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Zoran Drvenkar's "Sorry," a German bestseller that now invades our unsuspecting homeland, opens with a horrific crime: A man whose name we do not know knocks on the door of a woman who also remains anonymous. She recognizes the visitor and invites him in. After a bit of small talk, he renders her unconscious and drives her to another location, an apartment, where he nails her hands to the wall. ("The third blow wakes her, your eyes are level now and she screams into your face.") Then with a hammer and a 16-inch nail, he kills her. As she dies, he reflects that "everything is right" and the scene ends with the reader having no idea who these people are or what, if anything, the woman did to be awarded such a fate.
Read full article >>Philip Rucker 19 Sep, 2011
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Source: http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/click.phdo?i=7e358ac7e02bae3f8ed01afe3c544cf5
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