tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-137677673775151256.post1046114355981868126..comments2024-03-28T10:31:55.774-07:00Comments on The Passing Tramp: Death Panel: The Catalyst Club (1936), by George Dyer The Passing Tramphttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09830680639601570152noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-137677673775151256.post-17783569609034183672012-11-23T04:10:26.985-08:002012-11-23T04:10:26.985-08:00Pietro,
I think you would really like the other ...Pietro, <br /><br />I think you would really like the other Dyers! Dyer does seem to have wanted to tell his tales a but differently.<br /><br />I've heard of Vantage Point but have not seen it.The Passing Tramphttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09830680639601570152noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-137677673775151256.post-79891458438628278702012-11-13T01:37:29.494-08:002012-11-13T01:37:29.494-08:00The Catalyst Club in Italy has never been publishe...The Catalyst Club in Italy has never been published. I spoke with Mauro time ago and he praised the novel, telling the story briefly. I derived for roughly what was a sort of "Black Widowers Association", which solved puzzles. As part of the novels of Dyers, I have yet The Five Fragments, published in Italy by Mondadori, during the fascist period, back in 1935. It is quite appealing as it gives a novel of the same offense five different points of view, as the five witnesses.<br />A movie a few years ago, Vantage Point, directed by Pete Travis, analyzed a terrorist attack on the basis of eight different points of view, giving the same fact, eight different angles that put together the same truth recomposed.<br /><br />PietroAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com