One Good Turn (Russian Edition)

One Good Turn (Russian Edition)

by Kate Atkinson
One Good Turn (Russian Edition)

One Good Turn (Russian Edition)

by Kate Atkinson

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Overview

V vysshuyu ligu sovremennoj literatury Kejt Atkinson popala s pervoj zhe popytki: ee debyutnyj roman "Muzej moih tajn" poluchil prestizhnuyu Uitbredovskuyu premiyu, obojdya "Proshchal'nyj vzdoh mavra" Salmana Rushdi, a cikl romanov o chastnom detektive Dzheksone Broudi, uspevshij polyubit'sya i rossijskomu chitatelyu ("Prestupleniya proshlogo", "Povorot k luchshemu", "ZHdat' li dobryh vestej?", "CHut' svet, s sobakoyu vdvoem"), Stiven King okrestil "glavnym detektivnym proektom desyatiletiya". Na osnove pervyh knig cikla na Bi-bi-si snyali teleserial "Prestupleniya proshlogo" s Dzheksonom Ajzeksom v glavnoj roli. Na etot raz dejstvie proiskhodit v shotlandskoj stolice, navodnennoj turistami vo vremya znamenitogo ezhegodnogo Edinburgskogo festivalya iskusstv. Snova Dzhekson Broudi okazyvaetsya svidetelem, kazalos' by, nichem ne svyazannyh epizodov: vidnyj biznesmen, pod kotorogo uzhe vovsyu kopaet otdel ekonomicheskih prestuplenij, popadaet v bol'nicu s infarktom pri ves'ma komprometiruyushchih obstoyatel'stvah; otliv ostavlyaet na beregu telo devushki s serezhkami-krestikami, no priliv snova unosit ego v more, nesmotrya na vse staraniya sluchajno okazavshegosya ryadom Broudi. Mestnaya policiya vidit v nem v luchshem sluchae lzheca, a to i podozrevaemogo...

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9785389180987
Publisher: Azbooka
Publication date: 03/10/2020
Sold by: Bookwire
Format: eBook
Pages: 432
File size: 669 KB
Language: Russian

About the Author

About The Author
Кейт Аткинсон – трехкратный победитель престижной премии Costa Book Awards. За достижения в литературе писательница награждена Орденом Британской империи. Ее цикл романов о частном детективе Джексоне Броуди стал бестселлером во всем мире, а Стивен Кинг, большой поклонник творчества Аткинсон, окрестил его "главным детективным проектом десятилетия". Кейт родилась в Йорке, а живет в Эдинбурге. Ее первый роман "Музей моих тайн" получил престижную британскую награду Whitbread Book Award в номинации "Книга года" и для Кейт это стало началом оглушительного успеха, ведь каждая следующая книга неизменно попадала в списки бестселлеров. Кейт написала несколько самостоятельных романов "Человеческий крокет", "Витающие в облаках", "Жизнь после жизни", "Боги среди людей" и серию детективных романов о бывшем полицейском из Квебека с трагическим прошлым, неудавшейся профессиональной карьерой и сложными семейными взаимоотношениями. С 2011 по 2013 года телеканал BBC экранизировал детективы Аткинсон, в сериале "Преступления прошлого" (Case studies) роль сыщика сыграл британский актер Джейсон Айзекс.

Read an Excerpt

One Good Turn

A Novel
By Kate Atkinson

LITTLE, BROWN

Copyright © 2006 Kate Atkinson
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0-316-15484-9


Chapter One

He was trying to drive and at the same time decipher his A-Z of Edinburgh to work out how to escape this hellish street, when someone stepped in front of the car. It was a type he loathed-a young, dark-haired guy with thick, black-framed spectacles, two days of stubble, and a fag hanging out of his mouth, there were hundreds of them in London, all trying to look like French existentialists from the sixties. He'd bet that not one of them had ever opened a book on philosophy. He'd read the lot-Plato, Kant, Hegel-even thought about getting a degree someday.

He braked hard and didn't hit the spectacles guy, just made him give a little jump, like a bullfighter avoiding the bull. The guy was furious, waving his fag around, shouting, raising a finger to him. Charmless, devoid of manners-were his parents proud of the job they'd done? He hated smoking, it was a disgusting habit, hated guys who gave you the finger and screamed, "Spin on it," saliva flying out of their filthy, nicotine-stained mouths.

He felt the bump, about the same force as hitting a badger or a fox on a dark night, except it came from behind, pushing him forward. It was just as well the spectacles guy had performed his little paso doble and gotten out of the way or hewould have been pancaked. He looked in the rearview mirror. A blue Honda Civic, the driver climbing out-a big guy with slabs of weight-lifter muscle, gym-fit rather than survival-fit, he wouldn't have been able to last three months in the jungle or the desert the way that Ray could have. He wouldn't have lasted a day. He was wearing driving gloves, ugly black leather ones with knuckle holes. He had a dog in the back of the car, a beefy rottweiler, exactly the dog you would have guessed a guy like that would have. The man was a walking cliché. The dog was having a seizure in the back, spraying saliva all over the window, its claws scrabbling on the glass. The dog didn't worry him too much. He knew how to kill dogs.

Ray got out of the car and walked round to the back bumper to inspect the damage. The Honda driver started yelling at him, "You stupid fucking twat, what did you think you were doing?" English. Ray tried to think of something to say that would be nonconfrontational, that would calm the guy down-you could see he was a pressure cooker waiting to blow, wanting to blow, bouncing on his feet like an out-of-condition heavyweight. Ray adopted a neutral stance, a neutral expression, but then he heard the crowd give a little collective "Aah" of horror and he registered the baseball bat that had suddenly appeared in the guy's hand out of nowhere and thought, Shit.

That was the last thought he had for several seconds. When he was able to think again he was sprawled on the street, holding the side of his head where the guy had cracked him. He heard the sound of broken glass, the bastard was putting in every window in his car now. He tried, unsuccessfully, to struggle to his feet but only managed to get to a kneeling position as if he were at prayer, and now the guy was advancing with the bat lifted, feeling the heft of it in his hand, ready to swing for a home run on his skull. Ray put an arm up to defend himself, made himself even more dizzy by doing that, and, sinking back onto the cobbles, thought, Jesus, is this it? He'd given up, he'd actually given up-something he'd never done before-when someone stepped out of the crowd, wielding something square and black that he threw at the Honda guy, clipping him on the shoulder and sending him reeling.

He blacked out again for a few seconds, and when he came to there were a couple of policewomen hunkered down beside him, one of them saying, "Just take it easy, sir," the other one on her radio calling for an ambulance. It was the first time in his life that he'd been glad to see the police.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from One Good Turn by Kate Atkinson Copyright © 2006 by Kate Atkinson. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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