It’s not so much Reginald Hill’s productivity that is amazing (although producing novels for nearly four decades is impressive enough); it’s the unassailable quality of his writing that takes the breath away. With barely a misstep over the years, Hill’s chronicling of the abrasive (but, of late, more accommodating) relationship between his mismatched coppers, the no-holds-barred Andy Dalziel and the more nuanced Peter Pascoe, has been non-pareil, with the author’s plotting every inch a match for his spot-on characterisation (and not just of his detective duo -- there have been many sharply observed players introduced into the dramatis personae over the years). Of course, a title like The Death of Dalziel will set alarm bells ringing (as much, one assumes, for Hill’s publishers as for dedicated readers), and there's no denying that putting the life of his corpulent copper on the line ratchets up the tension here considerably.
We’re given a taste of Andy’s corrosive wit as he and Peter Pascoe observe a video shop that’s under surveillance by the security services for its supposed terrorist connections, but (before the reader has time to draw a breath), there is an explosion, and Dalziel is left lying unconscious, bleeding heavily and covered with debris, his body having shielded his partner from the worst of the blast. And for the rest of the book, while Pascoe tracks down the reasons behind the explosion (he doesn’t buy the obvious explanation, i.e., would-be terrorists have blown themselves up by accident), Hill tries something radically different: we are taken into the consciousness of the critically ill Dalziel in his hospital bed. These sections (discursive, alternately funny and sad) are among the most successful in a very successful book. --Barry Forshaw
Praise for 'The Stranger House': 'Grim, gory, fascinating, enraging and entertaining.' Independent 'A mystery novel but far more than that. It's gripping... Hill is wonderful.' The Times 'Exhilarating.' Sunday Times 'You're enthralled by the cunning of the plotting... great.' Observer 'It's a complex, multi-layered plot... it takes a master like Mr Hill to turn it into such an absorbing and atmospheric mystery.' Sunday Telegraph Praise for 'Good Morning, Midnight': 'A real treat. The characters are deftly drawn, the plot constantly delivers surprises and the assured narrative demonstrates again what a terrific writer he is.' Observer 'As absorbing and as enjoyable as anything Hill has produced. The writing is brilliant, witty and erudite.' Evening Standard 'Probably the best living male crime writer in the English-speaking world.' Independent Reviews for 'Good Morning, Midnight': 'Few writers in the genre today have Hill's gifts: formidable intelligence, quick humour, compassion and a prose style that blends elegance and grace.' Donna Leon, Sunday Times 'Reginald Hill's novels are really dances to the music of time, his heroes and villains interconnecting, their stories entwining.' Ian Rankin 'The fertility of Hill's imagination, the range of his power, the sheer quality of his literary style never ceases to delight.' Val McDermid
Hill was born to a "very ordinary" working-class family—his father was a professional footballer long before sportsmen earned riches—but began reading young. His mother was a great fan of Golden-Age crime writers, and he discovered the genre while fetching her library-books. After National Service (1955-57) and studying English at St Catherine's College, Oxford University (1957-60) he worked as a teacher for many years, rising to Senior Lecturer at Doncaster College of Education. In 1980 he retired from salaried work in order to devote himself full-time to writing.
Hill is best known for his more than 20 novels featuring the Yorkshire detectives Andrew Dalziel (pronounced [diːˈɛl]), Peter Pascoe and Edgar Wield. The characters were used by the BBC in the Dalziel and Pascoe series, in which Dalziel was played by Warren Clarke, Pascoe by Colin Buchanan, and Wield by David Royle. He has also written more than 30 other novels, including five featuring Joe Sixsmith, a black machine operator turned private detective in a fictional Luton. Novels originally published under the pseudonyms of Patrick Ruell, Dick Morland, and Charles Underhill have now appeared under his own name. Hill is also a writer of short stories, and ghost tales.
Hill's novels employ various structural devices, such as presenting parts of the story in non-chronological order, or alternating with sections from a novel supposedly written by Peter's wife, Ellie Pascoe (née Soper). Clues may also be provided in such a way that readers sail past them, only realising at the end how their own assumptions have been exposed. He also frequently selects one writer or one oeuvre to use as a central organizing element of a given novel, such as one novel being a pastiche of Jane Austen's works, or another featuring elements of classical Greek myth. In a different kind of tease, the novella One Small Step (dedicated to "you, dear readers, without whom the writing would be in vain, and to you, still dearer purchasers, without whom the eating would be infrequent",) is set in the future, and deals with the EuroFed Police Commissioner Pascoe and retired Dalziel investigating the first murder on the moon. In another departure from the norm, the duo do not always "get their man", with at least one novel ending with the villain getting away and another strongly implying that while Dalziel and Pascoe are unable to convict anyone, a series of unrelated accidents actually included at least one unprovable instance of murder.
The unusual force of Hill's writing career is suggested by a comment he made in 1986:
I still recall with delight as a teen-ager making the earth-shaking discovery that many of the great “serious novelists,” classical and modern, were as entertaining and interesting as the crime-writers I already loved. But it took another decade of maturation to reverse the equation and understand that many of the crime writers I had decided to grow out of were still as interesting and entertaining as the “serious novelists” I now revered.
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**评价一** 这部作品的叙事节奏把握得如同精密的机械,每一个转折点都恰到好处地勾勒出人物内心的挣扎与外部环境的压迫。我特别欣赏作者对于时代背景的细致描摹,那种历史的厚重感并非生硬地堆砌史料,而是自然地融入了人物的日常对话和对未来的迷惘之中。阅读过程中,我仿佛能闻到战后初期那种弥漫在空气中的硝烟味和对重建家园的渴望。角色的塑造立体而复杂,没有绝对的英雄或恶棍,每个人都在灰色地带游走,为了生存或信念做出艰难的抉择。特别是主角的内心独白,那些深刻的哲学思考,常常让我停下来,陷入沉思良久,思考人性的本质和道德的边界。它的文字如同雕刻般精确,每一个词语的选择都充满了力量,推动着情节向前发展,却又留有足够的空间供读者去想象和填充情感的空白。整体而言,这是一次酣畅淋漓的阅读体验,它不仅讲述了一个故事,更像是一面镜子,映照出人类在巨大变革面前的脆弱与坚韧。
评分**评价四** 这是一本读起来让人感到心寒,却又无法释卷的作品。它的冷峻气息贯穿始终,仿佛笼罩在一层挥之不去的阴影之下。作者对权力腐蚀人心的描绘达到了令人咋舌的程度,它不是那种戏剧化的、大张旗鼓的邪恶,而是渗透在制度的裂缝中,以一种看似合乎逻辑的方式逐渐吞噬个体的良知。我非常赞赏作者在处理复杂的人际关系时所展现出的洞察力,人物之间的信任崩塌过程,处理得细腻而真实,让人不寒而栗。阅读过程中,我的心跳时常加速,不是因为突发的动作场面,而是那种预知到悲剧即将发生却无能为力的紧张感。这本书的语言风格偏向于内敛和讽刺,常常在看似平静的叙述中隐藏着尖锐的批判。它迫使我们直面社会结构中的不公和人性的阴暗面,读完后需要很长时间才能从那种压抑的情绪中抽离出来,绝对不是一本轻松愉快的消遣读物,而是一次深刻的、挑战性的精神洗礼。
评分**评价二** 老实说,我差点被这本书的开篇劝退。那种带着浓重地方口音的对话,初读时显得有些晦涩难懂,仿佛需要一张解码器才能完全理解人物的意图。但一旦熬过了最初的几页,那种泥土的芬芳和生活的真实感便扑面而来,让人欲罢不能。作者的笔触极其写实,对于底层人民的日常生活描写得入木三分,没有美化,只有赤裸裸的困境和他们偶尔闪现的、微小却坚定的希望。我尤其喜欢书中对环境的描写,那些破旧的街道、阴沉的天空,都成了人物命运的隐喻。它不像那种流畅得让人感觉不到时间的快餐文学,反而需要你沉下心来,慢慢咀嚼那些粗粝的细节。读完后,我感觉自己仿佛在那个特定的时空里生活了一段时间,那些人物的悲欢离合,都成了我记忆的一部分。这是一种深刻的、需要投入情感才能完全体会的文学价值,它提醒我们,伟大的故事往往就隐藏在最平凡的角落里。
评分**评价五** 我必须承认,这本书在艺术手法上的大胆尝试令人印象深刻。它大量运用了非线性叙事和意识流的写作技巧,使得阅读体验充满了迷幻色彩和主观性。你永远无法确定你正在阅读的究竟是现实,还是某个角色破碎的梦境或回忆的碎片。作者对于感官细节的捕捉异常敏锐,比如某种特定的光线、突如其来的气味,这些意象频繁地出现,构建了一个极具象征意义的心理景观。这种风格要求读者放弃对传统情节发展的期待,转而沉浸于人物内在的意识流动之中。虽然初看可能会感到迷失,但一旦抓住作者设置的几次关键的情感锚点,整个拼图便会慢慢显现其令人震撼的图案。它探讨的主题非常抽象——关于身份的构建与瓦解、语言的局限性——但却通过极其具象化的、近乎诗歌般的文字呈现出来。这是一部需要反复品读,每次都能发现新层次的现代文学佳作,其文学实验性值得高度肯定。
评分**评价三** 这部作品的结构设计堪称精妙,它采用了多条看似毫无关联的叙事线索,在全书后半段如同河流汇入大海一般,展现出惊人的整体性和逻辑严密性。起初的章节中,我一直在猜测作者究竟想把我们引向何方,那些散落在各处的伏笔,小到一件遗失的饰品,大到一个模糊的童年记忆,都成了后续揭示真相的关键齿轮。这种布局要求读者必须保持高度的专注力,否则很容易错过重要的线索。而且,作者在处理历史事件和个人命运交织时,展现出一种近乎冷酷的客观性,他从不直接评判人物行为的对错,而是将判断的权力完全交给了读者。这种叙事上的克制,反而让情感的爆发力更具穿透力。书中的哲学思辨部分,探讨了记忆的不可靠性以及真相的相对性,这些深刻的议题,让这本书的层次远超一般的类型小说,具备了经久不衰的讨论价值。
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