The King of the Rainy Country

by Nicolas Freeling

Paperback, 1965

Status

Available

Call number

823.914

Publication

Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1985

Description

This was the end of the story that had started 'Once upon a time, in a rainy country, there was a king...' The end had not happened in a rainy country, but on a bone-dry Spanish hillside, three hundred metres from where Van der Valk had left a lot of blood, some splintered bone, a few fragments of gut, and a ten-seventy-five Mauser rifle bullet. No one had broken any laws. But a handsome, middle-aged millionaire had disappeared with a naked girl. And Van der Valk was given the job of finding out why.

User reviews

LibraryThing member auntieknickers
Nicolas Freeling's THE KING OF A RAINY COUNTRY was the 1967 Edgar winner for Best Novel. I was already reading a lot of mysteries in 1966, and Freeling's name was familiar to me from library shelves, but for some reason I'd never picked one up. In this case, I think I will need to read at least one
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more of the Van der Valk books before I can figure out exactly what I think! So far, 6 out of 14 Edgar winners have been series books, if you count Ed Lacy's ROOM TO SWING (he wrote a sequel many years later, but at the time it wasn't a series). I'm also not sure whether THE QUILLER MEMORANDUM was the first of the Quiller series. Anyway, the standard for a series book becoming a Best Novel winner seems to require something special. THE KING OF A RAINY COUNTRY -- well, a title out of Baudelaire should tip you off right away that this is going to be, as my spouse said, "weird." It's full of philosophy and philosophizing (and stereotyping of the various European nationalities). For me, it was a bit too talky, but still good enough to make me want to check out another of the Van der Valk books to compare with it. For what it's worth, I've never been a big Maigret fan either, and some of the jacket blurbs compared Van der Valk to Maigret.
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LibraryThing member nandadevi
Freeling writes with a very light touch. His dialog, and plots, wanders like the distracted, tired, cynical and reflective mind of his protagonist, Dutch detective van der Valk. Freeling creates a classic detective story, a wealthy man on the run across Europe, and the truth buried behind marital
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estrangement and corporate betrayal. It is gripping and fast paced, and draws out the discovery of the true state of affairs in a very satisfying manner. Freeling's unique gift, the ability to depict confusion, humanity and decency in his characters through dialog and subtle observation, is fully employed in this short novel.
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LibraryThing member antiquary
I had read this at least once about 1977, but today I picked it up to catalog it and just got swept away by it --read the whole book. With that kind of quality, I should give it five stars, but I must admit I found the ending unsatisfying. The heir of a very rich man vanishes; it turns out he has
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run off with a teenage girl from the equivalent of Mardi Gras in Koln. Van der Valk is sent after him, joined intermittently by the man's wife.
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LibraryThing member Cat-Lib
A very different type of detective novel, I enjoyed the philosophising and somewhat negative attitude of the main character. I am slowly working my way through all the Van der Valk stories.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1966

Physical description

157 p.; 18 cm

ISBN

0140028536 / 9780140028539
Page: 0.2618 seconds