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The Interpretation of Murder by Jed Rubenfeld. Literary/Historical Mystery Fiction 8/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/30/2007 12:23 PM
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Jed Rubenfled’s historical mystery fiction novel The Interpretation of Murder [ISBN 978 0 7553 3142 0] is a quite amazing book in many different ways. Firstly, the historical background of early 20th century New York is fascinating – including the amusing social divisions – and equally well researched is the background to the story – Freud’s lecture visit (with Jung) to the states in 1909, which the author has cunningly contrived to write into a murder mystery. The psychoanalytic discourse is reassuringly authentic, but can be tedious when
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The Two Minute Rule by Robert Crais. Crime fiction 8/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/29/2007 3:15 PM
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Robert Crais’ latest crime fiction novel The Two Minute Rule [ISBN 978 0 7528 7957 4] is not an Elvis Cole, but a gritty interesting and well-written table-turner where a newly released ex-con sets out to find a murderer. The plot is not all that complex, but the questions at the heart of it sets up a suspenseful narrative that builds and builds throughout the book – it only fails to get a 10/10 because he uses a couple of plot devices I find slightly cheating –and allows him to squirrel away key information until the end and then it looks a bit staged
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The Skin Gods by Richard Montanari. Thriller 8/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/28/2007 10:28 AM
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Richard Montanari’s novel The Skin Gods [ISBN 978 0 099 48689 3] is a dense book in many ways. It is not just that it’s a substantial read, but the plot is a complex mix of several stories which you feel may or may not come together. The narrative keeps moving forward all the time, but often adds only a sliver of information to the story out of context as each sub-story moves at the same pace. There are scads of red herrings and the reader can’t be sure which part of the plot each may well be connected with. The complexity is clever, and keeps you guessing.
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Darkness and Light by John Harvey. Crime thriller 7/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/24/2007 4:10 PM
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John Harvey’s Darkness and Light [ISBN 978 0 099 48995 5] is a well-written crime thriller, though the plot mechanism is so obvious that it begins to be hackneyed when you spot it. The crimes throw up suspects from the outset, each one is offered as a possibility, all but one are red herrings, but throughout the book you are invited to match the possibles against a flashback narrative of a young boy at a psychiatrist who is obviously our culprit
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Skylight Confessions by Alice Hoffman. Literary Fiction 10/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/23/2007 4:01 PM
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Alice Hoffman’s Skylight Confessions [CN 149600] is not my usual style of book. Its got an ethereal, ghostly feel, and though the story is simple (it could be told in a couple of sentences or so) the narrative is gripping and powerful and I confess I cried in several places. (This has not happened since the Kite Runner – but its not even as desperately sad as that was, its just so well written you are dragged into the story until you care what happens.)
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Brightness Falls by Jay McInerney. Literary Fiction 7/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/22/2007 11:04 AM
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Jay McInerney’s novel Brightness Falls [CN 5900] is one of those American almost riches to almost rags sagas full of angst and self-absorption. The plot is therefore simple, and the narrative predictable, even the underhand business dealings are no surprise. The characters are thoroughly drawn, (though American characters of this type get more and more foreign, I feel) and their foibles and views explored. The book is undoubtedly well written, which is why, even though it’s a long book, I did get to the end with only the minimal of skipping.
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Night Windows by Jonathan Smith. Thriller 6/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/21/2007 11:00 AM
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Jonathan Smith’s thriller Night Windows [ISBN 0 349 11893 0] gets some really good jacket crits – “an excellent and subtle novelist” “ a brilliant novel with a stunningly logical pay-off”, but I don’t think its quite so good. The plot is quite simple and revealed tediously – a double life or a doppleganger – and this is good as far as it goes, but the original character is quite stolid and boring – yes, I know this is to set against his shadow, but it doesn’t keep you on your seat, particularly. The writing is good, and. OK, subtle, but it’s only a fair read.
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Saving Fish from Drowning by Amy Tan. Literary Fiction 9/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/19/2007 9:01 AM
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Amy Tan’s Saving fish from Drowning [ISBN 0 00 721616 5] is a deceptively light comedy, that has great depths to its underlying psychology, detailed observations and empathic views of difference. The plot is engaging and the narrative voice (of a dead person’s spirit) sets just the right viewpoint and tone for this amusing. ironic, multiculturally-playful, thought provoking novel.
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Twisted by Jeffrey Deaver. Crime fiction short stories 10/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/18/2007 7:34 PM
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Twisted, Jeffrey Deaver’s collection of short stories [ISBN 0 340 83389 0] is a delight of well-written superbly plotted and suspenseful stories. Though short stories are not my usual preferred medium, these are the very best of the genre. Each one delivers major twists on what is expected – as he says in his introduction, all rules for full-scale novels are off, and he can change the goalposts and expectations. There is a new Lincoln Rhyme short story – good it is too, and a plethora of seriously clever, intelligent other stories you should not miss.
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The Associate by Philip Margolin. Crime thriller 6/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/16/2007 1:28 PM
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Philip Margolin’s crime fiction novel The Associate [ISBN 0 7515 3243 6] is reminiscent of Scott Turow (without the overwhelming detail) and is a reasonable enough read. The plot is somewhat implausible, however, it starts off well and then goes off at a tangent for a long period and never really tightens up again. The narrative keeps going with some pace, and the characterisations are good enough for light fiction, but it isn’t as good as I expected it to be at the outset.
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The Grave Tattoo by Val McDermid. Crime fiction 7/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/15/2007 5:39 PM
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No question about it, Val McDermid writes well. The Grave Tattoo, her latest [ISBN 978 0 00 714287 3] is not her best (I still like the Wire in the Blood) but a workpersonlike crime novel with sufficient twists and interesting background to keep you reading. The plot features the identification of a mummified body in the Lake District, and the narrative slowly uncovers happenings in the past and the present that lead to violence. Characters are OK, but not overly memorable (I’ve forgotten a couple of names already).
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The Remedy by Michelle Lovric. Orange Long-list historical fiction 7/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/14/2007 11:26 AM
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Michelle Lovric’s The Remedy [ISBN 1 84408 137 0] is historical fiction set in the late 19th century partly in London and partly in Venice. It has a quite simple plot and plot devices of dual narratives and misunderstandings, and though the historical details and context are undoubtedly authentic there is just too much of it. By this I mean, it appears that activities that happened in the two places from 1890 to 1900 were all crammed into a narrative spanning a few months
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Omega by Jack McDevitt. Science fiction 5/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/13/2007 2:37 PM
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The jacket blurb of Jack McDevitt’s Omega [ISBN 0 441 01210 8] hails him as “the logical heir to Isaac Asimov and Arthur C Clarke”, but don’t believe it. Clarke, perhaps, as he was never much good at the literary part – his ideas fine but the delivery boring. Omega is not good on either, particularly. This book is part of a saga, and I think I’m glad this is my first exposure to it. The plot is the size of the cosmos and suffers from a canvas moving apart at red-shift speeds
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The Small Hours of the Morning by Margaret Yorke. Crime fiction 5/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/12/2007 8:54 AM
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The Small Hours of the Morning [ISBN 0 7545 4494 9] is a re-print of one of Margaret Yorke’s very early novels and it shows – but famous names carry sales and perhaps died in the wool fans would find something to like. It is pretty bland. The plot is simple and quite easily guessable, the characters rather wooden and not particularly likeable, though the narrative is well written so the story flows, and so makes up for some of the basic lack.
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The Monsters of Gramercy Park by Danny Leigh. Thriller and more 9/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/11/2007 10:20 AM
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Danny Leigh’s The Monsters of Gramercy Park [ISBN 0 571 22906 9 ] is brilliantly written and has psychological depths rarely seen in what could be labelled as a thriller. The narrative has a number of devices switching from third person, to first, to reports, stories etc. which normally I would find distracting, but in this book adds to its interest and richness. The reader is captured at the outset and it becomes enthralling waiting to find out what happens. The reader is left with so many conflicting emotions, page by page.
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Brother Termite by Patricia Anthony. Good Science Fiction 9/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/10/2007 10:57 AM
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Patricia Anthony’s Brother Termite [ISBN 0 340 61843 4] is one of the best science fiction books I have read for a long time. The plot is quite simple but powerful and the narrative cleverly written to reveal the fundamental differences between the aliens and humans – not the usual boringly detailed descriptions of the scientific-but-not literate school of writers but with the slight quirks of dialogue and actions that suggest (but don’t club you with) apartness
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Reign in Hell by William Diehl. Armageddon scenario stuff 5/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/8/2007 10:02 AM
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William Diehl’s Reign in Hell [ISBN 0 7493 2284 5] is a novel featuring the right wing Christian militia in a fictional mega plan to take over America. Its not so much that it couldn’t happen, as much as you hope it couldn’t, but given the picture it paints of strangely incompetent folks in charge of either the country or the Christian militias you wouldn’t be surprised of such a series of cock-ups could happen. It could put you off American novels for years.
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Dance with Death by Barbara Nadel. Superior crime fiction 10/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/6/2007 9:56 AM
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Dance with Death by Barbara Nadel [ISBN 0 7553 2129 4] is the latest one in her series featuring her Turkish Detective Inspector Cetin Ikmen – to my mind equal to Rebus – with a more exotic and fascinating background. The plot is woven into the fabric both of the unsavoury present and the traditional past and unravels part by part in a gripping way.
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Lullaby Town by Robert Crais. Crime/Detective Fiction 9/10 |
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By bookworm on
3/2/2007 2:36 PM
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Lullaby Town by Robert Crais [ISBN 0 75381 700 0] is another mid-series re-released Elvis Cole American detective novel with his usual curved and twisty plot and moving-along narrative (whilst still managing to give a relaxed, laidback feel to the hero) – but again, what is the very best about Robert Crais is the superb characterisations of folks you can either dislike or like a lot, but never feel that they have only been airbrushed in because the author has run out of ideas.
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Second Genesis by Donald Moffitt. Science Fiction 5/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/27/2007 2:00 PM
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Second Genesis by Donald Moffitt [ISBN 0 7434 5861] is another mega journey with lots of time to set up characters to deliver polemics about stellar physics, the meaning of life the galaxy and everything, and descriptions about the intricate workings of alien stuff. The plot is rather broad brush, and the action measured in light years, not very high octane. What amazes me the most is that I read it all to the end – so it must be more addictive than I’m giving it credit for.
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Life Sentences by Alice Blanchard. Crime fiction 8/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/25/2007 1:37 PM
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Alice Blanchard’s Life Sentences [ISBN 0 316 73090 4] has a terrific plot, and a well-written interesting, suspenseful narrative. It is a delight to read among the wasteland of tedious fiction.
The characters are flawed and real, and the descriptive fluency of her writing is excellent.
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The Sky so Big and High by John Barnes. Science Fiction 4/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/22/2007 11:19 AM
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John Barnes’s The Sky so Big and High [ISBN 0 765 3433 7] has a pretty fair plot, though the narrative seems turgid at points (you think, get on with it !) the ending is very good. The third person narrative has the intricate detail of good sci-fi, though it is mainly descriptive, with little fuel for the plot as the interminable circular trip goes on. It is near to the end of the book when the action begins to take off.
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Beyond Infinity by Gregory Benford. Sci Fi 7/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/20/2007 7:11 PM
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Gregory Benford is one of the major science fiction writers who are actually scientists – as well as big name writer. I think Beyond Infinity [ISBN 1 84149 188 8] is an expansion-write of an earlier story idea he had. You’ll recognise the style of book – where the strange future world happenings is a backdrop for a polemic dialogue on the meaning of life between the main characters. The descriptions of the strange lush animate vegetation of this future earth reminds me very much of Hothouse – a premier book of the genre for me.
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Safer than Houses by Frances Fyfield. Literary-type Crime fiction 7/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/19/2007 12:49 PM
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I think I’ve been quite kind with my scoring for Frances Fyfield’s Safer than Houses [ISBN 0 7515 3621 0] because though its quite clever and well written, it isn’t the most zippy of reads. Reminiscent of Ruth Rendall, the convoluted plot meshes all the characters together in a strange circular and bizarre way. The characters themselves are kind of damaged and psychologically flaw
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The Lazarus Widow by Bill Knox Crime fiction 8/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/18/2007 1:40 PM
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Veteran British crime writer, Bill Knox left this book incomplete, however, Martin Edwards did a pretty good job of finishing the story. The Lazarus Widow [ISBN 0 094 97680 7] has a interesting plot, sound police procedural stuff, and a readable and fascinating Scottish River Clyde context.
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Indigo Slam by Robert Crais. American Crime thriller 9/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/14/2007 10:16 AM
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Robert Crais crime fiction book Indigo Slam [ISBN 0 75281 694 2] is a mid-series Elvis Cole detective novel and is up to the high standard of the others. Not only are the plots excellent and three-dimensional but the narrative moves along helped not only by the speedy action, but also by the deceptively simple- but immensely hard to carry off - wisecracking humour and nice slick dialogue
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The Lure by Bill Napier. SciFi thriller 8/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/13/2007 10:46 AM
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Bill Napier is a Scottish Astronomer so its not surprising that the science in this book is so authentic. The Lure [ISBN 0 7472 6727 8] has an excellent plot, and its factual background in physics and planetology makes it pretty convincing. The narrative is not just a story about political realism but also a fast-moving action thriller – and the characterisations and dialogue given the background of the author – entirely credible. Pretty refreshing for modern Science Fiction.
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The Tryst by Michael Dibdin. Crime thriller 5/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/12/2007 3:33 PM
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The Tryst is an early Michael Dibdin novel [ISBN 0 571 14221 4] and nowhere near up to the standard of his Aurelio Zen series. The Tryst is one of those books with a simplistic poorly-handled plot but with a quite compelling early narrative that promises so very much more. The characterisations are good, and build up the novel is early stages but that don’t prepare the reader for the strange ending.
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Executive Orders by Tom Clancy. Boys own adventure supremo 6/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/11/2007 10:59 AM
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You can just not fail to be impressed by this massive adventure tome. Executive Orders by Tom Clancy {ISBN 0 00 647975] is remarkably prescient – written before 9/11 it still foresees terrorists plots in a spooky way – though not exactly. It’s a mixture of a thriller and a political power story with his hero Jack Ryan propelled into the job as President just because everyone else is wiped out by a wayward aeroplane hitting the Washington Senate building
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Looking Good Dead by Peter James. Crime thriller 7/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/8/2007 2:19 PM
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Peter James’s Looking Good Dead [ISBN 0 330 43420 9} is not quite as good as Dead Simple, but has quite a lot going for it. There is an excellent corkscrew plot and a split narrative (baddies and police activity ) that keeps going pretty well, though at times I could have wished it moved ahead much quicker (why are the police so slow) – I was so tempted to skip half chapters along the way. Sorry!
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The Good, the Bad and the Undead by Kim Harrison. Science Fiction 5/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/5/2007 1:25 PM
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Kim Harrison’s The Good, the Bad and the Undead [ISBN 0 00 723611 5] starts off OK in setting the scene for the particular environment which is very sketchy – even though its obviously part of a series, I haven’t read any other, so perhaps the author thought you already knew the ins and outs of this world where weres and vamps are more like humans than witches are (or have I got it wrong ?). As it happens, the story gets more and more convoluted as the book progresses
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Nothing more than Murder by Jim Thompson. Vintage Crime thriller 8/10 |
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By bookworm on
2/2/2007 12:30 PM
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One of the Orion Crime Masterworks series, Nothing more than Murder by Jim Thompson [ISBN 0 75285 214 0] is not only plotted superbly, but is based on seriously clever insights into human behaviour, and with a slick narrative that conveys a sense of time and context that draws the reader on.
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The Naming of the Dead by Ian Rankin. Superior crime fiction 10/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/31/2007 9:37 AM
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Ian Rankin’s The Naming of the Dead [0 7528 6858 6] is so good its like an exercise in superior writing. Again featuring his imperfect but inspirationally dogged DI Rebus, he displays a talent for plotting and compelling narrative I have not met in any other contemporary writer. Its why it had to be the hardback rather than waiting for the paperback…..
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Gridlinked by Neal Asher. Science Fiction 9/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/30/2007 11:26 AM
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Neal Asher’s Sci Fi novel, Gridlinked [ISBN 0 330 48433 8] is very nicely put together, the plot coherent and the imagined world structured and interesting (without too many cheats) – the narrative builds suspense throughout the book and the characterisations of the humans at least, pretty rounded for a sci fi book.
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The Affirmation by Christopher Priest. Science Fiction 6/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/28/2007 2:22 PM
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Christopher Priest’s Sci fi novel The Affirmation [ISBN 0 575 04283] is addictive without being a good read – the reader is drawn into finding out what is happening and after reading the book blurbs again realises that this is a view into the voices of madness, of an introduction to the other worlds of schizophrenia. So the book is interesting without being a particularly good read, if you can follow me.
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Woken Furies by Richard Morgan. Science Fiction 7/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/27/2007 10:43 AM
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Richard Morgan’s Woken Furies [ISBN 0 575 07325 X] is a big sci fi novel, and in this lies my problem with it. It is complex and dense with a convoluted story line, which means that every time you put it down and pick it up again, your eyes glaze for a while and you struggle to make sense like someone just wakened from cryostasis. I only managed to keep going by trekking over the past chapter until light dawned. Having said that this novel is sneakily good
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The Best Revenge by Stephen White. Crime thriller 9/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/26/2007 1:01 PM
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This story, The Best Revenge, is the second in the Stephen White Omnibus Edition [ISBN0 7515 3788 8] and is equally as good as the first. The plot sucks you in and keeps you guessing right up to the end, and the narrative is cleverly crafted to maximise suspense and keep the reader engaged. The characters are very well drawn: again, the psychiatrist hero is not the usual know all perfection and the cast are quite rounded for this kind of action thriller
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Warning Signs by Stephen White. Crime fiction 9/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/25/2007 6:25 PM
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Warning Signs by Stephen White is one of the two stories in my copy of a Stephen White Omnibus [ISBN 0 7515 3788 8] and is an excellent read. For a thriller the plot is of the first order and the narrative peels interesting clues and action throughout the book. Though the psychiatrist, the central character is a bit of a wimp, his hesitations, mistakes and self-analysis serve to focus and illuminate the plot and on-going action, and is the anchor to the story
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S is for Silence by Sue Grafton. Superior Crime fiction 10/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/24/2007 9:33 AM
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Ever since I found the alphabet series of Sue Grafton I have been a fan, and she gets better with each novel. S is for Silence [ISBN 0 330 43888 3] is very good indeed. You’d think that given this is a series with the same PI that she would begin to feel repetitive, thin and stale. Not so, the plot is tight and sharp, the narrative excellently flowing and suspenseful and the characters seem more real as each book comes. Sue Grafton comes in my top 10 of crime fiction writers
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By the Light of my Father’s Smile by Alice Walker. Literary Fiction 5/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/23/2007 2:40 PM
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Alice Walker’s By the Light of my Father’s Smile [CN 2633] is one of those literary fiction novels where the author is vaguely experimental in form, (I would unkindly call this “being too clever”) and this adventure into the novel (bad pun) detracting from some underlying interesting ideas about relationships. The jacket blurb is full of “celebration of …spirituality… crossing conventional borders …denied sexuality leading to loss of …original self”. The language is pseudo-north American language of therapy, hiding a novel whose major claim to interest is a heavy upfront titillation of women’s lovemaking.
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Split Second by Alex Cava. Crime thriller 6/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/22/2007 12:44 PM
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Alex Cava’s crime thriller Split Second [ISBN 0 7783 0105 2] is uncannily so like Patricia Cornwell that I could swear they are both using the same Plots-r-us ideas. The heroine is being followed about by a past protagonist (so very familiar). The plot is tired and as each book comes it stretches our belief more and more. The narrative is fast and pacy and, like with Cornwell, doesn’t allow any of the promising love interest to develop (only in these novels are their wonderful and perfect men willing to wait forever being understanding whilst the women says “I’m not ready yet”).
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The Shift by George Foy. Science Fiction 7/10. |
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By bookworm on
1/20/2007 2:26 PM
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I liked George Foy’s The Shift [ISBN 0 553 50611 0] a great deal, but it did tail off towards the end – its hard to control this when the plot leads into more and more bizarre avenues and the author can barely keep it stapled together with the preceding chapters. The idea of virtual reality is already here, but Foy extrapolates into a future where people can participate in their own individual soap. The narrative in pacy and the suspense builds well throughout the book – it only really comes a little unglued in the later stages
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The Redundancy of Courage by Timothy Mo. Booker shortlist 1991, Literary Fiction 4/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/19/2007 9:19 AM
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Timothy Mo’s The Redundancy of Courage [ISBN 0 09 989060 7] is interesting but not powerful – it is typical of the Booker lists of the early 90s where anything illuminating the lives of people as they live through atrocities in relatively unknown places in the world becomes automatically great fiction. However, interesting though it is, and even though Tariq Ali thought it “brilliant” and written with “precision and tenderness” I still cannot find many good things to say about it
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Necropolis by Tim Waggoner. Science Fiction 6/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/18/2007 10:45 AM
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Tim Waggoner’s Necropolis [ISBN 1 59414 140 1] is good – in fact very good indeed in parts – the imagination and ideas are quite exceptional – but after engaging you at the outset the suspense keeps slipping somehow. The plot is, like many science fantasies, full of cheating bits where stuff you don’t know just happens to help the hero out of a tight spot (even in sci fi I feel there should be some consistency and fit in with the overall “rules” set by the author)
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Trace by Patricia Cornwell. Crime fiction thriller 5/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/17/2007 1:29 PM
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Patricia Cornwell’s crime fiction book Trace [ISBN 0 7515 3077 8] is yet another Kay Scarpetta and sidekick Marino novel. The stories have become the most strange, violent and almost absurd string of obscurely connected crimes where serial killers spend their time targeting Scarpetta herself. The clever and unusual plots of the early novels are still there – but are exactly the same and there are the same strange sociopaths surrounding her as in the first books where this was still n
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The Last Juror by John Grisham. Courtroom drama/ fiction 5/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/16/2007 10:48 AM
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John Grisham’s The Last Juror [ISBN 0 09 94515 6] was disappointing to me (though probably not for Grisham aficionados). Though context and characterisation was good, the overall plot and story held few surprises and altogether the amount of cloying sentiment(as opposed to authentic-feeling emotion) quite irritating. Its billed as a thriller, but doesn’t work for me. Its not that there are grim bits, but there is little overall suspense as it is too easy to anticipate future action all through the book.
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A Viking Voyage by W.Hodding Carter. Non-fiction travel adventure 7/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/15/2007 9:27 AM
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W. Hodding Carter’s A Viking Voyage [ISBN 0 091 87916 7] is the idiosyncratic story of the re-creation of a Viking Voyage from Greenland to North America. The story is told from the first crazy idea to the build of the boat and selection of the crew, the research and problems of identifying places mentioned in the Icelandic Sagas. However, it is the details of the actual voyage in an open boat using sail and oars by around ten men (the crew changed partially from year 1 to year 2).
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Kiln People by David Brin. Science Fiction 6/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/14/2007 10:04 AM
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David Brin’s Kiln People [ ISBN0 765 34261 8] starts off really well – an intriguing concept well introduced – with a thoughtful slant on several human issues – but the complexity of the plot and the multiple narratives that bud off in the second half of the book make it quite hard reading towards the end
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The Triumph of the Sun by Wilbur Smith. Historical novel 8/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/13/2007 1:49 PM
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Wilbur Smith’s novel The Triumph of the Sun [Hardback ISBN 1 4050 0570 X] is an excellent story written around the siege of Khartoum in 1884, when General Gordon faces the new religious leader the Mahdi. The story is a readable romanticised and sanitised view of the troubles but is a good read and with plenty of authentic historical context and setting. The main characters are, as usual, attractive and suitably masculine men and feminine women, and the ending is pretty happy (which I rather like though in “literature” it appears to be frowned on
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A Season for the Dead by David Hewson. Crime fiction 10/10 |
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By bookworm on
1/12/2007 9:35 AM
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A Season for the Dead [ISBN 0 330 49363 9] is David Hewson’s first book in the detective series set in Rome, and though I read it after his more recent ones (see other blogs) I feel this is probably the best. The plot is a little stretched, but a great deal less so than most modern crime fiction, and the narrative beautifully organised to not only prepare a breathtakingly realistic background in Rome, with well-rounded and yet constantly developing characters, and then dropping the bombshells of bizarre and puzzling murders that keep the reader gripped and guessing quite relentlessly throughout the book to its climax.
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