
Sicken and So Die
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Narrado por:
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Geoffrey Howard
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De:
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Simon Brett
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Reseñas de la Crítica
"In Charles Paris, the third-rate actor but first-rate sleuth, Simon Brett has devised one of the most ingratiating heros around." (The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Always a good read
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The story revolves around a summer festival production of Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night," in which the aging Charles is thrilled to be cast as Sir Toby Belch. The director is a friend who Charles trusts to approach the Bard with due reverence and a traditional interpretation. But his friend falls mysteriously ill (is poison a possibility?) and is replaced by a "hot" young director from Romania, whose approach is to trash tradition. Amazingly, one by one the cast members (all except Charles) embrace what emerges as an electrifying and dynamic take on a old classic--the type of modern reinterpretation that only emphasizes Shakespeare's genius.
The rehearsal road is rough and paved with accidents (or are they?) and eventually deaths. But it is the world and people of the theatre, not that of the detective, that pulls the reader in. I suggest scanning a synopsis of the characters and plot of "Twelfth Night" (the book's title comes from the play's famous opening speech that begins "If music be the food of love, play on..."). But you don't have to like Shakespeare to thoroughly enjoy "Sicken and So Die."
Author Simon Brett is a long-time writer for British radio and television, and the short, engrossing Charles Paris mysteries reflect his familiarity with the actors' world, whose finest moments and great foibles Brett views with keen perception and wry British wit. The subsetting of "summer festival theatre" is also portrayed with brilliant cynicism and fun. (I was not surprised to read in his biography that Brett's wife Lucy works with the Chichester Festival Theater--this is definitely a book written from first-hand experience.)
I may be biased toward Charles Paris; I confess I spent several summers in my twenties working backstage (with one or two minor and eminently forgettable appearances onstage) in repertory theatre. With the realization that my stage name could only be Noel Talent, I moved on to other career options, but I gained a healthy respect for the decidedly unglamorous world of the performing artist. Brett presents that world with humor and affection, and I highly recommend his Charles Paris series (I understand there's a new one coming out soon, after a long hiatus). They don't have to be read in order, and "Sicken and So Die" is definitely among the best of them.
The Food of Love
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