
1960: My Uncle Was the Fbi Director
by There Are Always Unscrupulous People Who Want To Love Me
About This Novel
My uncle is the FBI director! What? Who am I, you ask? Ahem, my last name is Hoover. ............ In the early summer of 1960, a profiler was reborn in the body of a rebellious young man. He decided to bring a little technological shock to the criminals of this era.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(11)Scraped 2d ago
I hope China can also have trade unions, the kind that are useful.
It's very interesting, but the case is not so "exciting". The criminal is no longer in the completion phase, but in the ongoing phase.
If there are too few updates, it will crash.
Just this update speed will drag down a bunch of readers to death. If you keep raising it, you will find that the author has no income, so he will cut it off. Why, no one reads it, why no one reads it? Because it's like a sheep pooping, little by little, normal people would die from it, so who would pay to see it? Just keep it first,,, and then keep it all, and then there will be no more.
Get a few more serial killers, perverted murderers, or get one, the kind that kills randomly, randomly selecting lucky spectators on the street, random places, random times, committing serial crimes, which should increase the difficulty of solving the case.
There are a lot of typos. Can you please pay attention to them?
The book is okay. If it were written in the era of paper books, it would have had a good reputation in the industry and a good market response. After all, the subject matter is niche. In the era of online writing, authors are self-sufficient on the premise that their own skills are sufficient, and they don't seem to be too obsessed with results. The portrayal of the protagonist seems inexplicable and unconvincing due to insufficient setting. But this is not a problem with the author's writing skills at all, because the supporting characters are written vividly and likeable. In comparison, the protagonist is like a ruthless and bad-mouthed child with Down's syndrome who is a top academic. I don't know whether the author intended this or whether he wanted to write too much and went astray. To sum up, it's not worth spending money to chase. Free viewing is guaranteed. All the shortcomings can be soothed by the story, and the quality of the story will not make people feel lonely.
Will this book feature a "Zodiac" killer?
I saw the news yesterday that the "Zodiac Killer" case had just been solved by the police and the identity of the murderer was confirmed. It was confirmed that the murderer was the same person as the "Black Dahlia Case"
Vote for you, the author will update ten chapters every day
The description of the partnership is exquisite, and the slightly cold technical character of the protagonist is also very novel. Come on, author!
1960: My uncle was the FBI director
Let's take a look first. There aren't many online articles where the protagonist writes about the FBI. This was the first time in the 1960s.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(11)Scraped 2d ago
I hope China can also have trade unions, the kind that are useful.
It's very interesting, but the case is not so "exciting". The criminal is no longer in the completion phase, but in the ongoing phase.
If there are too few updates, it will crash.
Just this update speed will drag down a bunch of readers to death. If you keep raising it, you will find that the author has no income, so he will cut it off. Why, no one reads it, why no one reads it? Because it's like a sheep pooping, little by little, normal people would die from it, so who would pay to see it? Just keep it first,,, and then keep it all, and then there will be no more.
Get a few more serial killers, perverted murderers, or get one, the kind that kills randomly, randomly selecting lucky spectators on the street, random places, random times, committing serial crimes, which should increase the difficulty of solving the case.
There are a lot of typos. Can you please pay attention to them?
The book is okay. If it were written in the era of paper books, it would have had a good reputation in the industry and a good market response. After all, the subject matter is niche. In the era of online writing, authors are self-sufficient on the premise that their own skills are sufficient, and they don't seem to be too obsessed with results. The portrayal of the protagonist seems inexplicable and unconvincing due to insufficient setting. But this is not a problem with the author's writing skills at all, because the supporting characters are written vividly and likeable. In comparison, the protagonist is like a ruthless and bad-mouthed child with Down's syndrome who is a top academic. I don't know whether the author intended this or whether he wanted to write too much and went astray. To sum up, it's not worth spending money to chase. Free viewing is guaranteed. All the shortcomings can be soothed by the story, and the quality of the story will not make people feel lonely.
Will this book feature a "Zodiac" killer?
I saw the news yesterday that the "Zodiac Killer" case had just been solved by the police and the identity of the murderer was confirmed. It was confirmed that the murderer was the same person as the "Black Dahlia Case"
Vote for you, the author will update ten chapters every day
The description of the partnership is exquisite, and the slightly cold technical character of the protagonist is also very novel. Come on, author!
1960: My uncle was the FBI director
Let's take a look first. There aren't many online articles where the protagonist writes about the FBI. This was the first time in the 1960s.
Featured in 5 Booklists
Official(5)
Detective, hay Niche type, for those who like it




Rating: 4.5 Introduction: What is it like to use modern profiling technology to be an agent in 1960s America while having an FBI boss uncle? It is more like an American drama style, fast-paced, suspenseful detective novel, the reasoning is more logical, and there is no intellectual element. The protagonist finds the truth through reasoning. Apart from the knowledge of modern profiling, there is no golden finger... Oh no, his uncle is the boss of the FBI. This is a private interview by the prince incognito! (Joke) I think the description of the detective who partners with the protagonist is okay. Through the ability of the partner, help the protagonist make up for his weakness in interpersonal communication (acting as the protagonist's mouth substitute), instead of forcing all skills to be included in the protagonist. I think this is a smarter approach than giving the protagonist a perfect character. Let's talk about the identity of the protagonist. The author's setting is that he is the nephew of the boss of FB. He had a quarrel with his family and ran away to the countryside to be a pawn👮🏻♂️. Occasionally, I write about the FBI boss's concern for him in solving the case, which makes people feel secretly happy. It was only recently updated that the great prince visits his loyal FBI (no), this is quite good throughout the whole text.




★★★ There is no golden finger. The full text is even of the quality of an American TV series. The early content has nothing to do with the FBI. It is just a character setting. You travel to the 1960s to be an American policeman. In this era, fingerprint identification and criminal detective testing were just introduced. The protagonist relies on criminal psychology and the ability of a forensic examiner to solve the case. The description of the case and the criminal are very good. However, the protagonist's character failed to stand up, and the supporting character's character was only strengthened. Ps: I recommend the movie "Hoover" starring DiCaprio. The description of Hoover's appearance in the article is basically consistent with the movie scene. Bad book title + quality content = lukewarm



Rating: 4/5 (grain and grass) Summary in one sentence: The story of a profiler solving crimes in the style of an American TV series Reasons for recommendation: The author has strong writing skills, and the words he writes are very graphic, not cliché, but full of intelligence. The plot is composed of the progress of the protagonist and each case. So far, it has not lost its freshness and keeps adding new things. Not recommended: My uncle is from Hoover, so I may not have a sense of empathy.













