Book Review: Dead Stop

DEAD STOP
Author: Barbara Nickless
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
ISBN: 9781503943384
Genre: Murder Mystery

DEAD STOP by Barbara Nickless is one hell of a twisted read full of taut drama, nail-biting tension, with a compelling plot that utterly blindsided me. But what sets this book apart from other murder-mysteries I’ve read of late is, Sydney Rose Parnell is the kind of character you not only root for but is someone you can identify with. I felt a real affinity for her because of her past, because of the baggage she carries.

Baggage that makes Sydney while not totally unique certainly different. Having done a couple of tours of Afghanistan she’s seen death on a scale we can only imagine. Working in Mortuary Affairs Sydney knows all too well what the true horror of war looks like. From the broken, twisted remains of soldiers blown apart by an IED, to collecting, identifying, and carefully piecing together her fellow soldier, bit by bit, by bit. The weight of the dead with her even after she returns to the US and back into civilian life, to work as a Special Agent for the DPC railway as a cop and dog handler.

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Book Review: Resurrection Bay

RESURRECTION BAY
Author: Emma Viskic
Publisher: Pushkin Vertigo
ISBN: 9781782273912
Genre: Murder Mystery

First of all, let me just begin by saying this debut novel by Aussie author, Emma Viskic, is outstanding. Truly a remarkable novel on just about every level. It’s not long, at just 280 pages, so I read this in one frantic, page-turning day!

Let’s start with the well crafted, well delineated characters. I love Caleb Zelic who narrates the story. He’s such a great down-to-earth character, feisty and oh so different from the usual MC in that he just happens to be deaf. This makes for a wholly unique POV both in the visuals and descriptions, and more, the dialogue.

Choppy and jarring, we see the world how Caleb hears it. With broken sentences that obviously make for a few comic and laugh out loud moments. And, of course, because of this handicap, we feel every ounce of Caleb’s frustration. His determination to not to give in, stubborn to the last. Which inevitably causes clashes with both his work partner, Frankie—who, by the way, is another excellently flawed character—and his ex-wife, Kat. It’s only when we learn why Kat and Caleb spilt that we understand the weight of emotions involved.

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Book Review: A Man Called Ove

A MAN CALLED OVE
Author: Fredrik Backman
Publisher: Sceptre
ISBN: 9781476738024
Genre: Contemporary Fiction

I don’t normally read contemporary or literary fiction, in the same way I like to avoid getting a nasty skin rash — through avoidance. But after reading a couple of reviews, and seeing it listed on a couple of blogs as a book to read. I found myself staring at the cover in my local bookstore and thinking, okay, maybe this won’t be so bad. Maybe I won’t get a skin rash, vomit, swoon or faint from cracking open its pages. So I bought it.

Sure enough, I checked myself regularly through out the reading process and, no rashes. I did, however, laugh a lot—because of Ove’s droll observations and the awkward situations he found himself dealing with—and smiled at the nicknames he gave everyone in his neighbourhood, including the mangy cat. I was also left shaking my head in wonder, when the seemingly innocent act of drilling a hole in the ceiling turns out to be a lot more than drilling a hole in the ceiling.

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Book Review: The Stockholm Octavo

THE STOCKHOLM OCTAVO
Author: Karen Engelmann
Publisher: Ecco
ISBN: 9780061995347
Genre: Historical Fiction

THE STOCKHOLM OCTAVO is a wonderfully written historical thriller full of intrigue, lady’s fans—and yes, I mean those kind of fans. Fans women use to fan themselves with, and more, with a deft hand, secretly signal to friends and lovers—hinting at mystery, murder, and a dash of romance. This story is as much about cartomancy as it is about history, and is decked out with an unusual cast of characters, ‘The Eight,’ who Emil Larsson must find in order to achieve what he thinks is his destiny.

Set in Stockholm, Sweden, at the end of the eighteenth-century, we find out Emil Larsson’s destiny isn’t his own, it’s tied up with that of the King of Sweden. All of which is the author’s way of opening up the various levels of society represented in the story, from seedy gaming houses and tap rooms, to the lofty levels of the government and royal palace and sumptuous world of Gustav III. Revolution is brewing on many levels, as the world in which Emil finds himself, is undergoing tumultuous change.

Engelmann’s writing is fluid, graceful, and wonderfully nuanced, sucking the reader into the story where the descriptive prose conjure locations, activities, and conversations that evoke this world, perfectly. This is not by any means a fast, action-packed story, but a slowly nuanced complex story told from a number of POV, centred around Emil Larsson. A story that paints a richly detailed world of manners, morals, and a belief a person can rise above the station they’re dealt in life if but given a chance or, dealt the right hand of cards.

An enjoyable, immersive experience. Highly recommended.

Book Review: The Last Thing He Told Me

THE LAST THING HE TOLD ME
Author: Laura Dave
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
ISBN: 9781501171352
Genre: Thriller

I do love me a thoroughly twisted and suspenseful mystery and The Last Thing He Told Me is exactly that. Laura Dave throws Hannah, step-mum to Bailey, right in at the deep end of the ocean and, I might add, us along with them. We’re left peering over Hannah’s shoulder the whole way, as she desperately tries to figure out what’s going on and, just who the hell her new husband is, before all is lost.

This is as much a character study of Bailey and Hannah as it is a mystery, and Laura Dave does a great job of slowly unraveling said mystery one breadcrumb at a time, leaving the reader in the dark as much as Hannah and Bailey. I had my suspicions and, just when I thought I knew what was happening, the author adds a whole new set of wrinkles. And that’s when you realise you have no idea who Hannah’s husband Owen is anymore than Hannah does.

The tensions throughout are never over played, and there’s just enough going on by way of mystery to keep us guessing as to who Owen actually is, and why he’s vanished at the start of the novel. And boy, when you find out, how the past stitches into the present, and just where or, I should say, what the future holds, it’s totally not what you’re expecting. The twists are so damn clever. All of which I can’t talk about here, in this review least I spoilt the surprises. You will just have to find out for yourself. And let me tell you, they were well worth the subtle build up.

We have a small supporting cast who are all well delineated and play their parts well. But the story is, at its heart, not just a mystery but a story of a woman and teenager bonding and coming together in the face of a dawning revelation.

It’s about how Dave takes these characters, throws them off a cliff, and then, shows us how they not only survive, but help one another in the face of uncertainty and mounting adversity.

The Last Thing He Told Me is tightly written, taut and suspenseful, and a thoroughly absorbing mystery that doesn’t let up until the last page. So if, like me, you love slow-burning cleverly-written thrillers, then this one is a definite must.

Simply put, this is an excellent read.

Book Review: The Kingdom of Copper by SA Chakraborty

I can sum my reading experience of this amazing novel up in one word: “OUTSTANDING!”

Truly this is the best fantasy novel I’ve read since, oh, wait… The City of Brass! But seriously, how do I encapsulate the two-day roller coaster ride of emotions I’ve just had? How do I find the right words to describe something that is, in all essence, for me at least, an “experience” and a very emotional one at that!

Chakraborty has not only out done herself in this follow up to The City of Brass, she’s captured lightning in a bottle, a second time!

Those who have already read the first installment of Nahri’s journey know that Chakraborty’s world building is so thoroughly immersive, you feel like you could book a PanAm ticket to go there for a holiday. Not that I’m advising too many people to go sightseeing in Daevabad, especially after the events that have taken place in The Kingdom of Copper.

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3 Things Tag

Today I’m doing the Three Things #Tag, and why not, I mean who posts anything on a Thursday these days anyway. So …

Three Read Once and Loved Authors

— Louise Penny, of course, I love her and the Three Pines series.
— Laurie R. King, most definitely, I started with her Kate Martinelli series.
— And in the last couple of years, Barbara Nickless, Kathleen Kent, and Steph Broadribb.

Three Titles I’ve Watched But Haven’t Read

— The Hunger Games: Never read any of the books but did catch the movie on the TV.
— The Shawshank Redemption: Saw the movie but didn’t even know there was a book. Go figure.
— Sphere, by Michael Crichton and no, I haven’t read any of his books, but I have seen quite a lot of the resulting movies.

Three Characters You Love

— That’s got to be Steph Broadribb’s kick-ass hero, Lori Anderson.
— Also, Kathleen Kent’s Betty Rhyzyk from The Dime!
— And, of course, Barbara Nickless’ Sydney Rose Parnell.

Three Series’ Binged

— That has to be the Inspector Gamache/Three Pines series from Louise Penny, where I read at least seven in the series one after the other. Like chocolate, you just want more.
— The Eve Ronin series by Lee Goldberg.
— The Sydney Rose Parnell series of books by Barbara Nickless.

Three Unpopular Bookish Options

— I’m not a fan of ebooks. I just cannot get into them. Give me a paperback each and every time.
— Books into movies, while there maybe one or two that can and do work, for the most part, no book should be anything less than a mini-series on TV. Which is a much better idea.
— I don’t use Amazon … Goodreads … Facebook …

Three Goals for the Year

— Write more blog posts
— Read more books
— Buy more books

And, if you haven’t already been tagged, then consider yourself tagged now!

I Turned to a Life of Crime

Or, to be exact, a life of crime reading, which began several years ago. Up until then, I would say I read a mixed bag and cross section of genre. And, up until then, was probably reading close to 80% SF and speculative fiction. I say speculative because at one point, I moved from almost exclusively reading SF through most of my teen years, to reading some fantasy, a little paranormal, and some supernatural. I never really took to horror, in the same way I strongly dislike ‘horror’ movies. It always boils down to violence, and I’m just not interest.

Which makes it all the more odd that I eventually wandered into reading crime fiction. But then again, crime fiction is an umbrella term I think we all use to cover quite a cross section of tropes that fit neatly, and some not so neatly, under that umbrella.

We’re all familiar with the whodunnit, courtroom drama, murder-mystery, suspense, cozy mysteries, police procedurals, detective stories, and, of late, forensics and psychological thrillers, which, yes, I also include under the umbrella. The latter are usually quite different to the modern thriller which, these days, tends to be about someone from an alphabet organisation (CIA/NSA/MI6/FBI), running around the planet trying to stop international criminals, terrorists, or organised crime and the like.

I don’t remember exactly which book started it all, that kind of recall escapes me these days. I just know that I picked up several more titles all considered ‘crime fiction,’ one of those was a Louise Penny novel from her Chief Inspector Armand Gamache stories: Bury Your Dead. It just happened to be on the shelf and caught my eye, and I saw it was set here, in Québec. Even if the setting is fictional, a lot of the story was set here, in Québec City, my home. How could I not read it?

And from there on in, I was hooked. Hooked on Louise Penny, the fictional village of Three Pines, and more, crime fiction at large.

If you haven’t read any Louise Penny, may I humbly suggest you do, but don’t start as I did, with what I think is book six. Start with book one, Still Life, and work your way through. The character development in this series is excellent, and unlike any other series I’ve ever read.

And you? What recommendations do you have for me.