hardened American partner, Caprisi, Field follows leads that run into the heart of a lawlessly corrupt city, slowly uncovering a web of deception that will leave him reeling.
In The Master of Rain, Tom Bradby weaves a taut, atmospheric crime novel that doles out surprising turns until the last suspenseful page.
Amazon.com
Tom Bradby's third novel (though his first to be published in the U.S.) is a feverish work of historical noir, a labyrinthine thriller set in a vicious world where everyone--as in Bogart's Casablanca--has a reason for hiding. The year is 1926; the city is Shanghai, a swamp of organized crime, corruption, turf wars between British intelligence and street-level law enforcement, Communist sympathizers, and East European refugees from Bolshevik atrocities. Into this sweltering, cutthroat port city steps Richard Field, an idealistic policeman from Yorkshire looking to distance himself from a painful past. Ill-suited to Shanghai's heat and shocking violence, Field nevertheless throws himself into investigating the grisly murder of a Russian prostitute, the latest in a line of dead women who lived in the orbit of a powerful Chinese mobster. Slowed by official roadblocks, Field learns that the only man in his department he can trust is a tough Chicago detective, Caprisi, a touchstone of sanity even as Field loses his rookie head over another doomed Russian call girl.
Bradby, a seasoned correspondent for Britain's ITN television network, has obviously spent considerable time researching 1920s Shanghai. His feel for the city's Byzantine society and exotic textures is matched by his accessible vision of Shanghai as a junction of international fallout and internal intrigue. Less compelling, if not outright distracting, is Bradby's more contemporary emphasis on ghastly serial killings with a sex-crime edge. But in the end, the book's remarkable prose and density of experience are uniquely rewarding.
--Tom Keogh
Amazon.co.uk
Every once in a while a book comes along that combines larger-than-life epic adventure; idiomatic, pungent historical detail and genuine storytelling panache. Tom Bradby’s The Master of Rain is such a book, carrying the reader headlong into a breathless tale of double-dealing and murder in 1920s Shanghai. What’s more, Bradby never allows his sprawling canvas to overwhelm his beleaguered characters who always remain in keen focus.
Richard Field, Bradby’s resourceful protagonist, has been seconded to the police force in the turbulent city of Shanghai. He finds a jostling mélange of British Imperial civil servants, American gunrunners and vicious Chinese gangsters. The grisly case he is landed with involves the mutilated body of a young White Russian woman and Field discovers that her neighbour, Natasha Medvedev, is somehow crucial to the investigation. But Natasha’s only agenda is self-preservation and Field finds himself unwisely falling in love with her. Can he crack the mystery before the next victim falls--particularly as the signs are that it is to be Natasha?
This is splendidly evocative writing from the author of the first-rate Shadow Dancer. Masterly in its depiction of a beautiful, dirty and corrupt city and a population in thrall to the imperatives of the market: human life, like everything else in Shanghai, has its price. Field is the perfect conduit for the reader through the glittering decay of the city and his relationships (both with the beguiling Natasha and the panoply of quirky, dangerous characters he encounters) are adroitly handled by Bradby. The book is nearly 500 pages long but the reader will find that it has the pace and compulsiveness of a short story.
--Barry Forshaw
From Publishers Weekly
British TV newsman Bradby used his time in Hong Kong to do some research on 1920s-era Shanghai, the result of which is this hefty first novel of corruption, debauchery and decaying colonialism. Richard Field, a young policeman from Yorkshire, lands a job in the Special Branch of Shanghai's police department circa 1926. Honest but naeve, the Englishman falls into a snake pit of corruption and rivalry, revealed when a Russian prostitute is savagely murdered by a maniac. The trail leads to local gangster "Pockmark" Lu Huang, a powerful opium smuggler; when evidence begins disappearing and mysterious cash deposits are made to his bank account, Field knows the department is dirty, but can't get support from anyone except his sidekick Caprisi (a pugnacious American transplant who cut his teeth fighting Capone in Chicago). What's more, Field falls hard for the dead Russian's neighbor, Natasha Medvedev, who is one of "Lu's girls" and therefore, as Field discovers, highly likely to meet a fate similar to her neighbor's, which Field learns is only one in a string of such homicides. But when Field's investigation threatens Lu's opium ring, Lu lashes out at the foreign police force and the body count rises precipitously. The novel works better as a multilayered mystery than as a period piece, as the background historical issues are obscured by the more modern focus on frenzied sex and death. Likewise, the obvious film noir look the author goes for is undermined by the late 20th-century serial-killer shtick he injects into the plot. Despite the periodic glimpse of Western elitism and building Chinese sympathy for communism, there is remarkably little use of local color (language, food, local customs) to satisfy readers of historical thrillers, though the mystery plot doesn't disappoint. Major ad/promo; author tour.
From Library Journal
A foreign correspondent for British TV's ITN, Bradby takes on Shanghai in 1926, where an English cop discovers that he is not supposed to solve the murder of a young Russian woman.
From AudioFile
The conventional elements of the gritty whodunit--the fledgling cop, the politically volatile station house, the criminal mastermind, the sexy dame in distress, drugs, smuggling, corruption--are spiced up by an exotic locale and taut writing. In 1920s Shanghai, an idealistic British novice on the force and his partner, a street-smart Chicago expatriate, investigate the murder of a Russian prostitute, the "property" of a Chinese underworld kingpin. West End veteran Steven Pacey serviceably impersonates the run-of-the-mill characters of various nationalities, despite his shaky handling of accents. Even more successfully, he plays the rhythms of the slick narrative structure and journalistic prose, which so effectively keep the listener riveted to the action. Y.R.
About Author
TOM BRADBY is a foreign correspondent for the British television network ITN. He has spent the last eight years covering British and American politics, as well as conflicts in China, Ireland, Kosovo, and Indonesia. While living in Hong Kong and writing this novel, Bradby researched historical records and archives of 1920s Shanghai. He now lives in London with his wife and three children.
Book Dimension:
length: (cm)24.1 width:(cm)16.1
网站评分
书籍多样性:5分
书籍信息完全性:3分
网站更新速度:9分
使用便利性:3分
书籍清晰度:5分
书籍格式兼容性:3分
是否包含广告:7分
加载速度:3分
安全性:5分
稳定性:3分
搜索功能:7分
下载便捷性:8分
下载点评
- 章节完整(515+)
- 推荐购买(452+)
- 无多页(352+)
- 无颠倒(301+)
- 差评少(611+)
- 速度快(492+)
- 中评(59+)
- 还行吧(275+)
- 值得购买(81+)
- 中评多(359+)
- 下载快(350+)
下载评价
- 网友 师***怡:
说的好不如用的好,真心很好。越来越完美
- 网友 益***琴:
好书都要花钱,如果要学习,建议买实体书;如果只是娱乐,看看这个网站,对你来说,是很好的选择。
- 网友 游***钰:
用了才知道好用,推荐!太好用了
- 网友 芮***枫:
有点意思的网站,赞一个真心好好好 哈哈
- 网友 石***烟:
还可以吧,毕竟也是要成本的,付费应该的,更何况下载速度还挺快的
- 网友 訾***雰:
下载速度很快,我选择的是epub格式
- 网友 权***颜:
下载地址、格式选择、下载方式都还挺多的
- 网友 蓬***之:
好棒good
- 网友 扈***洁:
还不错啊,挺好
- 网友 国***舒:
中评,付点钱这里能找到就找到了,找不到别的地方也不一定能找到
- 网友 孙***夏:
中评,比上不足比下有余
喜欢"The Master of Rain"的人也看了
2024春黄冈360定制密卷三年级语文+数学+英语下册人教版小学教材同步单元卷期中期末卷专项突破试卷(套装共3册) pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
9787552223538 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
原子核物理 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
成本会计 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
中公版·2019江苏省公务员录用考试专项教材:申论写作轻松学 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
彩虹兔欢唱童谣 第一辑 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
健康中国战略下医疗保险门诊保障政策的改革效果分析 中国财政经济出版社 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
主体功能区人口再分布实现机理与政策研究 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
男装结构设计/原型法纺织服装高等教育十二五部委级规划教材 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
就是这样走过来的—艺术人文 庞熏琹 著 生活.读书.新知三联书店【正版速发】 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
- 世界未解之谜 注音版 彩色图文带拼音小学生二三四五年级课外阅读书籍科普百科知识6-7-8-10岁未解之谜儿童科普百科书 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
- 陈亮 指弹吉他系统教程 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
- 水处理药剂及配方手册 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
- Coffee and Kung Fu (平装) pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
- 中国文化经纬— 老子与道家(1版2次)精装 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
- 2014年会计从业资格考试历年真题详解及押题预测试卷——初级会计电算化会计证从业资格考试教材2014 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
- 企业文化概论/高职高专专业基础课教材新系 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
- Ginzburg-Landau Theory of the Quantum Condensate pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
- 清代扬州学派经学研究 pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
- 宏章出版.专业八级英语词汇家族图谱(高级版) pdf snb 115盘 kindle 在线 下载 pmlz mobi
书籍真实打分
故事情节:6分
人物塑造:7分
主题深度:6分
文字风格:9分
语言运用:6分
文笔流畅:5分
思想传递:9分
知识深度:9分
知识广度:9分
实用性:6分
章节划分:4分
结构布局:7分
新颖与独特:8分
情感共鸣:8分
引人入胜:3分
现实相关:9分
沉浸感:8分
事实准确性:7分
文化贡献:9分