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Rural Noir: Bluebird, Bluebird and Pop. 1280
By Joe · 1 post · 14 views
By Joe · 1 post · 14 views
last updated Sep 19, 2020 10:14PM
What Members Thought

The Doomsters (1958) is the seventh novel in MacDonald’s Lew Archer series, yet we readers might still feel that we are barely scratching the surface when it comes to getting to know the elusive Archer. The Doomsters opens with one of the more unusual ways to meet a client with Carl Hallman, an escapee from a mental institution whose mind is all kinds of fuzzy, banging on Archer’s door. It seems Carl had been put in the institution by his brother, Jerry, after their father drowned in a bathtub.
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Maybe there was something wrong with me. Maybe I have finally hit a wall with the Lew Archer series (perish the thought!) but I simply could not get into this one. It's still an Archer novel so it remains a quality mystery tale but from the start, this one felt weaker than others. It relies too much on expository dialogue rather than Archer's detective skills and the setting is too familiar (though again, that's on me as I've read the vast majority of the Archer series already). This one ranks o
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Nov 16, 2012
Simon
marked it as to-read


Feb 16, 2020
Willj_1984
marked it as to-read

Oct 05, 2022
Ben Howard
marked it as to-read