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Death Claims (2004)

Death Claims (2004)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
4.04 of 5 Votes: 1
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ISBN
0299205649 (ISBN13: 9780299205645)
Language
English
Publisher
university of wisconsin press

About book Death Claims (2004)

Rating: 4* of fiveThe Publisher Says: "My name is David Brandstetter. I'm a claims investigator for the Medallion Life Insurance Company." He handed her a card. She didn't glance at it. "I'm looking for Peter Oats," he said."He's not here. I wish he were. Maybe you can help me. The police don't seem to care."She was April Stannard. Her lover, Peter's father, had died. April believed he'd been murdered.Dave Brandstetter's investigation takes him through the rare-book world, to backstage at a community theatre, to the home of a world-famous television performer. Along the way, Dave soon comes to agree with April.My Review: Small-town California has a lot of atmosphere, according to Hansen; I don't remember it that way, but I was young and miserable, so I'll go with the man who found there something that led to this description of an old mill made into a theater:The waterwheel was twice a man’s height, wider than a man’s two stretched arms. The timbers, braced and bolted with rusty iron were heavy, hand-hewn, swollen with a century of wet. Moss bearded the paddles, which dripped as they rose. The sounds were good. Wooden stutter like children running down a hall at the end of school. Grudging axle thud like the heartbeat of a strong old man.Beautiful.It's with this book, second in the series, that Hansen's chops come fully into play. He's here to wow you, and he's got the story to keep you sitting right there flipping pages. April, the bereaved, is Rita Hayworth in my mind; Oates, the dead guy, looks like John Garfield; Peter, the son and heir, is Cabaret-era Michael York; and so on and so on. (Eve, Oates' ex-wife, is Barbara Stanwyck.) I do this a lot, cast the perfect movie cast as I read along. But this time it felt as if it was all done for me. Oates' murderer, when revealed, was a surprise to me even though this was a re-read. And the actor I'd put in the role was perfect...no testament to my skills, just an example of how beautifully Hansen draws his characters.Dave's got a man, too...how amazing for the 1970s! I so wish this had been a TV series. Magnum PI only gay! *sigh* What might have been.... This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

Hansen’s word painting, put me into the setting with visuals and atmosphere complementing the feelings invoked by the characters. Sadness, loss, loneliness, tragedy and strength permeate the whole story. With simple words Hansen is able to create a whole cache of full blooded characters.The plotting of the story reminded me of one of Christie’s Poirot cases when he goes through all the characters, one by one and posits that they are the murderer and we visit a while with that character and work out that he is innocent and go on to the next one This works with Hansen too. He is able to build up characters, real characters and you come to see how they are what they are and how they think. Memorable for me in this story are John ‘the charming dependent user’, a user till the very end; the sad Whittington, I felt sad for him, like Madge he falls for the young beautiful ones who use him as stepping stones on to ‘better’ things; the strong Eve, who is seemingly bitchy and cold but in whom I saw strength and dependability, anchor material. Dave goes through all these characters, stubbornly, like a mastiff with a bone, until he finds the real murderer.Through the story we continue to catch glimpses of Dave, a cynical, reserved but caring Dave. To be able to have a relationship we carve out a space in our lives for that person to fit in. So when we lose that person, apart from the missing we also have the empty hole to deal with. Double wham. Dave has lost his other half and is now a bit in the dark, trying to find his way again. Only to do so he has to stop clinging to the lost one. I find this sad and tragic but true. We cannot walk forward whilst looking back.This is the kind of book which gives you people, who you can talk about for ages , which I end up doing with my buddy reader Rosa. We can talk a hell out a character and Hansen gives us the material to do this with. Because his people are us, their motives are our motives, their lives are our lives and what is more interesting than us at the end of the day!BR with Rosa (thanks for the company :D)

Do You like book Death Claims (2004)?

4,8 stars! The mystery in Death Claims was even better than in the first book. John Oats's body was found washed up on a beach. It was an accident, decided the police. It was murder, believed Dave Brandstetter, a insurance investigator. But who did it? "A loving son, a not-so-loving wife, a pretty young mistress, a business partner or none of the above."You'll have also a bit more romance comparing to the first book. Some thoughts, not exactly about this book, but that were triggered by it:While reading Joseph Hansen I can feel how my IQ is growing. A high-class writing. A PLEASURE PURE. A first class fiction.I never tire of repeating that Joseph Hansen's writing is BRILLIANT. I consider myself an enthusiastic ebook's reader. I can't imagine my life without my kindle but the ebook age is also responsible for a lot of trash on the book market.I don't want to offend anybody. But the number of people who believe they have something very interesting to say and who think that to write a book is not much different than to write a shopping list is growing. Unfortunately very rapidly. These wannabe writers are churning out their novels to the dozen and cause dying of our neurons every time we come in contact with their skills. Joseph Hansen's writing is the best brain food. Read his book and you'll know it.Why not 5 stars. It's hard. It is actually more than 5 stars, but I have a tiny tiny problem with this case of Dave Brandstetter. (view spoiler)[It is the sad example when the truth is not the best solution. I understand WHY Dave didn't believe that John Oats being a very good swimmer had drowned, WHY he had doubts that it was an accident. And I understand that he just did his job. It was also not totally wrong to have the son of John Oats as a prime suspect. But his investigations caused the death of Wade Cochran, the man Peter Oats was in love with. The man who was in love with Peter. The truth against the life of a human being. The truth against the happiness of two men. I understand that from the point of moral responsibility for crimes Dave has done the right thing. But this case made me soo sad and angry too: He found a real murder, but for which price... (hide spoiler)]
—Lena♥Ribka

That great man of "gay" crime fiction, Joseph Hansen, returns with the second instalment of his twelve book Dave Brandstetter, Insurance Investigator series, Death Claims sees Dave in the aftermath of his previous case, dealing with the relationship he fell in to with the spitting image of his dead lover whilst at the same time investigating a new suspicious death of a well insured client.Objectively Death Claims is the perfectly written crime novel; Hansen weaves a magical web of clues and suspicion through several suspects, constantly revealing new information just when you think you've got a handle on who did what to whom along with your judgemental homosexual hero he pulls the rug from under you with a delicate flick of the wrist, sending you off on another tangent as Brandstetter castigates himself once more for being such an idiot who can't see the wood for the trees.Subjectively however it feels like a step backwards in terms of enjoyment from the first in the series, there's less heartfelt observations, less poetic human insight and the investigation itself is just that bit less intriguing. Certain aspects seem perfunctory, red herrings placed for the sake of red herrings, the characters are book dealers and actors so they're all wonderful to hang out with even if they're all potential murderers but there's just nothing truly interesting about any of them outside of being suspects either.All this subjectivity aside means little in the grand scheme of things, Hansen is still a truly fine writer in this genre and worthy of further exploration, there's ten more of these things out there afterall.
—Tfitoby

Insurance investigator Dave Brandstetter has his doubts about the death of John Oats. True, the retired book dealer was dying of cancer, but good swimmers don't usually drown themselves close to the shore. And then of course there's the fact that Oats changed his beneficiary just days before . . . I didn't find the plot as compelling as Brandstetter's first recorded case ("Fadeout"), but I am still intrigued by his character. He's a thoroughly hardboiled detective who is also a practicing homosexual, and who treats his orientation--as his author treats it--as a given fact of life. This was groundbreaking genre work in the '70's, and it still holds up today.
—Bill Kerwin

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