Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Night Train (1997) is a comedic parody of American detective novels by the author Martin Amis, named after the song "Night Train", which features twice in the novel. Plot summary [ edit ] This book is told from the perspective of Detective Mike Hoolihan, a female detective who is charged with the task of finding the motivation for ...

    • Martin Amis
    • 1997
  2. 2 de out. de 1997 · Ostensibly Night Train is a straight up crime novel, narrated by a female "police" named Mike Hoolihan, who is given the task of investigating the suicide of a young woman named Jennifer Rockwell. Jennifer’s father is Mike’s boss, and neither Colonel Tom Rockwell nor Mike can truly believe that Jennifer, given her seemingly ...

    • (5,9K)
    • Paperback
  3. 1 de jan. de 1984 · A fast paced, fun novel of '80s horror set beneath the streets of New York City, this twisted tale of missing trains, a subway slasher, urban legend, and an unspeakable evil loose in the labyrinth that lies below the City That Never Sleeps.

    • (217)
    • Paperback
  4. 9 de jun. de 2011 · Night train : a novel. by. Amis, Martin. Publication date. 1997. Topics. Policewomen, Suicide victims. Publisher. New York : Harmony Books.

  5. 25 de jul. de 2020 · As night fell, we began to swap stories about strange things we'd encountered on our journeys, including the mysterious series of artworks by Kishida Michio called 'Night Train'. Morimi Tomihiko masterfully weaves strands of youth and fantasy into spine-tingling ghost stories of sojourns into night.

  6. 11 de set. de 1997 · If you have tears to shed, prepare to shed them - in a Martin Amis novel. Night Train by Martin Amis 150pp, Jonathan Cape, £10.99. Natasha Walter. Thu 11 Sep 1997 11.54 EDT. I f you usually...

  7. About Night Train. NATIONAL BESTSELLER • Fusing brilliant wordplay with all the elements of a classic whodunit, “Amis has created a quicksilver narrative that grabs the reader and refuse to let go” (The New York Times). “Dazzling…. Whistles into the police-procedural structure only to blow it to bits.” —Wall Street Journal.