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Showing posts with label mystery/thriller. Show all posts

Throughout History: My Pet Mystery Series

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The occasion of finishing “The Dove of Death” by Peter Tremayne makes a perfect time to review three detective series I have enjoyed over the years, but have not included here. An ancient setting recurs through these three series, which is a complete coincidence, a thing that evolved from simple preferences. Let’s start with the series the entry from which I finished just today. Each has its devoted followers (this is not a discovery piece, this is an appreciation).

Sister Fidelma, by Peter Tremayne

Set in Ireland in the seventh century CE, this series features a youngish nun who exercises the powers of a duly appointed investigating officer and advocate in the Five Kingdoms on the Island of Hibernia. Tremayne, real name Peter Berresford Ellis, studies English and Irish history professionally, and builds his rewarding stories around the customs and conflicts of the time, which to me is a wonderful extra spice in these pieces. His scholarship shows in such themes as the spread of orthodoxy of the Roman Church. Many professionals, particularly in the legal system, joined the Church as a way of pursuing their careers without interference, and Fidelma is no exception. You will not read of her in any sort of cloister or silent meditation; she does in fact marry a Saxon monk and have a son. However, a series of focused and fervent churchmen work tirelessly at spreading the celibate orthodoxy espoused by Rome. This doctrine is very slow to take hold in ancient Ireland.

The books stand very well as mysteries, and Fidelma is a memorable, intrepid character. These mysteries keep you guessing, often until the last dozen or so pages. Fidelma always guards her secrets well; often there is a reason she can’t even tell her husband Eadulf whodunit, because it could endanger him. One or two quibbles on these. The writing, particularly during conversation, can run a tiny bit stilted, as though Mr. Tremayne does not want his characters to sound vernacular or familiar. And he finds it too frequently necessary for Fidelma to cop an attitude about what she does, often putting a stuffy or prejudiced official in his or her place. Small quibbles, no doubt. A very worthwhile series, I have thoroughly enjoyed it.

For more information; click http://www.sisterfidelma.com/


Roma sub rosa, by Steven Saylor

Beginning late in the life of Lucius Cornelius Sulla, (d. 78 BCE) and extending through the collapse of Republican Rome and the establishment of the Empire, Gordianus the Finder finds murderers, thieves, conspirators, and more in a series of superb-down-to-the-details mysteries set in ancient Rome. Highlights in this series include intimate fictional portraits of Cicero, the famed advocate and statesman of Rome (for whom Gordianus does a series of tasks, sometimes grudgingly), and the cunning, charming, and ruthless Julius Caesar. The principal attraction of this series lies in the engrossing verisimilitude of Rome at its height. The sights, smells, commotion, attitudes, backroom political ruthlessness, and religious traditions all flow from the extensive knowledge of Mr. Saylor, who, like me, remains entranced by all things ancient Rome.

Gordianus must navigate his way through the shark-infested waters of Roman power politics. He must find murderers and unearth conspiracies, freeing his slave and marrying her along the way. In his life he must balance the interests of the state, his clients, and his personal life, and he does it all with a rigid personal moral sense. Much of the brutality of the time leaves him aghast, but he doesn’t question slavery, or the preeminence of his homeland in the world. The rogue’s gallery in this series is a highly entertaining one, whether it involves historical characters or the anonymous gladiator/thug. This series remains a prized favorite.

For more information: http://www.stevensaylor.com/RomaSubRosa.html


Brother Cadfael, by Ellis Peters

Portrayed through 22 novels published between 1977 and 1995, and brought to the small screen in a terrific BBC series with the divine Derek Jacobi in the title role, Brother Cadfeal ranks as one of the best-loved and most-followed detectives in all of mystery literature. These novels feature the eponymous Benedictine monk, who serves his abbot and neighboring nobles by investigating murders and other crimes. This series shares with the Gordianus novels a highly charged political backdrop, which allows for all kinds of machination and skullduggery. Cadfael’s time encompasses the civil war that raged in England in the 1130s and 1140s, between adherents to two contenders for the throne, Empress Maud and King Stephen.

Edith Pargeter, self-taught scholar and translator, published well-researched fiction and non-fiction after World War II. Under the name Ellis Peters, she published her first Brother Cadfael book, “A Morbid Taste for Bones,” in 1977, beating by three years Umberto Eco’s very well-received “The Name of the Rose,” a novel that famously deals with similar material. In her Cadfael series, Peters maintained an excellence in her plots and in her renderings of a far-off world. Her mysteries contain anything and everything the reader hopes for in this genre: distinctive sets of suspects, games of high-stakes political shenanigans, plenty of physical danger for our hero and other virtuous souls, and plenty of surprise twists and gratifying endings. There are a lot of reasons for Cadfael’s popularity, and I’m sure it will endure for generations.

For more information: http://www.steveconrad.co.uk/cadfael/

"Special Topics in Calamity Physics" by Marisha Pessl

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How does one plan a book like this? To set a murder mystery (we have no idea it's a murder mystery except for some prescient comments along the way, until well into the story) in a clever high schooler's senior year, and make her not only solve the mystery, but suffer abandonment as a result! This exceedingly clever piece contains multiple cultural references on every page, most of them actually valid. We have a startlingly erudite high school senior, who falls in with a clique of charismatic and clever classmates and who is able to complete her senior year without benefit of parents.
The language in this fresh, engaging piece is what propels it along. We keep turning pages because we begin to care what happens to Blue, and Hannah, the enigmatic teacher who proctors the creative group along the way. But for all the throw-away culture and kids-playing-at-adulthood, we have a deathly story underneath, in which Hannah loses her life and Blue's Dad disappears the minute Blue figures it (almost all the way) out.

Ms. Pessl amazes with her multitudinous references, her deadpan delivery, and the reality of the angst her characters feel. This is a debut you should definitely pick up, and a career we should definitely follow.

"The Janissary Tree" by Jason Goodwin

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In "The Janissary Tree" Jason Goodwin gives us an engaging murder mystery set in 1836 Istanbul. In the imperial capital, the sultan faces pressure from shrinking territory and waning influence, and when a young houri in his harem is murdered, he sighs and says, "Summon Yashim." Thus are we introduced to the intrepid and resourceful investigator who must solve not only the mystery of the harem murder, but also the apparent murder of four of the sultan's young officers. Are they related?

We have major international intrigue, treason, stealthy murder, and our hero in and out of hot water. I love when an author puts a mystery in an ancient setting (see Steven Saylor and Ellis Peters for the two best), and I'd hoped to learn about and feel immersed in (late) medieval Istanbul. I got this, but it seemed like "Istanbul Lite." The mystery and intrigue work satisfactorily, but I would have liked a little more basic info and flavor. Mr. Goodwin paces his story pretty well, and hides the identity of whodunit well, too.

If you're in the market for a medium-duty mystery with an exotic setting, give this a try.

"The Savage Garden" by Mark Mills

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Mark Mills is rapidly becoming a favorite. I was so taken by "Amagansett" that I doubted he could equal it in this subsequent work. I'm very pleased to be able to say he didn't disappoint. He seems to have the ability to spin a mystery out of a multitude of situations, and if the library's waiting list for his latest, [The Information Officer], is any indication, a horde of other readers feel the same way.

Adam Strickland has just finished his end-of-term exams at 1958 Cambridge when his mentor offers him the opportunity to review and write a thesis on an unspoiled Renaissance garden in Tuscany. His ready acceptance plunges him into a centuries-old murder mystery, and the intrigue and life-threatening danger that surround it. Along the way, we touch on a more recent murder, and the family haunted by both to the present day. Young Adam excels at medieval symbolism and culture, and apparently also at following clues from much more recent crimes. Or is he?

This story offers us the sympathetic strengths of a very bright young man, adept at gleaning clues from Dante as well as modern forensics. Other attractive characters abound here, such as Adam's ne'er-do-well sculptor brother Harry, and Antonella, the beautiful-but-scarred young woman who may or may not have ulterior motives for seducing Adam. This work is cleverly constructed, a compulsive page-turner, and a very gratifying, multi-layered thriller.

Have at it! And explore the rest of Mills's oeuvre while you're at it. I certainly am.

"Fatal Gamble" by J.P. O'Donnell

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“Fatal Gamble” by JP O’Donnell was given to me through the good and generous offices of Paula at Author Marketing Experts, and I’m going to take this opportunity to thank her for it. “Fatal Gamble” is a straightforward thriller in which an intrepid private detective survives to ferret out the evil-doers and saves his pretty girlfriend in the process. But it’s an engrossing trip to get to that point.

Measured against the classic whodunit criteria – do I care if the bad guys get caught; am I impressed by the hero’s resourcefulness; is there enough mystery and novelty in the crimes committed – this story succeeds very well. In the climactic moment, when the safety of our detective Gallagher and his girlfriend/fiancée is direly threatened, I really got sweaty palms, and my pulse became quite rapid indeed.

Gallagher is a former Boston cop who now plies his trade as a PI, and when he’s called in by the confused and frightened widow of a newly-murdered pediatrician, he has no inkling that he’s stumbled into a conspiracy involving real estate scams, big-money politics, murder, and corruption in very high places. It’s a very effective yarn, and does that necessary-but-hardly-easy thing: it involves our emotions.

“Fatal Gamble” is, as I say, a straightforward thriller – not so much a mystery, because we know only too well who the heavies are. Dr. O’Donnell could have used the teensiest bit of editing in those few places where unadorned descriptions of action or thought-processes takes too many words. This is not a story where the language soars and entertains on its own, but then, which mystery/thriller is? If you’ve a yen for an effective thriller where the hero is highly sympathetic, the secondary characters drawn with full shading, and the corrupt-in-high-places fall hard, go for “Fatal Gamble.”

"Bangkok 8" by John Burdett

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In "Bangkok 8," what has John Burdett wrought? We witness Sonchai Jitpleecheep, one of the very few uncorrupted cops in Bangkok, use meditation, charm, and his own subtle use of Bangkok's culture of bribery to untangle the web of drug trafficking, prostitution, art fraud, and murder which has enveloped him. But, into the bargain, Burdett presents us with an insider's look at the drastic culture shock faced by Westerners when they encounter the Thai Buddhist mindset - here Europeans and Americans are the backward, the oafish, the arrogant boors who run roughshod over Thailand's natural resources. There is a deep metaphysical pool into which we are immersed in this book - that's its difference from other mysteries.
The facts of the case are not especially remarkable on the surface. An American Marine who has bungled an attempt to join an international criminal syndicate is murdered in exotic style. All our detective's instincts and all the evidence point to a powerful, well-connected jade and jewelry dealer whom Sonchai feels he must kill to avenge the death of his partner. However, enter Fatima, the extremely sensual, beautiful result of a modern-day Pygmalion project - gone horribly wrong - and the heavy's demise is taken off our hero's hands. Or is it?

Something else that distinguishes this intriguing piece from other mystery stories is the bifurcation of our detective's personality: Fatima is really Sonchnai's alter ego, his living, breathing dark side, who takes it upon herself to deliver a brutal justice in her own way. All along, we have the ethereal, not-quite-concrete meditations on Buddha, karma, and the irreconcilable conflict between Western and Eastern morality. Along the way we have the detective's delightful entrepreneur mother, the crooked police commander Sonchai nonetheless loves, and communication with the detective's dead partner, whom he describes as his soul brother. And the master-stroke which turns the tables karmically correct is orchestrated by a holy and far-off Buddhist monk.

Read "Bangkok 8," and be transported by remarkable language and gritty similitude to another country, another morality, another state of mind. Recommended unreservedly.

"The Red Door" by Charles Todd

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"The Red Door" comes in as the twelfth entry in Charles Todd's mystery series featuring Ian Rutledge of Scotland Yard. In it, our hero struggles with an arcane murder case while trying to deal with a tireless voice in his head. The murder mystery starts out as a case of an important missing person, and suddenly people involved in the case start turning up as corpses. The voice in Inspector Rutledge's head belongs to a fallen comrade - a soldier who was subordinate to him in the gruesome Battle of the Somme.
Taking place in England after the Great War, "The Red Door" features a wealthy and influential family, one of whose members goes missing briefly, purportedly "tired," or "ill." He returns soon enough, but his brothers and sisters take unaccountable and extreme umbrage at his behavior. This forms the start of the Inspector's observations as he eventually suspects one or more of the siblings in the eventual murder.

"The Red Door" is a good example of a slowly-unfolding mystery. We learn little by little, as Rutledge does, of the crooks of deceit and the nannies of recrimination in this prominent but beleagured family. Their story includes a repudiated marriage, a case of false identity, and a staunch unity in maintaining their lies. In fact, I found the array of brothers, sisters, in-laws, and grandparents a little confusing. There are slightly too many of them; I don't think the authors meant them to seem so interchangeable. It strikes me as an undistinguished set.

I will quibble also with the peripatetic performance of the good detective. I'm sure it was possible to drive from London to Lancashire in 1920, but I had trouble believing it could be done quite so often, over and back, within the time frame set forth here. The plus side of the ledger includes the device of the voice in Inspector Rutledge's head. It proves useful on more than one occasion, and one can imagine it lasting for a few more books as the detective begins to rely on it. The mystery itself will appeal to inveterate readers, because it has depth, twists, turns, surprises and a pretty good resolution.

"Amagansett" by Mark Mills

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An atmospheric mystery set in mid-20th-Century Long Island, “Amagansett” sets forth the conflict arising from a determined fisherman’s investigation into a socialite’s murder. Amagansett is a small fishing village on Long Island’s southern coast; it is peopled by groups who bookend the society: the local fishing population, who struggle to make a living, share it with an elite group of vacationing urbanites which commands all the best in goods and service.

Conrad Labarde, a rough-hewn Basque immigrant and WWII veteran, and his fishing partner discover the body of the beautiful daughter of one of the upper-crust families, who has drowned in the ocean. He has his own mysterious route to the solution, whether or not Hollis, the deputy sheriff investigating the mishap, believes him, or even suspects him. Labarde displays an unexplained urgency in finding the killer, for he’s convinced this was no accident, but as the narrative proceeds, the reader becomes more and more sure of the reason for his single-mindedness.

Mark Mills delivers an engrossing mystery, with a highly unorthodox hero. We follow as Labarde keeps his eyes on the prize while juggling his other responsibilities, which include first and foremost his quirky, not-all-there business partner. We’re let into Hollis’s motivations too, which stem here from swirling suspicions about his behavior as an NYC detective. At length, Mr. Mills’s mystery is inventive and memorable, almost enthralling. He finishes with an excellent, cinematic climax, a fine denouement for the well-treated reader.

I recommend this, highly. As a debut effort, it’s very impressive.

"The Information Officer" by Mark Mills

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Mark Mills continues to bless us with thrilling mystery tales, where impromptu (non-professional) detectives depend on their wits and gumption to crack cases and catch the heavy. "The Information Officer" has an added fillip: it takes place against a backdrop of wartime espionage, complete with a Nazi spy on Malta during World War II.

In this entry, our accidental hero is Maj. Max Chadwick of the British Army. The Brits and the islanders are under constant bombardment from the Luftwaffe, as the German war machine is intent on clearing the strategic island of the enemy. But island girls start turning up dead, and it's apparent that it's not from the bombing sorties. The base's chief medical officer alerts Max, and supplies a clue as to the murderer's identity. This story is entwined with Chadwick's romantic adventures and misadventures, and it all follows the hectic, straining pace of wartime siege.

Mr. Mills is three-for-three. His other two books,"Amagansett" and "The Savage Garden" both delivered superbly on early promise, and this is no exception. The intimate scenes steam up the windows a little more in this one, and as I say, the Nazi spy angle is central to this story, and adds a weightier, sinister shade to the proceedings. Also new in this novel are the chapters that deal with the killer's background and thinking process. These are handled reasonably well. All in all, this is superior work, and all honors to our consistently excellent Mr. Mills.

"The #1 Ladies' Detective Agency" by Alexander McCall Smith

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Mma Ramotswe opens a detective agency in Botswana, has a series of cases, friendships, and relationships, and succeeds in more ways than one. This s a wise little book, in its discerning observations about people and human nature. The main case involves a kidnapping, which our heroine solves and of which she rescues the victim. The lead-up to and the execution of the rescue are both very satisfying.

This is a pleasant, funny, compassionate, light and easy read. Recommended.

"The Final Solution: A Story of Detection" by Michael Chabon

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In "The Final Solution," Michael Chabon gives us the story of the world-famous detective cracking the case of the interrogated parrot. It turns out someone did the parrot's owner in, and was questioning the parrot. It turns out the parrot knew and could recite rail car numbers of Jews being transported in the camps in the Final Solution. The "world famous detective" is not identified in the book, but no doubt is left before you finish. Conan Doyle's hero cannot be mistaken.
This is a haunting little story, with a favorable ending; it's a sweet confection weighted with heavy themes. I enjoyed Chabon quite a bit at this length. "Kavalier and Clay" is too long.

"The Egyptologist" by Arthur Phillips

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In "The Egyptologist" Arthur Phillips gives us a murder mystery that features an Australian con man named Caldwell, who poses as Trilipush, another character who is a foppish Brit who "read the Pharoahs" at Oxford, and a dim Aussie detective who'd like to sell his idea of this story to Hollywood. All this is set in the exciting backdrop of Egypt in the '20s, while the world is agog with the King Tut discoveries.
Principal among Caldwell/Trilipush's ambitions is the hand of Margaret Finneran, daughter of mobster money, but he believes he has to find a real Egyptian treasure to make himself worthy. His belief in this treasure is the driving energy behind the narrative. Too bad the belief is based on poor information, incomplete evidence, and outright falsehoods. In the end our protaganist's belief becomes maniacal: he comes to equate himself with his apocryphal Egyptian king, and kills himself. He leaves in his wake, confusion, uncertainty, murder, blackmail, and a dead gangster.

Phillips is very generous with his readers. We learn in plenty of time of Caldwell/Trilipush's delusion; there is wonderful dialogue - witty, and spot-on with the vernacular of the times. We have a complete understanding of story when the two men die at the end - the dream of discovery, the mystery of the Egyptian king who never existed, and the mayhem our would-be social climber causes.

This book has a wondeful cast of characters, an exciting climax, and takes us on a trip to a far-away land and time. I recommend it - take and enjoy.

"An Unpardonable Crime" by Andrew Taylor

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This is a long and interesting mystery set in late Regency London and Gloucester. Our schoolmaster protaganist stumbles into a labyrinth of murder, embezzlement, bankruptcy, and deathbed treachery. He uses his considerable wits to solve the various mysteries and help a beautiful and charismatic widow in need.

All this occurs with a large and diverting cast of characters. We have old Carswall, the story's chief villain; there's the lovely and bereft Sophie Frant, desired by both Carswall and our hero, Tom Shield. And at the eye of this storm is young Edgar Allan Poe, visiting in England (in Shield's care for much of the story) and oblivious as to who his father is and also to the role his father plays in the events of the tale.

The book moves slowly and is somewhat overlong. We never lose focus on the real issues, but sometimes we revolve around them at a considerable distance.

"The Pale Blue Eye" by Louis Bayard

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I was very much looking forward to this book: a murder mystery featuring Edgar Allan Poe as a character, set in the early years of the 19th century at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point - what's not to love?

Well, this book is pretty much not to love. I don't usually let a pervasive emotion put me off a book, but this hits me as a very sad book indeed. I don't want to spoil anyone's enjoyment of this novel, but there is NO ONE in the book who should be above suspicion. Some of the descriptions of the area are quite effective, and the protrayal of Poe rises above the pedestrian - I liked it - but overall, you might want to spend your valuable time elsewhere.

"The Cutting Room" by Louise Welsh

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In this story we are led to believe that there will always be sadistic sexual predators, and that there is at least one amateur in Glasgow who wants to solve a murder involving these themes. The twist is that this particular murder happened decades before the story, and our hero, Rilke, believes through most of the story that its perpetrator is dead. He learns that this has not been the case, however, but that the purported villain has been killed within the current story timeframe by an intended victim.
Rilke is a homosexual, and Ms. Welsh relates a series of anonymous sexual encounters in the seamy underbelly of Glasgow. It's hard to believe this book would be received as warmly in the US as it apparently was in the UK.

This is the story of a man driven by his conscience to try to prevent further depredation against innocents. Although the protaganist must ultimately give up his individual quest through circumstances beyond his control, it is also a book about the ultimate impossibility of stopping sadism and exploitation. It's a good, vivid read, and Rilke is a sympathetic hero. I recommend it.

"Death in Amber" by Dean Fetzer

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In “Death in Amber” Dean Fetzer offers a yarn that includes mystery, intrigue, a priceless and unique work of art, thieving Nazis, and strong elements of the supernatural. And a hero the like of which I have never run across before.

Mr. Fetzer focuses on the Amber Room, the unique masterpiece of Baroque art – an ornate room built entirely out of amber and given to Czar Peter the Great by Prussian King Frederick. It was a highly prized pawn in Russian-German diplomacy at the outset of World War II, and serves as the jumping-off point in this mystery. This story, too, has unique elements that set it apart from other mysteries. Set in the near future, it features Jaared Sen, a blind investigator with special powers of perception and great supernatural fighting and surviving skills. In an alternate narrative thread, we have Wolf and his crew of specialized thieves. And lording it over all are the supernatural creatures themselves.

The story progresses through these two threads: the difficult investigations on both sides go forward side-by-side in alternating sections, and these sections are one or two pages long. It took me a while to acclimate myself to this jarring scheme, maybe a third of the book, but after that, I got into the rhythm. Unfortunately, the mysteries unfold with such slowness that the first three quarters of the book feel like one long tedious drudge. Lack of reasonable pace is a problem here. Toward the end of the book, where our two protagonists meet, I built up a hope that they might join forces, but, that was not the payoff. The payoff was a brief interaction between Sen the supercop and an extremely mysterious non-human female character wherein Sen’s senses are overwhelmed by the supernatural properties of the Amber Room. As interesting as all this sounds, it just doesn’t become airborne for me, it never leaves the plane of the mundane; ultimately finishing the book felt like completing an exercise.

One part of the narrative deserves mention: in the midst of the plodding setups of our mysteries, we have Alicia the medical examiner and her professor husband. The husband is murdered, a gratuitous bit of violence in an unnecessary plot element, but Mr. Fetzer’s handling of Alicia’s shock and grief, and of her steadfast friends’ intervention in her life at this horrific time, is sensitive, properly-paced, and utterly believable. It makes me think Mr. Fetzer can handle these emotions really well, and I would be interested in a book of his that dealt more closely with elements like these.

Overall, though, “Death in Amber” moves too slowly for me, and its potentially high-voltage supernatural elements beg for more depth and background.