AND THEN THERE WERE NONE by Agatha Christie: Book Review
Not to keep you in suspense, I’m writing my first post in this section about what I consider the most golden of all Golden Oldies–And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie.
I have read this mystery at least five times over the years, each time with the thought that this time I’d see the red herrings and clues that I hadn’t noticed the previous times I had read the book. After all, I knew after the first reading what had happened and why.
But that didn’t happen. With each reading I was more impressed by the author’s ability to completely mystify me, to lead me down paths that definitely led me away from the murderer, all the while being convinced that I knew exactly what she was doing. In my mind there’s no one like Dame Agatha (she was named a Commander of the British Empire in 1956).
For those not familiar with the novel’s plot, ten people, a very disparate group, are invited to a deserted island off the coat of Devon. There seems to be nothing in common among them–there’s a judge, a rich young racing car enthusiast, a married couple who are the servants on the island, a retired military man, a governess, a former policeman, an elderly woman, a mercenary, and a physician.
Each had received a somewhat cryptic invitation from someone who professed to be an acquaintance, inviting them to spend a few days on the island. But when the group was assembled, it turned out that no one knew exactly who had invited them, and there was no host or hostess there.
All was set for their arrival however, and they anticipated that the next day would bring the owner of the island to the house. But after dinner, the manservant played a recording that accused each of the guests of being a murderer. They all vehemently denied the accusations with various excuses or reasons for the deaths that were described, and all claimed they were innocent.
The young race car enthusiast admitted that he had run down and killed two pedestrians some time ago, but he said that certainly wasn’t murder, just an accident that was “beastly bad luck.” He picked up his drink at the bar, swallowed it in a gulp, convulsed, and died in front of the group.
And then the other guests started dying, one by one. At first there was denial, the guests saying that the deaths were natural–suffocation, a weak heart. But soon there was the realization that someone had decided that these people literally had gotten away with murder and needed to be punished.
And Then There Were None is a masterpiece. Perhaps it’s dated, as a Sherlock Holmes story may be dated, but that doesn’t take away one bit from its perfection. If you haven’t read it, put it on your reading list. If you have, you know why it’s heading the G. O. list.
SNAKES CAN’T RUN by Ed Lin: Book Review
The snakes in the title are not of the reptile variety but rather snakeheads, what today we more commonly call coyotes. They are Chinese American citizens who bring over illegal immigrants, in this case to lower New York City. Not surprising is that both snakeheads and coyotes are the names of animals in that their treatment of the men and women they bring to the United States, whether it be via ships to New York’s Chinatown to work in restaurants and laundries or via trucks to Arizona to work in the fields, is inhumane.
Robert Chow is a New York City police detective whose late father was an illegal immigrant. Chow was a huge disappointment to his father when he decided not to go to college and joined the Army instead, then came home from Vietnam to become a policeman. The elder Chow had higher aspirations for his son, aspirations that were out of his own reach as an immigrant with an incomplete grasp of English.
And Robert Chow has other demons besides his memories of his father. He came back from Vietnam an alcoholic, and when the novel opens he’s only been sober for four months.
Now Chow is surrounded by illegals in his own neighborhood, where he’s the poster boy for diversity in the Police Department. Chinatown is split between two groups–the mainland Chinese and the Taiwanese Chinese. Although Taiwan has been replaced by mainland China as a member of the United Nations, the United States still did not have full diplomatic relations with the Republic of China in 1976 when the novel takes place, and tensions among the Communists and the Taiwanese are running high.
Adding fuel to the fire is the increased number of illegals coming to New York from China, mainly Fukienese. Like most immigrants, they arrived in America poor and uneducated and willing to do anything to stay here. But by coming here illegally, with the help of Chinese Americans who owned businesses, they couldn’t object to low wages, poor working conditions, and lack of benefits. And in order to pay back the money advanced by these merchants to the snakeheads, or owed by the immigrants themselves to the snakeheads, these illegal aliens were basically indentured servants, many working until their deaths trying to pay back what they owed.
Although there is a double murder early in the novel, I felt Snakes Can’t Run was more of a sociological study than a mystery. There’s a great deal of history in it and a lot of background of Chinese and Chinese American feelings during the late 1970s, and the mystery takes second place to that. But one of the reasons I love reading mysteries, as I have written before, is because they take me outside my own world. I was pulled into the gritty world of Chinatown–its food, its superstitions, its people. And it made for very interesting reading.
You can read more about Ed Lin at his web site.
TO DARKNESS AND TO DEATH by Julia Spencer-Fleming: Book Review
Self-preservation is the first law of nature. It’s certainly true in Julia Spencer-Fleming’s fourth novel in the Reverend Clare Fergusson/Police Chief Russ Van Alstyne mystery series.
I usually review the most recent book by an author, since I think that’s what most readers want. In order to truly understand the dynamics of the priest and the police chief, though, this series should be read from the beginning. That being said, To Darkness and To Death, the fourth Fergusson/Van Alstyne novel, will hopefully lead you to read the other books in order and thus gain a deeper insight into the characters of the two protagonists.
Clare Fergusson is an unmarried Episcopal priest in a small town north of Albany, New York. Russ Van Alstyne is a former soldier and the married police chief of this town, Millers Kill; kill is an old-fashioned word meaning a body of water such as a creek or river.
In Out of the Deep I Cry, the first book of the series, the two meet, and by the second book, A Fountain Filled with Blood, there is the beginning of a relationship that is slowly, slowly heading toward a place neither one wants it to go.
In To Darkness and To Death, many things in Millers Kill have reached the boiling point, including the relationship between Clare and Russ.
Millers Kill, like many other small towns, has been losing manufacturing businesses to other locations with cheaper labor and manufacturing costs. The two biggest businesses in town, Castle Logging and Reid-Gruyn Pulp and Paper Mill, are about to be sold by their reluctant owners to a joint ownership by a foreign company and a native conservancy group. Economics being what they are, it’s simply not financially feasible for these two companies to stay in business, especially given the fact that the town’s huge timber tract, which they both need to stay in business, is owned by the van der Hoeven family and is also being sold.
So into the mix that is the core of the book’s one day events is 1) Millie van der Hoeven, member of the family that owns the 250,000 acre timber land, who is missing as the novel opens; 2) Randy Schoof, a logger who can’t think of any other way to make a living when he’s told the logging company will close; 3) Becky Castle, daughter of the logging company’s owner and a committed “tree-hugger” who’s putting together the sale of the timber tract; 4) Shaun Reid, fourth generation owner of the pulp mill who desperately wants his son to be the fifth generation owner; 5) Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne, whose platonic but emotionally charged relationship is about to come to a head.
What happens when law-abiding people don’t see any way out of their difficulties except murder? What happens when people who’ve always been law-abiding members of society decide to take the law into their own hands? What has made them decide that their lives are worth so much more than anyone else’s?
What happens when two people who shouldn’t be attracted to each other, are? Can anything good come of it?
Each of Julia Spencer-Fleming’s books shows a deep understanding of human nature. Most of us know the rules of behavior, but we can’t or don’t always abide by them. And when we don’t, things go from bad to worse.
You can read more about Julia Spencer-Fleming at her web site.
CROOKED LETTER, CROOKED LETTER by Tom Franklin: Book Review
That sentence and its explanation open Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter. And Tom Franklin’s latest novel definitely takes the reader through a crooked path over a period of twenty-five years to right old wrongs and expose old secrets.
Larry Ott was always a loner, even before the traumatic event that shaped his life. Not much that he did pleased his tough, hard-drinking father, and his dependent relationship with his mother didn’t help. An outcast at school, he had but one friend, and that one had to be kept secret.
A young white boy in 1979 Mississippi, the last thing Larry could do or wanted to do was to befriend a black boy of his age. But when Silas Jones and his single mother moved into the rural town, there appeared to be a connection between the boys almost from the beginning. Although Silas and Larry couldn’t be friends in public, they did maintain a secret friendship over a period of time.
Desperate to impress his father and his classmates, Larry accepted the offer from a popular girl in school to take her to the drive-in, strange as that seemed to him. When they were together in the car, Cindy Walker told Larry she was pregnant and needed to be dropped off near her boyfriend’s house. Larry was her cover, her beard.
Upset and unsure of himself, Larry did what she asked after she promised to meet him later that night so he could take her home, after swearing him to silence about their “date.” But when he returned to the spot where he was supposed to meet Cindy, she wasn’t there, and she was never seen again. That began the complete ostracization of Larry Ott by the townspeople of Chabot and its surroundings.
Twenty-five years later, with Larry and Silas both back in Chabot, the story resumes. It’s the present, and another young woman is missing. The police have been dogging Larry’s footsteps for the past quarter-century, sure that he was responsible for Cindy Walker’s disappearance and death, and they are equally sure that he’s guilty this time around.
Larry has stayed in Chabot except for a brief stint in the army, operating the garage owned by his late father, visiting his mother in her nursing home; he is still an outcast in the community. Silas left during high school for Oxford, was a star on the baseball team, and joined the navy. Now he’s returned as town constable, and he’s ignoring the phone calls he’s received from his former friend.
Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter is a beautifully realized book. It is a mystery, but it’s more than that. It’s a picture of life in a small town in southern Mississippi, a place newly desegregated in its school but not in its neighborhoods or churches or attitudes.
I had never heard of Tom Franklin before, despite the fact that he won an Edgar award for his first book of short stories, Poachers. Judging by his latest novel, he deserves to be read more widely. His characters are real, their problems are real, and, as in life, there really are no easy answers.
You can read more about the author at: http://www.harpercollins.com/books.
THE SCENT OF RAIN AND LIGHTNING by Nancy Pickard: Book Review
The Linder family of Rose, Kansas seem to have it all in 1986. The parents are the wealthiest people in their county, with ranches in the adjacent states of Colorado and Nebraska, and have three sons, a daughter, her fiancee, a daughter-in-law, and a granddaughter. They’re well-respected and liked by all the townspeople and not just because many of them owe their livelihood to the Linders. It’s because the Linders are kind, generous people.
But terrible things happen even to good people. As the book opens, the Linders’ granddaughter is unexpectedly visited by her three uncles–her father’s two surviving brothers and her aunt’s husband. They’ve come to tell her that the prison sentence that put her father’s killer in prison for sixty years has been commuted after twenty-three and that Billy Crosby had been freed and was returning to Rose.
Everyone in town thought that the Linders were making a mistake by taking Billy under their wing and employing him on their ranch. But they’d done this before and had turned around the lives of several young men, and they thought they could do the same for Billy. But on a hot and steamy day, after downing one too many beers at lunchtime, Billy viciously attacked a cow that wasn’t docile enough for him and was sent home by patriarch Hugh Linder. Later that night the cow was attacked and killed, a gate was left open so that painstaking ranch work would have to be redone, and small fires were started.
When Billy was arrested for these crimes later that day but released the next for lack of physical evidence, the whole town knew how angry he was at the family. So when, in the midst of a terrible rainstorm the following night, the Linders’ oldest son, Hugh-Jay, was murdered and his wife nowhere to be found, Billy was arrested again. This time he’s brought to trial and convicted.
With masterful storytelling, Nancy Pickard goes from 1986 when the crimes took place to the present when Billy is released from prison. The story is told from different points of view–that of Jody Linder, the granddaughter; Annabelle Linder, the matriarch of the family; and Laurie Linder, the spoiled wife of Hugh-Jay who’s not above flirting with all the men in town, including her two brothers-in-law.
The end of this novel came as a complete surprise to me. I had composed several scenarios in my mind as to how it should end, but Ms. Pickard totally blindsided me. And her ending was, of course, the right one and the only one that made sense.
The small-town feel of Rose, Kansas and its surroundings are vividly portrayed. And Testament Rocks, the geological marvel outside the town, does more than serve as a tourist marker for the town; it has its own place in the novel.
The Scent of Rain and Lightning is one of the finest mysteries I’ve read in some time.
You can read more about Nancy Pickard at her web site.
I don’t believe I know any girl or woman who didn’t grow up reading Nancy Drew. Just mention her name and a whole host of other names pops into one’s mind–her father, Carson Drew; her housekeeper, Hannah Gruen; her two best friends, Bess Marvin and George Fayne; and her sometimes boyfriend, Ned Nickerson.
I started reading the series when I was about nine or ten. As I remember it, I started with the first one, The Secret of the Old Clock, and continued on, in no particular order, until The Ringmaster’s Secret. That was number 31, and at that point I had “outgrown” the series.
But I never forgot it, and I think I can still tell you the plots of most, if not all, of the books. And I certainly remember which were my favorites. Everything I know about Gypsies (Roma) I learned from The Clue in the Jewel Box; everything I know about campanology I learned from The Mystery of the Tolling Bell. Hmm, I wonder if the people writing the series under the name Carolyn Keene got their facts straight.
What brought this to mind was the the book my book club is currently reading, Infidel. It’s the fascinating memoir of Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s journey from her homeland in Somalia to Kenya and Ethiopia, then her flight to Holland to avoid living with the husband her father had chosen for her over her objections, and finally to the United States.
Her education in Africa was sporadic, learning a different language in each country, sometimes being home-schooled and sometimes going to all-girls or co-ed Muslim schools, depending on where she lived. It was in Nairobi that Ms. Ali discovered Nancy Drew and “the stories of pluck and independence.” I imagine the novels must have seemed like fairy tales, with Nancy dressed in Western clothes, driving her own car, traveling by herself, and generally doing what she pleased. This was a life so different from the life that the young Ayaan saw all around her that it would have seemed incredible. But something in these books touched her and awakened a curiosity about the world outside the one she knew.
This is what I find wonderful about reading in general and mysteries in particular. My own life has very little in common with Agatha Christie’s English villages, Alexander McCall Smith’s Botswana, or Colin Cotterill’s war-torn Laos. But reading takes me to all these places and gives me a glimpse of lives lived there. And I feel richer for it.
Marilyn
LOVE SONGS FROM A SHALLOW GRAVE by Colin Cotterill: Book Review
“I celebrate the dawn of my seventy-fourth birthday handcuffed to a lead pipe. I’d had something more traditional in mind….” That’s the opening of Love Songs from a Shallow Grave.
Dr. Siri is the hero, in every sense, of Colin Cotterill’s series of books set in the Laotian capital of Vientiane in the late 1970s. The doctor is a passive Communist and ready to retire when the new regime takes over from the monarchy, but he’s forced into becoming the country’s one and only coroner.
In Love Songs he has recently married Madame Daeng and is looking forward to a relaxing weekend with her when he’s pulled out of the local cinema by the Vietnamese head of security. Laos is an independent country, but it is very dependent on good relations with Vietnam, its more powerful neighbor. So the doctor reluctantly follows Chief Phoumi to the former American compound where they find a young woman who has been run through with a fencing sword, an epee to be exact.
Then, a couple of days later, another young woman is found in a similar situation, run through with yet another epee. What can be the connection between these two women, who as far as can be determined were strangers to each other?
The usual group of Dr. Siri’s friends appear in this novel. There’s the police detective Phosy, his wife nurse Dtui, morgue assistant Mr. Geung, the doctor’s close friend Civilai, and of course the doctor’s new wife, Madame Daeng. In addition to helping Dr. Siri, each has a story within the novel that helps bring the history of Laos into sharper focus.
Although the reader knows from the beginning that Dr. Siri is in prison, it’s impossible to figure out how he got there and why. The mental diary in which Dr. Siri reveals his thoughts doesn’t tell us until nearly the end of the novel, and these thoughts are interspersed with the straightforward plot of the main novel.
Dr. Siri is a wonderful protagonist. He’s smart, courageous, and pragmatic–he has to be to get along in the new Laos. But he’s also caring and empathic, traits that are not highly valued at the time and place in which he lives. It’s the combination of both sides of his character that makes him so fascinating, as well as the multi-layered history of his country.
This novel, along with the others in the series, isn’t easy reading because the history of this country in the 1970s isn’t comfortable to read–it’s filled with torture and betrayals from all sides. But knowing people like Dr. Siri and his friends are there fills the reader with hope.
You can read more about Colin Cotterill at his definitely off-beat web site and read an interview with him at the NPR web site.
THE LEFT-HANDED DOLLAR by Loren D. Estleman: Book Review
The Left-Handed Dollar is the twentieth Walker novel. And although Walker has aged, he doesn’t appear to be slowing down.
As the book opens, Walker is approached by famed defense attorney Lucille Lettermore–“Lefty Lucy” to the Michigan police and federal authorities for her political views. Lucy wants Walker to find evidence to overturn the conviction of a Detroit mobster for a hit twenty years earlier; by erasing that conviction and doing some legal maneuvering, she can get the ankle bracelet off “Joey Ballistic,” re-model him as a first offender, and earn a substantial fee.
Joey B. comes from a Mafia family, has an ex-wife and two former mistresses, and a once-opulent house where nearly all the furnishings have been sold off. He’s an old, sick man who’s still denying his role in the two-decades-old attack, a car bombing that left Walker’s close friend, Barry Stackpole, with a prosthetic leg and a hand with less than the usual number of fingers.
If he’s convicted of the minor crime he’s been arrested for now, Joey B. will go to prison for the rest of his life based on his record. So Lucy wants Walker to prove that her client was innocent of the car bombing, thus clearing his record of that crime and allowing him to plead guilty to a lesser charge for the current crime.
Although Joey has certainly committed any number of violent crimes, he may not have been guilty of the attack on Stackpole. Ever the bleeding heart, although he would never admit it, Walker takes the case.
As in all Loren Estleman’s books, there’s an interesting array of characters. There’s Lettermore, the foul-mouthed lawyer; Joey B.’s former wife Iona, now a successful interior designer; her partner Marcine, former model and former mistress of Iona’s ex-husband; Randolph Severin, the retired detective who investigated the original crime; and Lee Tan the younger, a physical therapist, and her aunt Lee Tan the elder, former heroin importer who worked with Joey B. years before.
In addition, Barry Stackpole and Detroit Police Inspector John Alderdyce return, the former the victim of the car bombing who is not happy that Walker is investigating the case, the latter the cop who is just an inch away from taking Walker’s P.I. license away for good. Walker is losing friends fast, and he didn’t have that many to begin with.
It’s good to see Amos Walker again, although I do feel that the repartee between Walker and everyone else strikes a false note. It’s very arch and can be amusing, but reading page after page of it, it gets old. “I’m riding the water wagon for a little, just to see what the Mormons are shouting about.” “Next you’re going to tell me they’re breaking up the USSR.” “Don’t teetotal just for me. I left my hatchet in my other suit.” It’s clever, but it gets a bit wearing after a while. And not very realistic, I think.
That being said, I’m glad to see Walker again. He’s a rare breed these days–a tough guy with a liberal interior who’s might bend the law but won’t bend his ethics.
You can read more about Loren D. Estleman at his web site.
ICE COLD by Tess Gerritsen: Book Review
Ice Cold opens with a portrait of Kingdom Come, a religious community with a charismatic leader. The village that the members of Jeremiah Goode’s church have carved out of the barren land is basically self-sufficient and closed to the surrounding cities and towns. There’s no electricity, no running water in Kingdom Come, but there is one huge benefit, at least for the leader and the other men–polygamous marriages to young girls. And thirteen-year-old Katie Sheldon is one of those unwilling brides, forced down the aisle by the tight grip of her father to marry the reverend.
Maura, the Boston medical examiner who is a cool customer at all times, is definitely out of her big city element in Jackson Hole, Wyoming where she has gone to attend a conference. She’s also still recovering from leaving her secret lover, Father Daniel Brophy. Maura and Daniel have been lovers for more than a year, and Daniel’s inability to choose between his two loves–his church and Maura–seems to have brought Maura to a crisis point. Can she/they continue this way, or must Daniel at last make a choice?
At the conference Maura meets a former college classmate. Doug Comley is attending the conference with two friends and his teenage daughter, and he persuades the not-very-spontaneous Maura to go with them on an overnight cross-country skiing trip. Following his car’s GPS, the group becomes stranded on an icy, snowbound road with no habitation in sight. Then they see a sign in the snow–Private Road, Residents Only, Area Patrolled–and realize they have chanced upon Kingdom Come, a name they’d only just heard from a local storekeeper.
When they finally make their way down to the village, it’s deserted. The houses are empty of people, but there are cars in the garages and food on the tables. What could have happened to make the inhabitants flee their homes, leaving pets behind to die, and simply disappear?
Back in Boston, Father Daniel is worried because he hasn’t heard from Maura and she didn’t catch her flight home. The ever reliable doctor would never behave like this, he’s sure. And now even her friend Detective Jane Rizzoli of the Boston Police Department and Jane’s husband, FBI agent Gabriel Dean, acknowledge that something is seriously wrong.
Tess Gerritsen, herself a physician, has created a very strong character in Dr. Maura Isles. In this, the eighth book featuring the medical examiner, Maura has reached a midlife crisis of sorts. That’s one of the reasons she decides to do something out of the ordinary with her former college friend, a decision that nearly leads to her death. By the end of the novel, the doctor has escaped death more than once and owes her life to a very unlikely duo.
You can read more about Tess Gerritsen at her web site .
THE HOLY THIEF by William Ryan: Book Review
Captain Alexei Dmitriyevich Korolev is the police inspector in The Holy Thief. He’s a loyal member of the new Soviet republic, a member of the Moscow Militia’s Criminal Investigation Division. Although the CID is technically involved only in the investigation and prevention of criminal activity, in the Soviet Union of 1936 everything is political.
And when Korolev is assigned to investigate the brutal torture and murder of an unidentified young woman in a former Orthodox church (the church has become a Komsomol recreational and political agitation center), the political aspects of the crime become visible almost immediately.
Reading this novel is almost like taking a course in 20th-century Russian history. The country is still reeling from what they call the German War (World War I to us) and, of course, the Revolution. Food and shelter are incredibly scarce, but the people are putting up with it because of the anticipation of a glorious future just around the corner.
There’s a strong sense of walking with Korolev through the dark, cold streets of his city, the detective wearing a slightly too tight coat several seasons old and a pair of felt books, valeni, to keep his feet warm. The housing shortage is vividly portrayed too, with Korolev being very fortunate, due to his outstanding arrest record, to be allowed to move into an apartment that he has to share “only” with a young widow and her daughter. But, of course, the high officials of the Party have taken over the former residences of the assassinated royal family. The more things change, the more they stay the same.
Korolev is a loyal citizen and an excellent investigator, but it’s hard for him to do a thorough job when his next step may be the wrong one. The case gets stranger when the body of the woman murdered in the former church is identified as a Russian-born nun who has lived in America for most of her life. Her murder is quickly followed by the murder of a Thief, a member of the Moscow Mafia, whose tattoos on nearly every part of his body tell the story of his life both behind bars and outside.
Korolev is a wonderful character. He is decent and loyal to the state, but he is no innocent. He’s aware of the brutalities and corruption that exist in the new government. But what is harder for him to accept is that someone within the Party, perhaps one of his own superiors, is involved in this spate of killings, which soon add third, fourth, and fifth victims.
At a time when religion is outlawed in Russia, the inspector is still a believer, although of course a secret one. And when he uncovers the fact that these murders are related to the Kazanskaya icon, the most revered holy object in Russia, it’s a double blow. The Madonna and Child icon was thought to have been destroyed, but what if it wasn’t?
William Ryan’s novel is a page-turner and The Holy Thief is obviously the beginning of a wonderful new series.
William Ryan doesn’t appear to have his own web site as yet, but you can read a very brief biography of him at panmacmillan.com.
KIND OF BLUE by Miles Corwin: Book Review
Ash was a highly respected member of the Los Angeles police department until a year before this book opens. At that time he had promised protection to a very reluctant witness to a murder, but despite his best effort the woman was killed. Torn by guilt and feeling unsupported by his superiors, Ash resigned from the force.
But as Kind of Blue opens, his former lieutenant Frank Duffy comes to Ash’s mother’s house where Ash is having shabbat dinner. Duffy asks his former protegee to return to the force to investigate the murder of an ex-cop.
Ash is reluctant but he agrees, with the silent proviso that when he solves this case he’ll be able to return to the one where his witness was killed. He had been hurt by the official reprimand Duffy had placed in his file after that murder, but he sees his reinstatement as a chance to go over once again all the parts of the crime that led to his resignation–the killing of a Korean shopkeeper and the subsequent elimination of the witness who saw the shooter.
By all reports Pete Relovich was a good detective who found too much solace in the bottle. His marriage ended, and he was having trouble making child support payments for his beloved daughter, so he took a job as a driver for an escort service. Did he see something/someone there that led to his murder? Because there’s an unexpected treasure that Ash finds hidden under a tile in Relovich’s kitchen–two Japanese ivory carvings and $6,000 in cash. Where did they come from?
And is a just a coincidence that when Ash is trying to locate Relovich’s former partner he discovers that he too is dead? The official report says suicide, but Ash isn’t convinced.
Ash’s personal life is kind of a mess too. Separated from his wife, he meets a beautiful art gallery owner who is an expert on Japanese art. There’s romantic tension there, but will the fact that Nicole Haddad is of Lebanese descent be a stumbling block in their relationship? Or is that a minor problem compared to the fact that Nicole already has a boyfriend and only wants Ash when her boyfriend isn’t around?
There are so many threads to follow in this novel that I almost needed paper and pencil to keep them straight. There’s anti-Semitism in the detectives’ bureau, the various parts of the dead cop’s life, the demons that plague Ash’s sleep, and his determination to find the killer of his witness.
The picture Corwin paints of the Los Angeles police department isn’t a pretty one. There are inept detectives, crooked detectives, cover-ups at all levels. No wonder Ash wants to go it alone; he doesn’t know whom he can trust.
Miles Corwin has written a taut, exciting first novel, and I’m sure there will be more to come in this series.
You can read more about Miles Corwin at his web site.
MOONLIGHT MILE by Dennis Lehane: Book Review
Patrick Kenzie and Angela Gennaro were the investigators in Gone, Baby, Gone. They found four-year-old Amanda McCready, who had been taken from her neglectful mother and was living with a loving couple who desperately wanted to keep her. The problem was, little Amanda had been abducted, not taken legally via the Massachusetts Department of Social Services, and at the end of G,B,G the investigators were faced with a heart-wrenching decision–to keep Amanda in her new, caring home or return her to her drug-addicted mother.
Kenzie’s decision to return the girl to her mother caused the breakup of his relationship with Gennaro. As Moonlight Mile opens, it’s twelve years later and Kenzie and Gennaro have reconciled, married, and are the parents of their own four-year-old daughter, Gabriella. They are struggling financially, as Kenzie is now the sole breadwinner while Gennaro has returned to school and is almost finished with her master’s in social work. Then they get a call from Amanda’s aunt–the girl is missing again and the police aren’t interested in doing anything about it.
Much against Kenzie’s better judgment, he and his wife are again pressed into looking for the missing girl. Amanda has seemingly turned her life around and is an outstanding student at a prestigious private school, but she is an aloof, hard-shelled girl whom no one seems to know. And her mother is involved with another criminal type and not very interested in finding out what has happened to her daughter.
The case gets more involved than simply finding Amanda, as Kenzie and Gennaro apparently aren’t the only ones looking for her. Amanda’s best/only friend, Sophie, is also missing, and neither Sophie’s self-righteous father nor Amanda’s social worker, Dre Stiles, seems to have a clue as to the whereabouts of the girls. And then a group of Russian mobsters enters the picture, determined to find Amanda, Sophie, and an antique cross of great interest to the boss of the mob.
Kenzie is still dealing with the issues from the twelve-year-old kidnapping case. He believes he did the right thing by returning the child to her mother, although Gennaro strongly disagrees with him. Can one do what he thinks is morally right and still be haunted by that decision? Would Amanda have been better served by leaving her with the people who would have been “better” parents, or would she have grown up and always wondered where her “real” mother was? That decision affected not only Amanda but also the man and woman who took her in and her own aunt and uncle who placed her with them.
In Moonlight Mile Lehane explores these ideas, plus the reality of living in today’s economy. The Kenzie/Gennaro family lives from paycheck to paycheck, and Kenzie must weigh the appeal of accepting a secure job that means working for people only concerned with the bottom line or continuing to worry daily about finances and his family’s financial well-being.
As always, Dennis Lehane has crafted a fast-paced, realistic story about modern life, crimes past and present, and how the decisions of years ago impact on life today.
You can read more about Dennis Lehane at his web site.
I just finished reading Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian. I’ve read several of McCarthy’s other books–All the Pretty Horses and No Country for Old Men among them–so I knew I wasn’t going to be reading a children’s story. Even if I hadn’t known the type of books McCarthy writes, the subtitle of this book would have given it away–The Evening Redness in the West. And the redness referred to isn’t the sunset.
Now, I’m used to murder and mayhem; after all, I’m writing a blog about mysteries, right? But the number of dead bodies in Blood Meridian is beyond counting. The story is based on the Glanton Gang, a historical group of scalp hunters in 1849-50, immediately following the Mexican-American War. The gang, led by John Joel Glanton, was hired by the Mexican government to kill marauding Indians and bring their scalps to the authorities to receive payment. But soon the gang was murdering peaceful Indians and Mexican civilians to increase their totals and, as it appears to me, just for the joy of killing. Eventually the government of Chihuahua offered a reward for the capture of the gang, turning them from semi-legal mercenaries to outlaws.
With a background story like that, Blood Meridian could hardly be sweetness and light. But there’s not one character in the novel to whom I was drawn. The Kid, who opens the novel, might have been that character. After all, he comes from an abusive home from which he runs away at the age of fourteen, unable to read or write and without any skills except shooting. He has to make his way in the world, and he does so by joining this para-military group. But The Kid’s participation in dozens of ruthless killings robs him of any connection with this reader. It was impossible for me to feel anything but antipathy toward him, toward Glanton, or toward Judge Holden, the book’s portrait of pure evil.
Yet the reviews of Blood Meridian are superlative. No less a literary authority than Professor Harold Bloom of Yale University has declared it “the major esthetic achievement of any living American writer.”
So this is my point, or rather my question. Even if there is stirring, evocative language in such a book, some of it quite beautiful, is it possible for a reader to enjoy it, to recommend it, to feel that it has been a worthwhile reading experience, when that reader feels no empathy, no attachment, no sympathy for a single character in it? It reminds me of a time years ago when a friend had read The Murder of Roger Ackroyd and said to me, “I feel as if I’ve just spent the afternoon with a murderer.” Although Blood Meridian isn’t a mystery, enough blood flows through it for a dozen crime novels.
Frankly, at the end of this book, when every character except one has been killed, I thought “serves them right. Too bad the judge is still alive.” And that’s not the way I want to feel at the end of a book.
So while I’m happy to air my opinion, I’d like to hear from you. Am I alone in feeling that there has to be some connection between a reader and at least one character in the book? Or does no one else care about this? Let me know.
Marilyn
LOCKED IN by Marcia Muller: Book Review
In the latest series’ entry, Locked In, Shar is shot in her San Francisco office late one night. When she awakens several days later, she is told she’s a victim of locked-in syndrome, something that will be familiar to readers/viewers of The Diving Bell and the Butterfly. The author of that novel, Jean-Dominique Bauby, wrote his memoir while virtually a total prisoner of his body–victims of locked-in syndrome can neither talk nor move, but they are able to hear, see, and understand everything that’s said to them. In Bauby’s case, the locked-in syndrome was caused by a massive stroke; in Locked In, the bullet to Shar’s brain had the same devastating effect.
Hy Ripinsky, Shar’s husband, and all her colleagues at the McCone Agency, are working to find the person who shot her. There’s her nephew Mick, the computer whiz; Rae Kelleher, married to Mick’s country singer father and a private investigator; Julia Raphael, former prostitute turned P.I.; and several others. Their only hope is that one of the agency’s still-to-be-solved cases is behind the attack, and so they are determined to find the culprit.
In fact, there are several unsolved cases at the McCone Agency that may have a bearing on the murder attempt. There’s corruption in San Francisco’s city hall, a young street walker who turns up dead and is not identified, a missing man. Are they all separate, or is there something tying them together that can shed light on what happened to Sharon McCone?
One of the best things about this series is following Shar’s life. In my March 9th About Marilyn blog, I wrote how important it is to me to know the back story about the lead in a series. I didn’t mention Marcia Muller in that post, and I should have. Of all the mystery writers I can think of, Muller has done the best job of creating not only a back story but a continuing story for her heroine. Each book reveals a bit more.
Shar is one of six siblings, and each one has his/her own distinct history. In the more than two dozen novels in this series, Shar and family have been through a lot–marriages, divorces, remarriages, suicide, the truth about Shar’s birth, and more. It makes Shar real, someone the reader can identify with, even if the reader cannot quite put herself or himself in Shar’s many life-altering or life-threatening adventures.
Marcia Muller has been quoted numerous times saying that she’s tired of being referred to as the “founding mother of the hardboiled contemporary female private investigator”; that by now, given the number of excellent female private eyes, she’s more like the grandmother. It’s true that there are now dozens of women following in the footsteps of Muller/McCone, but few who do it so well.
INNOCENT MONSTER by Reed Farrel Coleman: Book Review
Innocent Monster is the sixth Moe Prager mystery. As Lee Child says on the back cover, “The biggest mysteries in our genre are why Reed Coleman isn’t already huge, and why Moe Prager isn’t already an icon.” I couldn’t agree with Child more.
I had read two previous books in this series when I picked this one up at my local library. Frankly, I didn’t realize it was the sixth book or that I had only read two others; when I got home and realized this, I decided to read it anyway.
Prager’s back story is sufficiently explained so that it’s not necessary to start from the beginning of the series to find out the story of his life. Prager’s life has not been an easy one, and as this book opens he’s still recovering from the murder of his first wife, the divorce from his second, and the estrangement from his only child, Sarah, who blames him for her mother’s murder.
Their formerly close relationship has deteriorated into quick once-weekly phone calls, something which hurts Praeger greatly but which he is powerless to change as he too thinks himself guilty in his wife’s death. But as this novel opens Sarah calls him with a request to meet. When they do, she explains that the eleven-year-old daughter of her childhood friend has been abducted, and in the three weeks since that kidnapping the police have been unable to find the girl.
Prager, a former New York City policeman and later a private detective, objects strongly to taking this case, saying that he’s no longer working as a P.I. and that if the police haven’t found the girl, he won’t have any better luck. But, his daughter persists, you’ve always been lucky, at least in your work, and he has to agree. She makes him understand that the resumption of their relationship depends on his looking for young Sashi Bluntstone. The case is complicated by the fact that Sashi isn’t just any eleven year old but a nationally famous art prodigy whose abstract paintings have sold for amounts in the tens of thousands since she was four years old. Her parents are distraught over her abduction, but are they telling the police and Prager everything?
And for a young girl, Sashi has a lot of enemies. Art critics deride her paintings, semi-famous painters use the Internet to post hateful, obscene scribes about her, and museum directors voice their opinions that Sashi, in fact, is not the artist at all.
There is a lot of thinking and philosophy going on in Prager’s mind. His life has been so traumatic, so filled with betrayals by those he trusted and loved, that he has little confidence in himself and doesn’t think himself worth much. This reader, at least, formed a very different opinion of him, but it’s easy to see why a man who has gone through as much as he has isn’t looking at the glass as half full any longer.
Reed Farrel Coleman has created a mensch in this middle-aged Jewish man from New York, even if the mensch himself isn’t sure about that.
You can read more about Reed Farrel Coleman at his web site.