One Good Turn (novel)

This article is about the novel by Kate Atkinson. For other uses, see One Good Turn (disambiguation).
One Good Turn

First edition
Author Kate Atkinson
Cover artist Neil Gower
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Series Jackson Brodie
Genre Crime Fiction
Publisher Doubleday
Publication date
2006
Media type Print, audio & ebook
Pages 400
ISBN 0-385-60800-4
Preceded by Case Histories
Followed by When Will There Be Good News?

One Good Turn (subtitled A Jolly Murder Mystery) is a 2006 crime novel by Kate Atkinson set in Edinburgh during the Festival. 'People queuing for a lunchtime show witness a brutal road rage incident - an incident that changes the lives of everyone involved.'[1] It is the second novel to feature former private investigator Jackson Brodie and is set two years after the earlier Case Histories.[2]

Principal characters

Reception

Reviews were mixed. Justine Jordan of The Guardian enjoyed the novel, saying

'the finale, when the cast are manoeuvred together for a violent climax and the inevitable expostulations of "You? Here? Why?", does not slot the pieces together as neatly as the Russian dolls which stud the novel might suggest. But the pleasure of One Good Turn lies in the ride, in Atkinson's wry, unvanquished characters, her swooping, savvy, sarcastic prose and authorial joie de vivre'.[2]

Liesl Schillinger of the New York Times said, "Kate Atkinson shows again, in her inimitable bleakly funny way, how much easier it is to explain a death than to solve a life."[3] In "no hurry to judge," Atkinson "acts like a hidden camera, dispassionately recording her characters’ deeds and misdeeds so they can indict themselves. Indeed, she has woven the technological accessories of the last 10 years into the fabric of her story, threading them through it like an invisible current into which the lives of all her characters are plugged." [3]

But Amanda Craig writing in The Independent says

'Unlike its dark and dazzling predecessor, One Good Turn is neither a good literary novel nor a satisfying detective story, though it had the potential to have been both'.

Adaptations

The novel was adapted for television with two other of Atkinson's Brodie series for the BBC in 2011, under the overall title of as the second two parts of the series Case Histories. This novel was covered in two parts.

Cast

References

  1. ↑ back cover, Charwood large-print edition, publ, 2007
  2. 1 2 Jordan, Justine (2006-08-04). "Beyond the Fringe". theguardian.com. The Guardian. Retrieved 2014-04-26.
  3. 1 2 LIESL SCHILLINGER, "Unusual Suspects", New York Times, 29 October 2006, accessed 20 September 2014

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.