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Wineries, geology, and frontier history of the Llano Uplift, Central Texas: Field trip guidebook
  
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Wineries, geology, and frontier history of the Llano Uplift, Central Texas: Field trip guidebook [Unknown Binding]

Peter R Rose
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (30 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Unknown Binding: 40 pages
  • Publisher: Society of Independent Professional Earth Scientists, Austin, Texas Chapter (1992)
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0006DMF86
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (30 customer reviews)

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
63 of 66 people found the following review helpful
Format:Mass Market Paperback
It's hard to say what the attraction is about the Kurt Wallander series: They're not whodunnits; the stories can be as grim as the Southern Swedish landscape where they are set; there's no redeeming humour and the hero is just a normal policeman with no special quirks or character traits. There is nevertheless something remarkably compelling about them. The latest offering, Firewall, is no exception.

Inspector Wallander is a police inspector in Ystaad, Southern Sweden. As usual, he is in despair at what he sees as the gradual erosion of any sort of values in modern swedish society. He is confronted by an appalling example of this when two teenage girls are arrested for the brutal murder of a taxi driver and confess to the crime showing absolutely no signs of remorse. On the same evening a seemingly fit and healthy man drops dead in front of a cash machine, seemingly of natural causes. However, one of the girls escapes from custody and then there's another gruesome episode which seems to link the two events. The plot develops from here with Wallander attempting to piece together what really is behind it all.

The chronology of the series of novels is sometimes hard to follow as the books weren't translated in the order that they were written. If you haven't read any of these before then I would recommend that you start with an earlier novel. This one is actually set after Sidetracked, that is later than any that have so far been translated. The novels stand alone but there are references to events in earlier books. Nothing that spoils any plot however, but it is better to read them in the order they were written.

If you have read these books before then this one is back with what Mankell does best. I was a little disappointed with "Dogs of Riga" and "White Lioness" simply because they seemed to veer away from police procedural and into thriller territory. Firewall is more like "The Fifth Woman" and "Sidetracked". The reader gets to see the story mainly from Wallander's point of view but there is also some things seen from the criminal's eye, to put the reader slightly ahead of the police, but still not in the whole picture. You can never be sure where the investigation is going to lead to. Despite what I said earlier there's plenty of action too.

I also think that Mankell gets the mix of Wallander's private and professional life about right. There's enough to make the detective interesting as a human being but without being too much of a diversion from the meat of the book. As usual Wallander spends most of the book tired, bad-tempered and at the end of his tether and has very little time for a private life anyway. This case has a bit more office politics in it than in previous novels.

In general, the book seems very realistic, although I would say that artistic licence has been stretched a bit in a few places. Some things are never explained, which in some way adds to the realism because I'm sure in real life cases are not as neatly wrapped up in a bundle as conveniently as they are in most mystery stories. However I'm not entirely convinced by the criminal's behaviour at certain points. These are only minor grumbles. I see no letting up in the quality of the overall series with this entry. I find it really hard to compare these works to any other detective fiction availabe at the moment. Wallander might be a bit of a misery, but I'm keen to see what the future holds for him. I eagerly await the next translation.

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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful
By RachelWalker TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
I'm now going to make a broad statement: Mankell's Wallander books form the best detective series that has ever been written. Ever. Michael Ondatje seems to concur, which is just lovely.

Firewall is the 8th full-length novel in the series, and also the last. In the next novel, Wallander retires and we follow the exploits of his daughter Linda, who has also joined the police force. Knowing it was the last was a great shame, because it is also, probably, the very best of this incredibly, astoundingly fine series. At the close of each chapter sadness broke over me like a wave. Wallander may not be the most cheerful company, but he is charming and the most endearing of current detective. Mankell's style is also part of the reason why every single sentence is so spellbinding. I can't say why, I don't know exactly what it is about the way he writes that is so special, but nor do I want to. Like seeing how a magician performs his tricks, that may spoil it a little.

Part of the reason why it's all so engrossing is Mankell's mixture of details. Indeed, he depicts a level of procedural detail that should be all rights be dull, but is instead riveting. The reasons for this a re two: Mankell's superb prose, and the very real impression he has created through the entire series that the crucial breakthrough, the information which might crack the case wide open, could come from absolutely anywhere, from the most mundane of tasks.

Also, it may be true that Wallander is somewhat the stereotypical loner (although like them all he has things about him which make him truly original), the police-force background is not at all stereotypical. Unlike many series where the cop seems to constantly go it alone, Mankell creates a unique sense of teamwork, that I don't think I've ever come across before. There's a warmth in the team which surrounds Wallander, and the way they work together. He doesn't have a particularly antagonistic boss, or any colleague he particularly dislikes. They all play their part, they all play their role in a cohesive policing team, and it's a joy to watch it as it works. Mankell knows that otherwise his series may be just TOO bleak and depressing, so the team exists in a happy unity which is far more realistic.

As you may have guessed, I adore this series. Wallander is a superb protagonist, and while just now I said he was the stereotypical loner, in all honesty he isn't. He's actually completely different to his counterparts Bosch and Rebus, etc. Instead of being the attractive loner, he is REAL, he is HUMAN. He gets angry properly (rather than Rebus would), like a child - in Firewall his frustration becomes such that he snaps and throws a chair across a colleague's office. There isn't a single investigator like him.

Do yourself a favour - read this series. Don't start here (Faceless Killers is the first). It isn't for everybody, but serious fans of crime fiction cannot afford to pass it by.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
One of Makell's best 11 Feb 2010
Format:Paperback
This is the eighth of the Wallander novels. As usual, Mankell builds and maintains the tension of his story through the twists and turns of an investigation into a series of deaths. Though another round of multiple deaths (if not serial killing) in the same area of Southern Sweden stretches credibility, the pace and cleverness of the writing win out. One of Mankell's recognisable devices is to use a lot of dramatic irony - the reader knows what Wallander is just missing in his investigation, and we read with interest (mostly) as he discovers the links which solve the problem. Wallander's musing on Sweden's putative societal breakdown (the end of the golden age of welfare and the rise of a more feral social fabric) leaves the reader not quite knowing where Wallander's politics lie. But this is all to the good - enough is left unsaid to retain interest in the undertow, as well as in the main plot of the novel. A very good read indeed - if you like procedural detective fiction.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Firewall by Henning Mankell
I have been fortunate in being able to buy the complete set of Wallander novels from Amazon. Thus I have been able to follow the career and tribulations of Inspector Wallander. Read more
Published 16 days ago by Pierre Lebec
Bit of a mixed bag
This book had its positive points. It was well written for the most part, and had good characterisation. However, it lacked sorely when it came to pace and tension. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Emanon
Very good - my first foray with Insp Wallender
A pacy book keeping me interested into the wee small hours. Plot a little fantastic but subject - global financial meltdown, very topical!. Read more
Published 4 months ago by P. Taylor
Grim
I have read this twice, purely by accident and because I was learning Swedish. I can say that it is brilliant, simple storytelling. Read more
Published 10 months ago by D. J. Andrews
Mankell does it again.
Newish to this writer - However having read his latest The Troubled Man as my first, this is every bit as good.
Published 11 months ago by R D Glegg
Good but not his best
This was the third Henning Mankell read for me. 'The Man from Beijing' was masterful; 'Italian Shoes' was a bore; and am also a bit disappointed with 'Beyond the Frost' though... Read more
Published 13 months ago by John Fordyce
The day the fire went out
If you like police thrillers with weak plot lines and poorly researched technology angles with a long list of improbable characters, this is the book for you. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Basura Blanco
A refreshing change
What a fantastic book.

The front cover of this book states, "The most impressive new voice in the genre since Ian Rankin". Read more
Published 14 months ago by Like2Read
Another excellent Wallander mystery
As always, excellent plot development and very real characters - I have now read all the Wallander mysteries and miss having any more to read
Published 15 months ago by Angus G. Cockburn
Firewall
The title gives an indication of the content. Due to his unexpected death, a man conspiring with others to bring down the global financial system comes to the attention of the... Read more
Published 20 months ago by Ragnar
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