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LANOIREvision.com, 03.05.2011, 23:09

Rockstar Games gab heute bekannt, dass sie in Partnerschaft mit Mulholland Books, eine
Verlagsmarke von Little, Brown and Companyam, am 6. Juni 2011 das L.A. Noire: The Collected Stories
eBook bei diversen eBook-Händlern zum Download anbieten möchten. In L.A. Noire: The Collected
Stories
gibt es ein Teil der Fälle aus L.A. Noire als einzelne Geschichten, verfasst von den
Autoren Lawrence Block, Duane Swierczynski, Joe R. Lansdale, Jonathan Santlofer, Joyce Carol Oates,
Francine Prose, Megan Abbott und Andrew Vachss
.







Sam Houser, Gründer von Rockstar Games:

"L.A. Noire bezieht seine Inspiration aus einer reichhaltigen Geschichte, und zwar nicht nur aus
Filmen, sondern auch aus großartiger Kriminalliteratur. Wir haben das Spiel als Sprungbrett benutzt
und mit den besten Autoren des Genres zusammengearbeitet, um Storys zu erschaffen, die den besten
Traditionen der Kriminalliteratur gerecht werden."











Michael Pietsch, Publisher von Little, Brown and Company:

"Wir sind begeistert über die neue kreative Partnerschaft mit dem Team bei Rockstar Games. Die
Möglichkeiten bei dieser Art von Cross-Promotion die Spieler zum Lesen und die Leser zum Spielen zu
bewegen, sind immens. Wir freuen uns auf ein Stück Neuland in Sachen Buchveröffentlichung und sehen
in Rockstar den idealen Partner dafür."




In den nächsten Wochen möchte Rockstar Games die einzelnen Geschichten veröffentlichen und mit der
heutigen Bekanntgabe, wurde die Vorschau von dem ersten Fall The Girl der eBook-Serie
veröffentlicht. Viel Spaß beim Lesen.









"The Girl" An Excerpt by Megan Abbott:

"Through the half-open doors, June could see women with severe hair and pendulous earrings, their
arms laced high with Mexican bracelets. Men with pencil moustaches and the slick look of morphine
and Chinatown yenshee, their cuff links dropping to the floor, their heads loose on their necks.
Some were dancing, hips pressed close, and others were doing other things, straps slipping from
shoulders, bracelets clacking to the tiled floor.
Under a darkening banana tree in the center court, two women, ruby- haired both, their bodies lit,
swarming each other, their silver-toned faces notched against each other. They were famous, both of
them, famous like no one ever would be again, June thought, and to see their bodies swirling into
each other, their mouths slipping open, wetly, was unbearably exciting, even to June.
"Let's see the sights," the seersucker man said, gesturing inside one of the rooms. But suddenly
the coral-mouthed girl didn't want to and June's agent had a darting look, and said he'd spotted
George Tusk and had a sweet deal he wanted to seal over a pretty girl's bare back. The seersucker
man drifted away and it was only June and the girl.
A dark-haired man in glasses came up to them. He had in his hand a tall green bottle and a pair of
balloon goblets crooked in his finger.
"Please?" he said, lifting the bottle.
"Are you the owner?" June asked. The man grinned wetly, his face a white streak under a torch
flame.
Slowly, he set the glasses on a rosewood table and poured the green liquid from the bottle. "Are
you him?" June asked again, the alcohol—whatever it was—hitting her the second it hit her tongue,
tingling through her mouth like cocaine.
"Oh," the girl said, touching her greening lips. "It's very fine."
The man starting talking to them about the Mayans.
"They'd fasten a long cord around the body of each victim. After the smoke stopped rising from the
altar, that meant it was time."
June was not listening because he did not look important. He had rolled up his shirtsleeves and she
saw a tattoo of a woman with a long webbed tail on his forearm. "They'd throw them into the pit,"
he was saying. "The tribe would watch from the brink and then pray without stopping for hours.
After, they'd bring up the bodies and bury them in a grove." June couldn't really hear, her head
starting to feel echoy and strange.
The man was suddenly gone and June couldn't remember him leaving.
What had they drunk? She felt her dress slipping from her shoulders, her own mouth seeming to go
wider, spreading across her face. She felt the girl's hands on her, and they were walking on the
faintest of feet, their tiny shoes tapping on the courtyard.
They stood under an arching tree hung thickly with long soft blooms like red bells. The bells
tickled June's hair and made her skin rise up.
"I've been here before," the girl said, eyes saucering. "I know where that hallway goes. I was
brought here. I had something done to me here."



© 2011 Megan Abbott

All Rights Reserved.
"




Folgende Fälle folgen:












McFizLe, 06.05.2011, 19:21
Hoffentlich werden die Übsersetzt :S
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