Book Review

Falling Glass, Adrian McKinty

15/06/2011 - 1:11pm

There are some books that it is just flat out a relief to finish.  Too much sleep deprivation and the dust bunnies can start to look like they are moving into formations for the final onslaught.  FALLING GLASS really cheats a lot.  Having become a somewhat besotted Michael Forsythe fan, I did think I could approach FALLING GLASS with the vague hope of keeping reasonable hours.  He plays a bit part only in this book after all, with the action centred around enforcer Killian.  Should have known better.  McKinty writes that brand of dark, violent, no holds barred, tempered with touches ... Read Review

Prime Cut, Alan Carter

14/06/2011 - 2:56pm

There's absolutely nothing like a quintessential Aussie bloke, a cop in purgatory, stuck in outback Western Australia, doing time on the Stock Squad for offending the powers that be.  Alan Carter's debut novel PRIME CUT starts out with considerable promise, despite the slightly unrealistic picture of a Stock Squad peering that closely at roadkill!

But the setup is beside the point as DSC Cato Kwong has to be out in the middle of nowhere for some reason, therefore becoming the only option on hand when a mangled torso is washed up on the beach of mining town Hopetoun.  Much ... Read Review

Death of a Red Heroine, Qiu Xiaolong

10/06/2011 - 2:50pm

To my mind, the very best crime fiction in the world provides a window into the world in which it is set.  Be that the psyche of the people, the machinations of the society, how a community is structured and operates, the laws and mores, even the way in which authorities deal with the disorder, how they implement authority.  DEATH OF A RED HEROINE is set in Shanghai in 1990, a year after Tiananmen Square, an ancient city with a population tightly controlled by the Communist Party.  Poet Chen Cao is an unlikely policeman, forced into the job by the party system, he's caught between a ... Read Review

Paydirt, Garry Disher

01/06/2011 - 5:09pm

Wyatt is back in a new adventure set on the far side of morality. Introduced in Kickback, Garry Disher's fast-selling, widely praised crime novel, Wyatt reappears in the South Australian outback, intent on snatching a payroll. But Wyatt is not the only one eyeing the funds. The Outfit has business with Wyatt. It will only be finished when he faces the hitman's gun. Garry Disher's highly controlled, fast-paced style brilliantly matches this tense, unnerving story of treachery and rough justice.Read Review

Lambs to the Slaughter, Debi Marshall

01/06/2011 - 1:44pm

The strange thing about starting out reading a book like LAMBS TO THE SLAUGHTER was a vague feeling of uncertainty.  Mostly because the man at the centre of this book - Derek Ernest Percy - has one of those names that instantly rings very loud bells.  Uncertainty because despite knowing that he's the man that so many law-enforcement agencies in Australia are convinced is a multiple child-killer, I found I didn't really know much about him at all.  At the end of LAMBS TO THE SLAUGHTER, the disturbing thing is that you still aren't going to know a lot about what makes the man tick.  No ... Read Review

Die A Little, Megan Abbott

26/05/2011 - 12:54pm

DIE A LITTLE is the first in a series of books from Megan Abbott flagged somewhat unhelpfully as "modern noir".  I'm not at all sure what that should imply in terms of expectation, but whatever caused it, something didn't really work about this book for me.

Leaving aside the fact that the cover is absolutely wonderful and the title is glorious, the style very atmospheric and the build up interesting (woman with a "past" who marries a cop, cop's sister smells a rat, digs), something about the delivery of this story simply flat out didn't hold my interest.  I suspect part ... Read Review

Sex Crimes, Paul Thomas

26/05/2011 - 12:23pm

I'm more than a bit of a fan of books by Paul Thomas.  I'm more than a bit of a fan of his short stories now as well.  SEX CRIMES is a series of fantastic short stories themed around sex.  As the blurb puts it "exploring the unpredictable and sometimes fatal consequences that can occur when sex rears its not-so-uly head."  (To say nothing of the odd looks you get when you're sat in public places, with a book which declares it's title obviously on the cover, and you, the reader, are snickering and outright laughing at points).  Needless to say - this book quickly became a home based ... Read Review

Crime, Ferdinand von Schirach

25/05/2011 - 2:52pm

The author of CRIME, Ferdinand von Schirach is a criminal lawyer in Berlin.  He's also an extremely good storyteller.

The stories incorporated in CRIME (as the publicity material puts it) were specifically chosen to demonstrate the relationships between truth and reason, law and compassion.  They are real-life cases from the author's own experience.  The subject matter, frankly, is frequently much much easier to imagine as fictional - but they are not.  Whilst it's clear they are tales chosen to trigger certain emotions and reactions in the reader, in von Schirach's hands ... Read Review

The Unknown Terrorist, Richard Flanagan

24/05/2011 - 5:08pm

Feeling somewhat cocky that I owned a copy of our f2f book for this month I was more than happy to finally get a chance to read THE UNKNOWN TERRORIST by Richard Flanagan.  No matter that it turned out that the book club book was another one altogether (might make a note of that book later on), I really really really enjoyed THE UNKNOWN TERRORIST.

This book beautifully illustrates the way that somebody's reputation, life and future can be trashed comprehensively by one little mistake compounded by somebody else's blatant personal interest.  Not wanting to give away too ... Read Review

An Accidental Terrorist, Steven Lang

24/05/2011 - 4:30pm

A f2f bookclub read, I started this book with high hopes, having just finished another with what seemed like a similar concept. A scenario that had some serious potential, this book started off okay but quickly just seemed to degenerate into a mish-mash of making the reader feel sorry (attracted to / interested in) a central character that was just... well boring. Unfortunately this feeling of being bored was compounded by some extremely predictable events, actions and outcomes. Perhaps the idea was to show how somebody unwittingly gets involved with things that they shouldn't. ... Read Review

Poison Door, Steve Malley

22/05/2011 - 3:17pm

Not being at all adverse to a big suspenseful thriller I was more than pleased to get my hands on a copy of NZ author Steve Malley's book POISON DOOR.

Even more pleased that I didn't dither around like I'm wont to do and sat down and read it.  There's an awful lot to like about this book.  The story revolves around three main characters - Michelle Swanston, a 14 year old girl who lives a fair amount of her life on the streets - anything to avoid her drug addled mother.  Tommy Knowles is a thug - originally from London he's landed on the shores of New Zealand with a desire ... Read Review

Scream, Nigel McCrery

18/04/2011 - 12:26pm

I doubt it's much of a coincidence being a big fan of the scripts and the acting in the TV Series NEW TRICKS, that I'm also a fan of the DCI Mark Lapslie series.  After all, Nigel McCrery is a writer and creator of both.  (Along with many other excellent TV series including Silent Witness and All the King's Men.)

SCREAM is the third in the DCI Mark Lapslie series, Lapslie being an unusual central protagonist who suffers from a particularly acute form of synaesthesia.  In other words he experiences sounds as a variety of different flavours.  Which makes receiving a very ... Read Review

1222, Anne Holt

17/04/2011 - 5:50pm

Take one gloriously grumpy central protagonist, add that train crash, include a massive snowstorm cutting off a train full of people 1222 metres above sea level in an inaccessible hotel, add a mysterious locked carriage and a group of shadowy unknown passengers, then kill off a high-profile passenger and see what happens.

What happens is that our grumpy protagonist, Hanne Wilhemlsen, ex-police officer, in a wheelchair as a result of being shot on duty, has to work out what is going on before the body count continues to increase.  With no official help from the outside, ... Read Review

Violent Exposure, Katherine Howell

15/04/2011 - 4:13pm

Katherine Howell is rapidly becoming one of my stars of crime fiction writing in Australia.  Part of what really works in Howell's books (and VIOLENT EXPOSURE is no exception) is the way that the viewpoint is slightly skewed from the common police, detective, investigator concentration.  In all the books there is a paramedic viewpoint (no surprise as she was a paramedic herself for 14 years), but I particularly like the way that even that predictable element is slightly twisted in all the books - but even more so in VIOLENT EXPOSURE.

The central thread of this book is the ... Read Review

The Affair of the Bloodstained Egg Cosy, James Anderson

15/04/2011 - 2:51pm

Yes, yes, I know.  What am I doing reading a book like THE AFFAIR OF THE BLOODSTAINED EGG COSY.  In my defence I used to be quite a SPLASHER (4MA speak for somebody who reads a wide range of crime book "styles") although in recent years I will admit I've moved more and more to the dark side.  But every now and then I like a bit of a splash around in the lighter side of the genre, and I do rather like the eccentric side of the classic English country house sub-genre.  Chuck in a slightly batty Lord; an unflappable Lady; a house with secret passages; a poor cousin / secretary / jolly ... Read Review

Zulu, Caryl Férey

12/04/2011 - 12:49pm

Unbelievably violent, amazingly confrontational, searingly honest and profoundly emotional, ZULU is one of those books that you may have to read through spread fingers, but it is almost impossible to put this book down until it screeches to an ending that will make you shudder.

This is noir, critical, brutal writing at it's absolute best. The "Zulu" of the title refers not so much to the tribe as a whole, but to Cape Town homicide captain Ali Neuman.  Heading up the investigation into the death of a young woman whose body is found with a crushed skull, Neuman accepts that ... Read Review

Shadow Sister, Simone van der Vlugt

11/04/2011 - 1:25pm

SHADOW SISTER is the second book translated into English from Dutch author Simone van der Vlugt.  Both standalones, this one is the story of twins Lydia and Elisa, as the blurb puts it - identical in appearance, different in every other way.

Starting out on a particularly dramatic note, the book opens with Lydia being threatened with a knife by one of her students.  From there, and there's really no other way to explain how this book works, except to say that the book is about the events that led up to Lydia's murder.  Each sister has a voice, her own perspective about ... Read Review

Operation Napoleon, Arnaldur Indridason

11/04/2011 - 12:54pm

Reactions to an author taking a detour away from a much loved series, or style (or both for that matter) can vary.  Some readers love the chance to head into new territory, others find that departure too much of a step, and long to return to the familiarity of the series, the known characters or the styling.  And as with everything, for this reader, it all depends. 

OPERATION NAPOLEON is a thriller, set in Iceland, but based around the mystery of a plane that went down at the very end of World War II.   To take this that little bit further again from the Erlendur ... Read Review

Murder on the Eiffel Tower, Claude Izner

07/04/2011 - 1:07pm

I suspect we all pick up a book looking forward to what is going to happen.  So normally around page 50 a reader will be getting twitchy if nothing much has happened.  Get to the end of the book and it still seems like you're waiting for something to happen and it's a very frustrating experience.  

Set during the 1889 World Expo in Paris, the Eiffel Tower has just been officially opened and is a massive attraction.  When a woman dies on one of the Tower's platforms, officially she died from a bee sting.  As other people also die supposedly from bee stings, the police are ... Read Review

The Ringmaster, Vanda Symon

06/04/2011 - 2:39pm

THE RINGMASTER is the second in the Sam Shephard series from NZ author Vanda Symon.  Sam has moved to Dunedin, is in detective training when the body of a young university student is found in the Botanic Gardens.  In Sam's world it goes without saying that nothing is ever going to be straightforward, and once the possibility that this murder isn't a solitary event, the connection between murders all over the Southern South Island of New Zealand and a local travelling circus becomes a distinct possibility.

Which, as it does, leads to a sympathetic relationship with an ... Read Review

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