This one is real gripping, and the ending is satisfying.
Actually, the elements that construct the story are never groundbreaking. Politics, crimes and the court proceeding. Nevertheless, the presentation matters. Everybody who is realistic enough would trust that "the section of Sapo" exists, more or less, in any country. I suspect that any serving government, if faces the predicament as the one depicted in the fiction, would do the same thing as the story suggests. Keep an arm length to stink and feign pure.
The court proceeding on Lisbeth's case is fascinating. The contrast between Annika's silence in most of the time and her eloquence while cross examining Teleborian is so steep. The change in atmosphere is great. Also, Larsson's light-hearted play around assertion and question is bemusing. It just seems like an assignment during the tutorial of Evidence.
Eventually, all the problems solved. All the evils ought to die, die.
2010年12月2日 星期四
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