Former boxer, Bart Heslip, is working a repo-man for Dan Kearny Associates, a private investigation firm in San Francisco. After dropping off a car late at night Heslip is attacked from behind, put in a car, and rolled over the side of a hill, leaving him in a coma. While the police conclude that he was drink driving and lost control, his colleagues disagree. Heslip’s close friend, Ballard, sets himself the task of running down the attacker within 72 hours. He suspects it must be related to one of the many cases that Heslip was working on, but working out which one and then locating them is not going to be straightforward.
Dead Skip, first published in 1972, was the first book in the Dan Kearny Associates series that charted the work of a private investigation company in San Francisco. Gores worked as a PI for twelve years and his knowledge of how to track down people and property is evident in the story. In this case an employee of DKA is attacked and left in coma, the crime crudely faked as a road traffic accident. A young investigator, Ballard, hunts for the killer, aided by Kearny himself. The strength of the book is in the procedural elements and the pacing. Gores keeps the prose tight and focused on the action. The result is a story that moves along at a fair clip, but somewhat at the expense of characterisation, which is mainly inferred from behaviour and dialogue. Moreover, there is little in the way of backstory – in many ways, the storytelling is like a television script. The plotting is nicely done, with Ballard unearthing new clues and chasing an elusive killer, though I wasn’t quite convinced by the denouement. That said, it was an enjoyable, quick read.
Pages
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Thursday, March 30, 2017
Wednesday, March 29, 2017
Review of Redemption Road by John Hart (Hodder & Stoughton 2016)
Elizabeth Black is a tough cop living with a dark secret that draws her to over-protect vulnerable children. When rescuing a young girl who has been abducted and raped by two black suspects she pumps 18 bullets into the pair, include joints and genitals. Now she’s being pursued for excessive violence and torture of suspects. Ex-cop Adrian Wall has been suffering torture at the hands of a prison warden and guards while serving 13 years for the death of a local woman. He’s always pleaded innocence, but only a handful of people believe him, including Elizabeth. On the day he’s released, Gideon – another of Elizabeth’s young charges and son of the murdered woman – seeks out Adrian with the intention of shooting him dead. Instead Gideon ends up in hospital. The following day another woman is found dead in the same place and laid out in the same way as the victim Adrian was convicted for. Attention is quickly focused on the newly released convict, despite Elizabeth’s best efforts to intervene. And not only does Adrian looked doomed, but it looks likely that she’ll also be heading for prison.
There’s a heck of a lot going on in Redemption Road. John Hart has interwoven two main storylines and their various subplots together to create a multi-layered tale. The pacing is at a quick tempo, with barely a pause for breath, and there are multiple mini-cliffhanger moments that keep the pages turning. Indeed, the story is full of tension and to a certain degree is relentlessly grim – there are very few light moments in the book, in fact it is to a large extent a litany of people being fairly horrid to one another. At a few points I had to put the book down and go and get some fresh air before inevitably being drawn back to wanting to find out what was going to happen next. Amazingly, given how much plot is crammed into the 400 odd pages, the story does not feel forced or overly reliant on plot devices. They’re there, of course, but storytelling is no nicely done that they don’t feel contrived or over-egged. Perhaps inevitably given how many crime fiction books I’ve read I’d pegged the murderer fairly early in the tale and it was reasonably well telegraphed as to how the story would resolve. The characterisation is very nicely done, with good interactions between the characters. And the prose is expressive. The result is a kind of literary redemption, serial killer tale with a hell of a lot more going on than the average literary tale. Grim but good.
There’s a heck of a lot going on in Redemption Road. John Hart has interwoven two main storylines and their various subplots together to create a multi-layered tale. The pacing is at a quick tempo, with barely a pause for breath, and there are multiple mini-cliffhanger moments that keep the pages turning. Indeed, the story is full of tension and to a certain degree is relentlessly grim – there are very few light moments in the book, in fact it is to a large extent a litany of people being fairly horrid to one another. At a few points I had to put the book down and go and get some fresh air before inevitably being drawn back to wanting to find out what was going to happen next. Amazingly, given how much plot is crammed into the 400 odd pages, the story does not feel forced or overly reliant on plot devices. They’re there, of course, but storytelling is no nicely done that they don’t feel contrived or over-egged. Perhaps inevitably given how many crime fiction books I’ve read I’d pegged the murderer fairly early in the tale and it was reasonably well telegraphed as to how the story would resolve. The characterisation is very nicely done, with good interactions between the characters. And the prose is expressive. The result is a kind of literary redemption, serial killer tale with a hell of a lot more going on than the average literary tale. Grim but good.
Sunday, March 26, 2017
Lazy Sunday Service
I made a quick trip to Amsterdam during last week. I wasn't sure if the book I was reading was going to last the full trip, so also packed a slim paperback from the TBR - Joe Gores', Dead Skip, first published in 1972. As it happened, I did finish my present read, so started on the backup. Dead Skip
was the first in six installments of the Dan Kearney and Associates private investigator series set in San Francisco. Gores worked for twelve years as a PI and it shows in the story. My review will follow this week, hopefully.
My posts this week
Bones and cartilage
Review of The Day That Never Comes by Caimh McDonnell
was the first in six installments of the Dan Kearney and Associates private investigator series set in San Francisco. Gores worked for twelve years as a PI and it shows in the story. My review will follow this week, hopefully.
My posts this week
Bones and cartilage
Review of The Day That Never Comes by Caimh McDonnell
Saturday, March 25, 2017
Bones and cartilage
The car drifted right, the thwack, thwack, thwack of the wheels juddering over cat’s eyes waking Janet.
She rolled her head forward, bones and cartilage clicking softly.
‘Jesus, what time is it Fergal?’
The car lurched into the next lane.
Suddenly Janet was blinking, trying to orientate, on-coming headlights blinding her.
Next to her, Fergal was slumped lifeless across the steering wheel.
‘Fergal!’
She grabbed him by the shoulder and tried to tug him back.
He barely moved.
Next, she tried heaving the steering wheel anti-clockwise.
A horn blared.
‘Fergal!’
She yanked him back, but then bones and cartilage exploded.
A drabble is a story of exactly 100 words.
She rolled her head forward, bones and cartilage clicking softly.
‘Jesus, what time is it Fergal?’
The car lurched into the next lane.
Suddenly Janet was blinking, trying to orientate, on-coming headlights blinding her.
Next to her, Fergal was slumped lifeless across the steering wheel.
‘Fergal!’
She grabbed him by the shoulder and tried to tug him back.
He barely moved.
Next, she tried heaving the steering wheel anti-clockwise.
A horn blared.
‘Fergal!’
She yanked him back, but then bones and cartilage exploded.
A drabble is a story of exactly 100 words.
Friday, March 24, 2017
Review of The Day That Never Comes by Caimh McDonnell (McFori Ink, 2017)
Summer in Dublin. Activists led by a wayward priest have taken over the headquarters of a failed bank to house homeless people. A vengeful, new organisation, Puca, wants rough justice for those that led Ireland to bankruptcy. Three developers of Skylark properties, a property complex riddled with build quality issues that went bust as the bottom fell out of Irish economy, leave court after their trial collapses on a technicality. A stunning blonde asks MCM Investigations to determine if one of the Skylark developers is cheating on her with his wife. Paul Mulchrone needs the money, but he’s got problems of his own. His business partners are not talking to him: Nurse Conroy, his ex-girlfriend is still steaming mad at him for cheating on her; former Detective Sergeant Bunny McGarry has disappeared. And Maggie, the ex-police dog foisted on him has an attitude problem and a thirst for beer. Mulchrone is an amateur investigator at best and the friend he recruits to help him tail Jerome Hartigan is just as hopeless. As the hapless pair trail round Dublin, Puca start to murder members of the Skylark Three and those associated with them, and the people of Dublin are being whipped up into a bitter frenzy. Can Mulchrone, his pal, Phil, and Maggie discover who is driving the violent undercurrent and halt the madness?
The Day That Never Comes is the second book in Caimh McDonnell’s Dublin trilogy. In this outing, the hapless Paul Mulchrone has started a new private investigation company with Nurse Conroy and former Detective Sergeant Bunny McGarry. However, it already appears to be hitting the rocks, with Nurse Conroy refusing to speak to Paul, and McGarry missing in action. Mulchrone is left to keep the show on the road, but even he’ll admit to being Dublin’s worst private investigator. His task is trying to trail a property developer involved in large-scale corruption, embezzlement and building control violations. It should be straightforward but someone is murdering the developer’s colleagues and he may well be on the hit list as well. Like the first book, the tale is great fun; witty throughout and with a number of laugh out loud moments. At the same time it’s got all the elements of a decent crime tale. The characterisation is excellent, especially the no-nonsense Nurse Conroy and the slightly psychotic Bunny McGarry, a man who administers his own brand of justice with a hurley. The plot is well constructed, with McDonnell interweaving a number of strands – including a police investigation line, phone-ins to a radio chat show, and flashbacks to McGarry dealing with an earlier incident of planning corruption – that builds to a nice denouement. And there is a strong sense of place and context; the story set in Dublin, a city still simmering with resentment at the state of the economy and fallen personal fortunes after the financial crash. Overall, a very nice comic crime caper that delivers both the laughs and decent crime story.
The Day That Never Comes is the second book in Caimh McDonnell’s Dublin trilogy. In this outing, the hapless Paul Mulchrone has started a new private investigation company with Nurse Conroy and former Detective Sergeant Bunny McGarry. However, it already appears to be hitting the rocks, with Nurse Conroy refusing to speak to Paul, and McGarry missing in action. Mulchrone is left to keep the show on the road, but even he’ll admit to being Dublin’s worst private investigator. His task is trying to trail a property developer involved in large-scale corruption, embezzlement and building control violations. It should be straightforward but someone is murdering the developer’s colleagues and he may well be on the hit list as well. Like the first book, the tale is great fun; witty throughout and with a number of laugh out loud moments. At the same time it’s got all the elements of a decent crime tale. The characterisation is excellent, especially the no-nonsense Nurse Conroy and the slightly psychotic Bunny McGarry, a man who administers his own brand of justice with a hurley. The plot is well constructed, with McDonnell interweaving a number of strands – including a police investigation line, phone-ins to a radio chat show, and flashbacks to McGarry dealing with an earlier incident of planning corruption – that builds to a nice denouement. And there is a strong sense of place and context; the story set in Dublin, a city still simmering with resentment at the state of the economy and fallen personal fortunes after the financial crash. Overall, a very nice comic crime caper that delivers both the laughs and decent crime story.
Sunday, March 19, 2017
Lazy Sunday Service
While looking for something else I discovered Jake Arnott's first novel, The Long Firm. I bought it a long time ago and misplaced it before I'd had chance to read it. It's now going to shuffle it's way to near the top of the TBR. I'm also grateful that I didn't get round to buying a second copy. Eventually everything resurfaces in this house.
My posts this week
Review of The Last Winter of Dani Lancing by P.D. Viner
New paper: Living Labs, vacancy, and gentrification
Review of Koko Takes a Holiday by Kieran Shea
He was here
My posts this week
Review of The Last Winter of Dani Lancing by P.D. Viner
New paper: Living Labs, vacancy, and gentrification
Review of Koko Takes a Holiday by Kieran Shea
He was here
Saturday, March 18, 2017
He was here
The door swung open, held by a middle-aged woman.
‘He was here.’
‘Mrs Davies, I …’
‘Why are you persecuting us? Why aren’t you out there,
catching real criminals?’
‘I’ve just come to …’
‘You’re always picking on our Darren just for being a kid. Why can’t you leave us alone!’
She started to close the door.
Carter jammed a foot in the gap. ‘Mrs Davies, it is about Darren ...’
‘I told you, he was here.’
‘He’s in hospital.’
‘What did you do to him?’
‘Nothing. But a guard dog at White’s didn’t realise he was
home all night.’
A drabble is a story of exactly 100 words.
Thursday, March 16, 2017
Review of The Last Winter of Dani Lancing by P.D. Viner (Ebury Press, 2013)
1989. University student Dani Lancing was kidnapped, raped and murdered. The event shattered lives of Jim and Patty, her parents, and Tom, her best friend who wanted to be more. 2010. Jim and Patty have separated. Jim still lives in the family home with the ghost of Dani. Patty has given up her career as an investigative journalist to work for a charity, Lost Souls, who help families who have lost loved ones. Tom is now a Detective Superintendent, running a specialist unit that hunts for the killers of women. The legacy of Dani’s death still drives their daily lives. When Dani’s case is placed on the secondary list for a cold case unit, Patty regains hope of discovering her daughter’s murderer. Forensic science means that it might be possible to get a DNA match. Employing a private detective she finds out who the prime suspect was in the case and a way to get the police sample. All she needs now is a sample of blood. Her obsession to administer her own form of rough justice initiates a dangerous set of events that neither Jim or Tom are able to halt.
The Last Winter of Dani Lancing tells the story of parents shattered by the loss of their daughter, how they cope in the aftermath, and their pursuit of justice. Dani disappeared from her University lodgings to be found dead three weeks later. Nobody was arrested for the murder. Twenty years later her mother, a former investigative journalist, is driven by a need for answers and revenge – she not only wants to find the killer, but to exact an eye-for-an-eye punishment. Her husband has retreated into being a recluse, living with the ghost of his daughter, who he interacts with continuously. Her former best friend, Tom, is a senior police officer known as the ‘Sad Man’ due to his empathy with the dead and their families. Viner tells the story of each in a sympathetic voice that reveals their hurt and loss, and there is a strong, intense emotional register throughout the tale. This is heightened by the use of a temporally broken narrative, the storyline jumping back-and-forth from the early 1980s to the present day. This produces a strong sense of character development and provides glimpses into key moments in each of their lives. The plot is interesting and engaging, but as it progresses a series of unlikely coincidences and reveals start to appear, with the links and backstory of one character in particular being a series of convenient plot devices. The result is a tale that spins into a thriller for the denouement, but one that has elements that seem out of kilter with the rest of the tale. Nonetheless, a good read, especially with respect to the emotional register and character development.
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
Review of Koko Takes a Holiday by Kieran Shea (Titan Books, 2014)
Five hundred into the future, the planet is effectively run by large corporations who fight for assets and market share. Ex-corporate mercenary Koko Martsellar runs a bar and brothel on The Sixty Islands, which specialises in satisfying appetites for sex and simulated violence. Koko was offered the job by one of her old combat mentors, Portia Delacompte, who has risen slowly up the corporate ladder of an entertainment conglomerate. In order to progress her career, Delacompte has selectively wiped some of her memory and joined a religious cult. At some point in the past though she wrote a note to herself to eliminate Koko and to that end she sends a squad of security personnel to the bar. Koko has not lost any of her instincts and skills, however, and after the shootout flees skyward. In pursuit is an assassin. If Koko is going to survive she needs her wits about her and to tackle her old boss.
Koko Takes a Holiday is a kind of cyberpunk tale set in the far (500 years hence) rather than near future. Shea has imagined a world run by corporate conglomerates and puppet governments, where women are very much the equals of men. Above the planet are ships that provide residences and specialise in different services. Koko is an ex-mercenary turned bar and brothel owner who can look after herself. She’s a fun-kind of kiss-ass character, who’s lived through dozens of deadly scrapes and doesn’t take any crap. Her ex-combat partner and current boss, however, wants her dead, though it’s not immediately clear to her why. After surviving the initial hit, Koko flees on a self-built craft skyward pursued by an assassin. There’s a good energy and vibe to the opening sequences, hooking the reader in. After an initial chase, however, the pace slows and becomes more pedestrian as Koko settles in one place and Shea works in another couple of characters, including a security guard on his last day of duty who is about to take part in a mass suicide due to chronic depression. The tale unfolds in an interesting enough way until near the end. The reveal concerning why Koko is being pursued is based on a trillion-to-one chance encounter that was hard to believe and the final showdown is overly linear and over too quickly, in my view. And the final scene felt too contrived. All of that was a bit of let down after a cracking start, an interesting enough future world, and an engaging lead character. If you like cyberpunk it might be worth a spin.
Koko Takes a Holiday is a kind of cyberpunk tale set in the far (500 years hence) rather than near future. Shea has imagined a world run by corporate conglomerates and puppet governments, where women are very much the equals of men. Above the planet are ships that provide residences and specialise in different services. Koko is an ex-mercenary turned bar and brothel owner who can look after herself. She’s a fun-kind of kiss-ass character, who’s lived through dozens of deadly scrapes and doesn’t take any crap. Her ex-combat partner and current boss, however, wants her dead, though it’s not immediately clear to her why. After surviving the initial hit, Koko flees on a self-built craft skyward pursued by an assassin. There’s a good energy and vibe to the opening sequences, hooking the reader in. After an initial chase, however, the pace slows and becomes more pedestrian as Koko settles in one place and Shea works in another couple of characters, including a security guard on his last day of duty who is about to take part in a mass suicide due to chronic depression. The tale unfolds in an interesting enough way until near the end. The reveal concerning why Koko is being pursued is based on a trillion-to-one chance encounter that was hard to believe and the final showdown is overly linear and over too quickly, in my view. And the final scene felt too contrived. All of that was a bit of let down after a cracking start, an interesting enough future world, and an engaging lead character. If you like cyberpunk it might be worth a spin.
Sunday, March 12, 2017
Lazy Sunday Service
I did manage to get to the local bookshop during the week to pick up the latest Adrian McKinty novel. I also bought John Hart's Redemption Road. Looking forward to reading both. Presently reading Caimh McDonnell's The Day That Never Comes.
My posts this week:
February reads
Review of His Bloody Project by Graeme Macrae Burnet
New paper: Smart cities, urban technocrats, epistemic communities and advocacy coalitions
Review of The Detour by Andromeda Romano-Lax
Why use a hammer?
My posts this week:
February reads
Review of His Bloody Project by Graeme Macrae Burnet
New paper: Smart cities, urban technocrats, epistemic communities and advocacy coalitions
Review of The Detour by Andromeda Romano-Lax
Why use a hammer?
Saturday, March 11, 2017
Why use a hammer?
‘So you accidentally hit her with a hammer?’
Tyner stared at the table top. ‘I lashed out with the first thing at hand.’
‘Why not use your fists?’ Carter suggested. ‘Why use a hammer?’
‘It was there.’
‘Conveniently at hand where you were having an argument with your girlfriend.’
‘She wasn’t my girlfriend.’
‘She was carrying your child.’
‘It wasn’t mine.’
‘But you were sleeping with her.’
Tyner shrugged. ‘She was threatening me. My family.’
‘So you hit her sixteen times with a hammer as a warning?’
‘I didn’t mean …’
‘Yes, you did, Jack. We both know you did.’
A drabble is a story of exactly 100 words.
Tyner stared at the table top. ‘I lashed out with the first thing at hand.’
‘Why not use your fists?’ Carter suggested. ‘Why use a hammer?’
‘It was there.’
‘Conveniently at hand where you were having an argument with your girlfriend.’
‘She wasn’t my girlfriend.’
‘She was carrying your child.’
‘It wasn’t mine.’
‘But you were sleeping with her.’
Tyner shrugged. ‘She was threatening me. My family.’
‘So you hit her sixteen times with a hammer as a warning?’
‘I didn’t mean …’
‘Yes, you did, Jack. We both know you did.’
A drabble is a story of exactly 100 words.
Friday, March 10, 2017
Review of The Detour by Andromeda Romano-Lax (Soho Press, 2012)
1938. Ernst Vogler is employed on the Sonderprojekte, collecting great art from around Europe for display in the Third Reich. After the incarceration in Dachau of his mentor, a well-known art historian, Vogler is sent to Rome to accompany the famous classical Roman marble statue, The Discus Thrower, to the border where it will be handed over to the Gestapo. The statue is the personal target of the Fuhrer and there is widespread unhappiness that it has been sold and is leaving Italy. Vogler’s task should be a simple, three-day excursion, but things start to go wrong as soon as he arrives in the Italian capital. When he does set out to the border he is accompanied by twin brothers. Almost immediately, the trio leave the agreed route, giving their police escort the slip. Despite Vogler’s protestations, the brothers seem intent on setting their own schedule, which includes visiting a girlfriend. At first, Vogler tries to resist the detour, realising that it is putting them all at risk, but soon he is so far implicated that he gives himself up to the adventure hoping that as long as he ultimately delivers the statue in one piece that he’ll survive the inevitable fallout.
The Detour recounts the tale of Ernst Vogler, a budding art historian who worked on the Third Reich’s Sonderprojekte, collecting great art for the Fuhrer before the Second World War. It is told as recollection as Vogler arrives back in Italy in 1948 to track down the woman he fell in love with on his last visit, a decade previously. On that trip, Vogler was sent to Rome to accompany the famous statue, The Discus Thrower, back to Germany. He is accompanied on his journey to the border by twin brothers, Enzo and Cosimo, who are police officers and speak rudimentary German. Fearing that the statue is at risk, the brothers lose their escort and take a detour, with Enzo becoming obsessed with seeing his girlfriend. As the journey progresses a series of mishaps and tragedies befall the trio. Rather than telling the tale as a straightforward adventure, Romano-Lax nicely blends in a smattering of politics, art and philosophy, as well as thread of romance. The historical context and Vogler’s backstory is well constructed and there’s a strong sense of place as the trio head north through the back-roads of central Italy. The result is a bittersweet tale of a sensitive and insecure young man coming of age in difficult circumstances and returning years later to see if he can find lost love.
The Detour recounts the tale of Ernst Vogler, a budding art historian who worked on the Third Reich’s Sonderprojekte, collecting great art for the Fuhrer before the Second World War. It is told as recollection as Vogler arrives back in Italy in 1948 to track down the woman he fell in love with on his last visit, a decade previously. On that trip, Vogler was sent to Rome to accompany the famous statue, The Discus Thrower, back to Germany. He is accompanied on his journey to the border by twin brothers, Enzo and Cosimo, who are police officers and speak rudimentary German. Fearing that the statue is at risk, the brothers lose their escort and take a detour, with Enzo becoming obsessed with seeing his girlfriend. As the journey progresses a series of mishaps and tragedies befall the trio. Rather than telling the tale as a straightforward adventure, Romano-Lax nicely blends in a smattering of politics, art and philosophy, as well as thread of romance. The historical context and Vogler’s backstory is well constructed and there’s a strong sense of place as the trio head north through the back-roads of central Italy. The result is a bittersweet tale of a sensitive and insecure young man coming of age in difficult circumstances and returning years later to see if he can find lost love.
Tuesday, March 7, 2017
Review of His Bloody Project by Graeme Macrae Burnet (Contraband, 2015)
1869. The Macrae’s lot in life has not been good. Eeking out a living on a croft on the west coast of Scotland the mother died in child-birth leaving the stoic father to bring up four children and the family are being persecuted by a neighbour who is also the local constable. Roddy Macrae has always been an outsider child, intelligent, but somewhat naïve and often lost in his own world. He makes poor decisions and bad luck seems to follow him. He eventually concludes that the only way to help the rest of his family break the cycle of torment they are suffering is to murder the constable. This is he does with calm indifference, also killing two others. He admits to the crimes and there is no doubt that he is guilty. However, his court advocate is convinced that Roddy was delusional when he committed the acts and sets out to convince the jury to acquit his client. He is a lone voice though and the public is baying for justice.
His Bloody Project follows the life and trial of Roddy Macrae, a young man living in abject poverty on the west coast of Scotland whose family is being persecuted. Macrae admits to murdering the local constable and two of his family members in cold blood. Burnet tells the story as a factual account as if put together through historical research. In the first two thirds, the tale is told from the perspective of Roddy Macrae who at the behest of his court advocate writes down his account as to the events leading up to the murder and the act itself. The last third swaps to an account of the trial gleaned from court documents, various newspaper articles, and a book published by a criminal anthropologist who examined Macrae. The style throughout is a somewhat dispassionate narrative, with Macrae’s account being rather dry and unemotive, as is the more historical account of the author. Beyond the dry style there were a couple of things that niggled. The first was the supposed first person account of Roddy Macrae, which is far too mature and polished for a seventeen-year old crofter who left school early, regardless of how intelligent he is. The second was the silence in the Macrae’s narrative and in particular the court proceedings with regards to his sister. Overall, an interesting but somewhat flat story.
His Bloody Project follows the life and trial of Roddy Macrae, a young man living in abject poverty on the west coast of Scotland whose family is being persecuted. Macrae admits to murdering the local constable and two of his family members in cold blood. Burnet tells the story as a factual account as if put together through historical research. In the first two thirds, the tale is told from the perspective of Roddy Macrae who at the behest of his court advocate writes down his account as to the events leading up to the murder and the act itself. The last third swaps to an account of the trial gleaned from court documents, various newspaper articles, and a book published by a criminal anthropologist who examined Macrae. The style throughout is a somewhat dispassionate narrative, with Macrae’s account being rather dry and unemotive, as is the more historical account of the author. Beyond the dry style there were a couple of things that niggled. The first was the supposed first person account of Roddy Macrae, which is far too mature and polished for a seventeen-year old crofter who left school early, regardless of how intelligent he is. The second was the silence in the Macrae’s narrative and in particular the court proceedings with regards to his sister. Overall, an interesting but somewhat flat story.
Monday, March 6, 2017
February reads
My read of the month was Jack Serong's The Rules of Backyard Cricket - a very engaging slice of Australian noir.
The Intrusions by Shav Sherez ****.5
Flight from Berlin by David John ***
Kill the Next One by Federico Axat ***.5
Stasi Wolf by David Young **.5
Where the Iron Crosses Grow: The Crimea 1941–44 by Robert Forczyk ***
The Rules of Backyard Cricket by Jock Serong *****
The Night Watch by Sergei Lukyanenko ****
The Intrusions by Shav Sherez ****.5
Flight from Berlin by David John ***
Kill the Next One by Federico Axat ***.5
Stasi Wolf by David Young **.5
Where the Iron Crosses Grow: The Crimea 1941–44 by Robert Forczyk ***
The Rules of Backyard Cricket by Jock Serong *****
The Night Watch by Sergei Lukyanenko ****
Sunday, March 5, 2017
Lazy Sunday Service
By March I've usually read the latest Adrian McKinty novel. This year that has slipped. This is an open note to myself to get to the local bookshop to pick up Police at the Station and They Don't Look Friendly, which I see has been picking up great reviews. Looking forward to catching up with DI Sean Duffy.
My posts this week
Review of Tears of the Giraffe by Alexander McCall Smith
Review of The Intrusions by Shav Sherez
My posts this week
Review of Tears of the Giraffe by Alexander McCall Smith
Review of The Intrusions by Shav Sherez
Saturday, March 4, 2017
Blind slave
Dan frowned. A veil had been lifted. Suddenly everything seemed clearer.
‘This has all been a game to you.’
‘What?’ Hannah snapped, hands on hips, her face pinched with anger.
‘This.’ Dan gestured at the room. ‘Us. I’m just a …’
‘Just a what? Callous-hearted bastard?’
‘Stop-gap until someone else comes along. Someone with deeper pockets or more power.’
‘So I’m a shallow bitch and you’re a put-upon saint?’
‘Yes. Yes, you are. And I’m a fool.’
‘I’m the victim, not you! You’re never here.’
‘And whose fault is that? I’m working to pay off your debts! But not anymore.’
A drabble is a story of exactly 100 words.
‘This has all been a game to you.’
‘What?’ Hannah snapped, hands on hips, her face pinched with anger.
‘This.’ Dan gestured at the room. ‘Us. I’m just a …’
‘Just a what? Callous-hearted bastard?’
‘Stop-gap until someone else comes along. Someone with deeper pockets or more power.’
‘So I’m a shallow bitch and you’re a put-upon saint?’
‘Yes. Yes, you are. And I’m a fool.’
‘I’m the victim, not you! You’re never here.’
‘And whose fault is that? I’m working to pay off your debts! But not anymore.’
A drabble is a story of exactly 100 words.
Friday, March 3, 2017
Review of Tears of the Giraffe by Alexander McCall Smith (2002, Anchor)
Precious Ramotswe, Botswana’s finest female private detective and owner of The No 1. Ladies Detective Agency, has become engaged to Mr J. L. B. Matekoni, owner of the Tlokweng Road Speedy Motors garage. It appears to be a perfect match, though Mr Matekoni’s maid does not think so. But Precious has little regard for the maid who has been taking advantage of Mr Matekoni’s kindness and blindness, nor for her betrothed’s home. The maid is not the only person to be exploiting Mr Matekoni’s good nature. He is left fretting about an engagement ring, the water pumps at a nearby orphanage, and the future of two orphans. Meanwhile, Precious takes on two cases – the disappearance of a young American at an experimental farm on the edge of the Kalahari ten years previously and tracking the activities of a wayward wife – and deals with ambitions of her talented secretary. She also unexpectedly finds her prospective family is four not two.
Tears of the Giraffe is the second book in the No 1. Ladies Detective Agency series following the exploits of Precious Ramotswe. The tale is written very much in the tradition of a cozy, with a gentle charm and humour, with the storyline as much about the everyday lives of the protagonists as about the solving of crimes. The real strength of the story are the lead characters of Precious and her husband-to-be, Mr J. L. B. Matekoni, a garage owner, who leap off the page as engaging, delightful folk. There is some nice, light reflections on moral philosophy stirred in and a dose of intrigue concerning a scheming maid, a wayward wife, and a long-missing American. The plotlines around the intrigue, however, are somewhat thin and underdeveloped, with Precious solving one through some fairly weak plot devices, one halting abruptly, and the other being quite simple in nature. That said, the charm of the book are the characters, their interactions, and the sense of place. An enjoyable, feel-good read.
Tears of the Giraffe is the second book in the No 1. Ladies Detective Agency series following the exploits of Precious Ramotswe. The tale is written very much in the tradition of a cozy, with a gentle charm and humour, with the storyline as much about the everyday lives of the protagonists as about the solving of crimes. The real strength of the story are the lead characters of Precious and her husband-to-be, Mr J. L. B. Matekoni, a garage owner, who leap off the page as engaging, delightful folk. There is some nice, light reflections on moral philosophy stirred in and a dose of intrigue concerning a scheming maid, a wayward wife, and a long-missing American. The plotlines around the intrigue, however, are somewhat thin and underdeveloped, with Precious solving one through some fairly weak plot devices, one halting abruptly, and the other being quite simple in nature. That said, the charm of the book are the characters, their interactions, and the sense of place. An enjoyable, feel-good read.