Showing posts with label Fowler Christopher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fowler Christopher. Show all posts

Friday, December 11, 2015

Review of Christopher Fowler's Bryant & May and the Burning Man

Bryant & May and the Burning Man, by Christopher Fowler (Bantam, December 15, 2015)

The Peculiar Crimes Unit’s decrepit offices are located in the City of London, that ancient square mile that was home to London’s original settlement and is now jammed full of the skyscrapers housing the metropolis’s financial institutions.

Hardly anybody lives in the square mile anymore, which makes the P in PCU seem like it should stand for Precarious at times. The PCU has very little in the way of modern technology; nothing like the kind of assets that would allow it to combat the financial crimes that are headquartered in the square mile.

But as this twelfth book in the series begins, a case arises that is right up the PCU’s alley. Financial shenanigans in the banking world have led to increasingly large and violent protests in the City. One bank is firebombed, killing a homeless man dossed down under cardboard boxes in its entryway.

credit: www.christopherfowler.co.uk.com
The PCU suspects this was murder, not accident, and their conviction is cemented when there are more murders; seemingly unconnected killings, executed in bizarre ways reminiscent of punishments common in more ancient times. As each day passes, demonstrations against the bankers and other presumed-to-be-corrupt wealthy people escalate. Arthur Bryant suspects that the mystery killer will take advantage of the upcoming Halloween and Guy Fawkes Day to pull off even more spectacular murders.

As always, the PCU gets no support––or even respect––from other police units. This time, their particular nemesis is Darren “Missing” Link, who hamstrings them, ostensibly to prevent their interference with an ongoing fraud investigation. Like everybody else, all Link sees in the PCU is a ragtag bunch of misfits, led by the spectacularly untidy and decidedly eccentric old man, Bryant. Like the rest of the force, he just doesn’t understand that Bryant’s encyclopedic knowledge of the history of London is what will make all the difference in the investigation.

Each member of the PCU faces a crossroads in this book, which gives it a bittersweet, even elegiac feel. After 12 books, the PCU members are like old friends. I hope to see them again, but if not, I wish them well and thank Christopher Fowler for letting us know them.

credit: www.christopher.co.uk.com

Friday, May 1, 2015

Random Thoughts, Or, Murder on a C-Note

Cinco de Mayo

The big holiday will be here in a few days, but I'm not thinking of the Mexican celebration. Instead, I'm clearing the decks to be ready to read Kate Atkinson's A God in Ruins, the followup to her Life After Life (Reagan Arthur Books, 2013). I still think about Life After Life, the story of the repeating lives of Ursula Todd in 20th-century England.

A God in Ruins (Little, Brown and Company, May 5, 2015) tells the story of her younger brother, Teddy, who was an RAF pilot during World War II and never expected to survive the war. What will the 20th century have in store for him? I plan to find out as soon as possible.

I sure won't be waiting until December 15 for Christopher Fowler's Bryant & May and the Burning Man, the 12th in the Peculiar Crimes Unit series. It was published last month in the UK by Doubleday, but I am going to be patient enough to wait until May 7, when the audiobook comes available in the US on Audible. The narrator, Tim Goodman, is so wonderful, I prefer the audiobook versions of the series anyway, so I suppose it's a happy oddity that the audiobook is available in the US more than seven months before the print edition.


The Cormoran Strike series

Remember back in 2013 when it was revealed that Robert Galbraith, the pseudonymous author of The Cuckoo's Calling, was none other than J. K. Rowling? Since then, we've had a sequel in that Cormoran Strike/Robin Ellacott series, The Silkworm, which I thought was at least as good as the first. I was just talking with some mystery-reading friends the other day about when we might see another book in the series, and that got me to researching . . . .

I learned that the third book in the series will be called Career of Evil and will be coming out sometime this autumn. Yippee! Though, judging from her last book, I would have thought there is no mystery that Rowling sees the publishing business as the career of evil.

I also learned that the BBC plans to dramatize the series, which is terrific news. I've been enjoying the Grantchester series, originally produced by Britain's ITV and shown on PBS this last season––even though, frankly, I'm not a big fan of the Grantchester books. If ITV could make such an excellent series from those books, I'm hoping BBC will do even better with the superior material of the Cormoran Strike books.


O, Canada

The Old Mansion House, Georgeville, Québec
I look forward every year to a new Armand Gamache/Three Pines book from Louise Penny. One comes every August, like clockwork, but it always seems like such a long wait in between. If you feel the same way, you might want to check out this site, which is currently running a series about the real places that inspired locations in the books. It's a lot of fun to read about the real inspirations, like the very un-scary-looking pink house that nevertheless inspired the creepy Hadley House in Still Life.

Louise Penny's monthly newsletter is always an entertaining read too. It's almost like getting a letter from a friend. You can sign up to read her newsletters here. One bit of recent news from her is her husband's recent Alzheimer's diagnosis. She writes with such affecting openness about how this has affected their lives.


Cozies

My brother-in-law, Jeff, enjoys traditional mysteries and is a big-time completist when it comes to series. Once he starts a series, if he likes the first book, he plows through the entire series, usually without a break.

Jeff was the one who first told me about Kerry Greenwood's Phryne Fisher series years ago, and that's now up to 20 books. I think I told him about Rhys Bowen's Her Royal Spyness cozies, about the impoverished Lady Georgiana Rannoch, who is 30-somethingth in line for the throne of England. That reminded him of another Englishwoman, Daisy Dalrymple, who decides to make her own living as a journalist rather than rely on her Viscount father.

Daisy's connections to the members of the upper crust allow her to access the kinds of places that are closed to working-class types like police detectives. St. Martin's publishes attractive paperbacks of the series, and seems to be starting over at the beginning. The first book, Death at Wentwater Court, was just republished in March.


What makes a good spy novel?

I was on a real run with C-initialed topics, but I can't resist adding one of these things that's not like the others. "What makes a good spy novel?" is the question recently asked of Olen Steinhauer in The New York Times. As a voracious reader of espionage novels, I was taken by his response:

Depends on the reader. For me, it’s the moral muddiness of the ends/means equation that comes up more often in spy fiction than in, say, murder mysteries. The best espionage stories not only ask questions about how spying is performed, but they also question the value of the job itself. And when the profession becomes a metaphor for living, the spy novel can delve into the very questions of existence, while thrilling the reader with a convoluted plot. Do all that well, and you’ve got a potential classic on your hands.

I'd say that quote is a particularly apt description of Steinhauer's newest novel, All the Old Knives (Minotaur Books, March 2015).

Thursday, March 12, 2015

Spring Preview 2015: Part Eight

Some of the biggest mysteries for me right now have more to do with book availability than book contents.

There is no book titled The Strange Publication of the Strange Death of Fiona Griffiths, but there should be. You might remember that I'm crazy about Harry Bingham's series about Fiona Griffiths, a police detective in Cardiff, Wales, who has a very unusual psychiatric background (Cotard's syndrome; check it out), a mysterious family history she's trying to uncover, an uneasy relationship with authority figures, and an absolute passion for defending the helpless victims of violent crime. You can read more about Fiona and her entertaining attempts to live on what she calls Planet Normal here.

I read the first two books in the Fiona series, Talking to the Dead (Delacorte, 2012) and Love Story, With Murders (Delacorte, 2014), and I was anxiously awaiting the third book, The Strange Death of Fiona Griffiths, which I'd read was to be published in the US this spring. I got impatient and ordered my copy from the UK (Orion, 2014), but I wanted to be sure to let our Read Me Deadly friends know about the US publication. This is where things became mysterious.

I discovered that without my having read anything about it anywhere, The Strange Death of Fiona Griffiths slipped out at the end of January in the US, apparently self-published (Sheep Street Books is listed as the Kindle publisher and Amazon's CreateSpace for the paperback). I wondered what the heck had happened here. Previous books in the series had received favorable reviews in The New York Times, The Washington Post and other major review outlets, so why didn't Bingham's traditional US publisher publish the new book?

Bingham's website supplied the answer. He has several long blog posts on the subject, but the gist is that his US publisher was so noncommittal about whether and when they'd put out The Strange Death of Fiona Griffiths that he finally just published it himself. Good for him, but I have to say I'm mystified as to why any US publisher wouldn't be eager to publish this series. I'm constantly amazed by how the James Patterson factory can get anything published anytime they want, but truly excellent writers like Bingham and Christopher Fowler struggle to get their books published in the US. Do US publishers think
Americans are too provincial to want to read British writers, or do the publishers just not know good writing if it bites them in the butt (or bum, as our friends across the pond would say)? As I say, it's a mystery.

Alright, enough about all this publishing headache. Let's get on with the book so that you can buy it and read it! When a payroll fraud case leads to murder and blossoms into what appears to be a far-flung criminal enterprise, DC Fiona Griffiths goes undercover as an office worker. Calling herself Fiona Grey, she tries to learn the scope of this crime network and who is responsible for the murder. Fiona normally has some trouble fully realizing emotions and inhabiting Planet Normal. Now, by taking on another persona, will she lose the grip she had on her Fiona Griffiths life? And whatever her psychological state, will she manage to stay alive as she gets closer to the truth about the long and violent reach of the fraudsters?

I've complained many times before about the unconscionably long time after UK publication that Christopher Fowler's Peculiar Crimes Unit series books finally come out in the US. It's often a complete mystery when the US title will appear, which is so not good enough for fans of the PCU. The strange, but welcome saving grace for audiobook lovers is that the books are usually available on audio in the US at or near the same time the print book comes out in the UK. And so it is this time around, with the 12th book in the series, Bryant & May and the Burning Man (Doubleday (UK), March 26, Whole Story Audio Books, May 1).

The new book begins with mass protests in London's streets in response to a banking scandal. A homeless man is killed, burned to death between the protesters and the police. The PCU is called in when it becomes clear that some mystery killer is targeting victims for fiery death. With Christopher Fowler, you know that along with the investigation and the eccentricities of the PCU's members, you'll be treated to some fascinating history of the city of London. In this case, the book description tells us our history lesson will involve "mob rule, corruption, rebellion, and the legend of Guy Fawkes."

Christopher Fowler also writes that Bryant & May and the Burning Man is the final book in the "second arc" of the series, and:

several members of the PCU team reach dramatic turning points in their lives––but the most personal tragedy is yet to come, for as the race to bring down a cunning killer reaches its climax, Arthur Bryant faces his own devastating day of reckoning. ‘I always said we’d go out with a hell of a bang,’ warns Bryant . . . 

Uh oh. I don't like the sound of this. Now I'm so worried about the PCU team, especially Arthur Bryant, that I might not be able to wait for the audiobook.

If you're like me and you can't get enough of Christopher Fowler's writing, keep in mind that he writes non-series books, which are more horror-oriented, and which you can find listed here. I read Fowler's memoir, Paperboy (Bantam, 2010), last year, which I highly recommend if you're interested to see how he got the way he is, as a person and a writer. If you like your hits of Fowler to be more frequent, you can't beat his blog, which is filled with book news, talk about movies and wonderful bits of London history.

Another British writer who isn't as celebrated in the US as he should be is Christopher Brookmyre. I will never, ever forget the experience of reading the first pages of Quite Ugly One Morning (Little, Brown and Co., 1996), the debut book in his Jack Parlabane series. I was in Stratford, Ontario, with family, to go see some plays. I stopped by the marvelous John Callan Books and asked the proprietor about crime fiction books that might not be stocked by bookstores in the US. He handed me that book, but said I absolutely had to read the first couple of pages before deciding whether to buy it. Brilliant advice! The first scene in that book is a description of the most repulsive crime scene ever, and the police detectives' reaction to it. But if you have a strong stomach and a warped sense of humor, it's gold. I bought all the Brookmyre books the bookshop had.

Brookmyre has written several non-Parlabane books, and I have to say my reactions to them range from mild enthusiasm to near indifference. But now, eight years since the last Jack Parlabane novel, he's back, in Dead Girl Walking (Atlantic Monthly Press, May 5). Parlabane started as a crusading journalist, but now, as a result of events involving a phone hacking scandal, he's out of that business and sleeping with one eye open to watch out for his enemies. He's asked to trace Heike Gunn, the missing lead singer of a group called Savage Earth Heart. The narrative shifts between Jack and the group's newest member, Monica, who keeps a diary of her tour of European capitals with the group.

Although most UK readers say you don't need to read the other Parlabane novels to enjoy this new book, one reviewer recommends reading the short story The Last Day of Christmas: The Fall of Jack Parlabane (Little, Brown Book Group, 2014) to learn just how Jack got to be in the dire situation he's in as Dead Girl Walking opens.

Another UK book that's been hard to get in the US is now coming––after 35 years. It's Ted Lewis's GBH (Soho Press, April 23), a stripped-down-to-the-bone, ultra-noir tale of London crime chief George Fowler, who descends into paranoia and extreme violence as he tries to find out who in his operation is an embezzler and a traitor.

Ted Lewis, who died at age 42, is best known as the British author of Get Carter (originally titled Jack's Return Home), which was made into the classic Michael Caine movie of the same name (and pointlessly remade with Sylvester Stallone). But some claimed that GBH (1980), his last novel, was his real masterpiece. It's been hard to know if that claim is accurate, because the book went out of print almost right away and it was never published in the US.

If you like noir, you might give this one a try. But be warned: this truly is noir, not a hard-boiled detective story. Very bad things happen, and to Sam Spade, Fowler would be like something he'd want to scrape off his shoe.

How about we move on to a British author who has not had trouble getting books published––and pronto––in the US? It's Kate Atkinson, and her upcoming book is not a new entry in her popular Jackson Brodie series. Disappointed? I'm not, because it's a completely unexpected gift, a sequel to her bestselling and thoroughly engrossing Life After Life (2014). I was obsessed for weeks with Ursula Todd's many lives in that book. I found a friend who was almost as fascinated and we spent all of one evening parsing two chapters in the book that are almost, but not quite identical, trying to tease out all the hidden meanings in the differences between the two chapters. I won't say our study magically opened the door to all the mysteries of Life After Life, but I will say that the book is so subtle, with so many possibilities and layers of meaning that it rewards that kind of deep study––after you've first enjoyed the book's sheer adventure and beauty. How many books can you say that about?

I think Life After Life will be a book that lasts and will cement Kate Atkinson's reputation as one of the most talented writers of our day. Her upcoming book, A God in Ruins (Little, Brown and Company, May 5) supplements the story of Ursula Todd's 20th century with that of her younger brother, Teddy. We saw Teddy in Ursula's childhood, and his fate as an RAF pilot during World War II is one of the intriguing plot points of Life After Life. Still, I never saw it coming that Atkinson would shift her focus to Teddy in a new book. Her website says: "For all Teddy endures in battle, his greatest challenge will be to face living in a future he never expected to have. " Now there's a hook to grab me. This will be a book I'll start reading the minute I get my hands on it.

Debut novelist Stephen Kelly isn't British, but he joins that long line of Americans whose love for traditional British mystery compels them to set their novels in the UK. Kelly's The Language of the Dead: A World War II Mystery (Pegasus Books, April 15) is set in the peaceful Hampshire village of Quimby, where it seems all there is to worry about is whether the Luftwaffe bombing raids will target the nearby Spitfire fighter plane factory. But that's before old Will Blackwell––who is rumored to have sold his soul to the devil many years before––is found murdered with a scythe through his neck and a pitchfork in his chest.

That's just the start of a series of violent murders in the village, and the call goes out for the crusty Detective Inspector Thomas Lamb to put a stop to the mayhem. The constant bombing raids bring back terrible memories of his experiences in the Great War, and he worries about the safety of his daughter in Quimby. His investigation, with his team of David Wallace and Harry Rivers, reveals a disturbing village history of witch hunts. Maybe this will be a treat for three audiences: fans of supernatural mysteries, World War II mysteries and village mysteries. I do know that Booklist, Library Journal, Kirkus Reviews and Publishers Weekly are all encouraging, and that's good enough for me.

How about something completely different? Hallie Ephron's Night Night, Sleep Tight (William Morrow & Co., March 24) is set in Beverly Hills, far away from the UK. In 1985, Deirdre Unger grudgingly agrees to help her retired screenwriter father, Arthur, get his house ready for sale, but when she arrives, she finds him dead, floating in the pool. From accident, his death is quickly reclassified as a murder and police question Deirdre closely.

Deirdre soon finds that her father has appointed her his literary executor and, as she goes through the pages of his unpublished memoir, she is transported to tragic events of two decades earlier, when her best friend apparently killed her movie star mother's husband. Deirdre's memories are sketchy, because she was in a car accident that night that left her with a withered leg. But she was there in the house that night, as were her parents. Is Arthur's murder connected to that long-ago Hollywood killing, and what might be dislodged from the recesses of Deirdre's memory as she reads Arthur's memoir?

That Hollywood murder sounds a lot like the 1958 killing of movie star Lana Turner's lover, the young and mobbed-up Johnny Stompanato, which was found to have been committed by her teenage daughter, who was attempting to protect her mother from a violent attack by Stompanato. Ephron is one of four daughters (including the late Nora Ephron) of parents who were screenwriters in Hollywood. She was born in Los Angeles and spent some of her youth in a house not far from Lana Turner's place. I hope this personal connection to the Hollywood of 50 years ago will take us back to those days in this story.

Will ice out day arrive before April does?

Friday, January 2, 2015

Best Reads of 2014: Part Three

Did you all have a great New Year's Eve and Day? If you celebrated a little too much, I hope by now the fog has lifted and you're confident you'll make it through the day intact. As I write this, it's still New Year's Day. I have an apple pie in the oven, the Tournament of Roses Parade on the TV, and it's a cold but sunny day outside. I sure can't complain.

As I looked back on my list of 2014 books read, I was surprised to see that nearly all my favorites were written by British authors. I've always been a bit of a reading anglophile, but this was pretty overwhelming. I've talked about several of these as the year went on, but that won't prevent me from twisting your arm again in hopes I can get you to read them.

If you're a regular reader of Read Me Deadly, you already know what I'm going to say my absolute favorite read of the year was: Ben Macintyre's A Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby and the Great Betrayal (Crown, 2014). This is a near-perfect read for anyone fascinated by the British class system or Cold War espionage––and if both subjects are among your passions, then this is the mother lode.

To me, the psychology of a traitor to his country is always fascinating, and Philby is all the more intriguing because he was a son of privilege and more than comfortable with the accoutrements of his station. He was proud of being a Cambridge man, enjoyed alcohol-fueled evenings at his ancient London gentlemen's club, loved his Savile Row suits and handmade shoes, and was addicted to reading the Times. Why, then, would he betray all this for a country that had none of these things?

I won't tell you that Macintyre truly explains the conundrum of Philby, though he gives us some shafts of insight. What he does that cements this book for me as a one that I'll have on my shelves forever is to show how Philby's social class insulated him from being found out and punished for so many years. Macintyre details how MI6 (roughly the equivalent of the CIA in the US, while MI5 is similar to the FBI) was an upper-crust milieu that admitted the "right sort" to its ranks and then closed around them in a protective cocoon. Philby's treason––including the hundreds or even thousands of agent deaths it led to––ultimately seemed less important to his colleagues, especially his longtime friend Nicholas Elliott, than his betrayal of his class.

If Macintyre's book is historical nonfiction that reads like a page-turner of a novel, then Robert Harris's An Officer and a Spy (Knopf, 2014) is a novel that illuminates history better than any academic study. I'm sure you know the basics of the Dreyfus Affair: France's false conviction of a Jewish army officer for treason in the late 19th century, his exile to Devil's Island, and the years-long efforts to exonerate him. Harris looks at the story from a different angle, that of Colonel Georges Picquart, an officer who was present when Dreyfus was arrested on charges of passing secret military information to German agents.

Picquart didn't have much of any interest in Dreyfus, and had the same level of anti-Semitic feelings as was sadly typical in the French military and society. But when Picquart was assigned to become chief of the military's secret intelligence bureau, almost by accident he learned that the evidence against Dreyfus was nearly nonexistent, but there was plenty of damning evidence against Major Walsin Esterhazy, a womanizer, gambler and cheat––but not Jewish. Picquart couldn't help pursuing the truth, though it was increasingly dangerous for him to do so within the hierarchy of the military.

Robert Harris wrote Fatherland, to my mind an unparalleled World War II alternative history. I doubt he can ever write anything that will surpass that for me, but he gives it a heck of a good effort with An Officer and a Spy.

So where are the mysteries, I hear you grousing. And to that, I say: What's the matter, you grump, do you still have a hangover of a hangover? But I do have mysteries on my favorites list, never fear.

It's always a thrill to find a new mystery author. Tony Parsons is a well-known journalist and novelist in Britain, but The Murder Man (Minotaur, 2014; originally published in the UK under the title The Murder Bag) is the first in a planned police procedural trilogy featuring the very human Detective Constable Max Wolfe. Max is a refreshing character for this genre. He has a troubled past, but it's a wrecked marriage, not something much darker. And he spends his evenings at home with his young daughter and their dog, Stan, not wrapped around a liquor bottle.

The Murder Man begins with a short prologue of sexual violence that nearly had me putting the book aside for good, but I'm glad I didn't, because after that I was treated to a this appealing new protagonist and his family, and a plot with plenty of depth and sense of place. Parsons also throws in issues of privilege, power, inequality and media manipulation, all of which add to the richness of the story.

An even better-known English novelist decided to turn to mystery writing recently. That's J. K. Rowling, of Harry Potter fame, who began her Cormoran Strike series in 2013, with The Cuckoo's Calling, published under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith. Cormoran Strike returned earlier this year in The Silkworm (Mulholland Books, 2014). This is a leaner story than The Cuckoo's Calling, and I think it's the better for it. In this entry, Strike is persuaded to drop an obnoxious––but lucrative––corporate client in favor of a nonpaying job to track down writer Owen Quine.

As Cormoran investigates, he learns that Quine has a reputation for being no less obnoxious than his erstwhile client. But Quine is hardly alone in that. Rowling's book is at least as much a thinly-veiled exposé of the publishing world as a detective novel. She paints vivid portraits of a variety of distasteful characters, including the harpy who is Quine's agent, a creepy publisher, a drunken editor, a supremely narcissistic and unpleasant literary rival of Quine's and at least a dozen more minor, mostly unpleasant, personalities.

Rowling makes the publishing milieu deliciously nasty, while her protagonist and his protegée, Robin Ellacott, are people you'd want to have on your side if you ever happen to run into trouble in London. I hope they return in another adventure this year.

Speaking of appealing protagonists, one of my more recent favorites made another appearance this year. Fiona Griffiths is a most unusual person and Detective Constable. Buried deep in her subconscious is a traumatic event from her childhood. She knows it's there, but she doesn't know what it is. But, like a virus, it flares up from time to time in the form of Cotard's syndrome, a condition in which dissociation and depression combine to make her lose touch with her physical and emotional feelings, turn the world into shades of gray and, in its worst stages, make her believe that she is literally dead.

That sounds like a real laugh riot––not––right? Believe me, though, it actually can be. The series books are written in the first person and are in near-equal parts about the case at hand, Fiona's attempts to find out about her past, and about her strenuous efforts to stay firmly resident on "Planet Normal."

In the second book in the series, Love Story, With Murders (Delacorte, 2014), Fiona and her comrades at the Cardiff (Wales) police department are investigating the finding of dismembered bodies in an assortment of odd locations in a quiet suburban neighborhood. With morbid humor, they call the case Stirfry. Fiona herself combines sympathy for victims of crime and their families with a maverick style at work that often lands her in hot water. These books are narrated in the first person, which is the perfect choice since the inside of Fiona's head is an eccentric and often very funny place.

Eccentric might as well be Arthur Bryant's middle name in Christopher Fowler's unfailingly delightful Peculiar Crimes Unit series, featuring old-timers Bryant and his longtime partner, John May. May is dapper, disciplined and diplomatic to Bryant's scruffy, scattershot and sarcastic. But they're both brilliant, and that's what keeps the PCU in operation, just barely, despite how fervently their overlords usually wish them away to perdition.

In Bryant & May and the Bleeding Heart (Bantam, 2014), Number 11 in the series, the plot elements are even odder than usual, combining corpses rising from the dead and raven-napping from the Tower of London. The PCU is in a new HQ––just as ramshackle as the old one but now replete with kittens––and they are now under the jurisdiction of the historic City of London. Gone is their old nemesis top boss, the saturnine Oscar Kasavian, replaced with the dressed-for-success Orion Banks, who talks in management-speak and is dismayed to find that the PCU is unlikely to add policing statistics that will help fuel her rise up the rungs of the professional ladder. She and Arthur Bryant are not a match made in heaven.

Despite the outlandishness of the plot, Arthur Bryant is a little less outrageous than usual. He's feeling his years and wonders if he's become extraneous. His introspection is a welcome opening of another dimension into this character, though it's an unwelcome reminder that this series must inevitably someday come to an end.

I'd like to say my next book sticks with the theme of eccentricity, but I think "eccentric" is too limiting a box for William Heming, the subject of Phil Hogan's brilliant A Pleasure and a Calling (Picador, January 6, 2015, though currently available in the US in audiobook form and published in 2014 in the UK). He's an estate agent in a leafy and prosperous village within commuting distance of London. He's quite successful, but not at all showy. In fact, people rarely notice him, and what a handy thing that is for him, being a sociopath and all.

In the apartment to which no guest is ever invited, William keeps a key to every house he's ever sold. He likes to keep tabs on their residents. Usually, that's all he does, but sometimes he feels more is warranted. Someone who is a bad neighbor might need a bit of correction. For example, if he doesn't clean up after his dog, well, that mess might just end up the centerpiece of the man's white carpet. But when Heming finds himself falling for a young woman and learns that a particularly distasteful married man is her lover, things quickly get very much out of hand.

"Creepy" is the adjective most often applied to this novel, but it's the most deliciously enjoyable kind of creepy and I urge you to meet William Heming yourself. And if you haven't changed your locks since you bought your house, think about it.

Another odd English protagonist, though not at all creepy, is Frank Shaw in Robert Glancy's Terms & Conditions (Bloomsbury USA, 2014). Shaw is part of a particular sub-type of English male, the man who apologizes when someone else bumps into him and uncomplainingly lets other people always have their way. But when we begin the book, Frank doesn't know that about himself, because he's suffered a traumatic brain injury in a car accident and doesn't remember much of anything.

Though Frank has amnesia, he also has synesthesia, where the sight of people and certain objects triggers sounds, colors, smells and strong emotions. There's a nasty, rancid green smell around the fat, smug, smartly-dressed man who says he's Frank's older brother, Oscar. That slim, sophisticated woman named Alice, who says she's Frank's wife, evokes confusing feelings, but when Frank gets home, the sight of a box of copies of her book, titled Executive X, fills him with rage. And when, rummaging around the house, he finds a jar with a preserved pinky finger floating around in it, he feels elated. What's that about?

Frank slowly begins to put his life together, at least enough to return to work, where he is a junior member of the family law firm, run by Oscar. Frank's specialty is writing contracts, in particular the fine-print terms and conditions that generally put the lie to all the promises in the large print. As flashes of memory pierce the fog, Frank learns that the terms and conditions of his own life are just as contradictory to what Oscar and Alice keep telling him. Maybe it's time to quit apologizing and start writing a new contract for the rest of his life.

Glancy writes the book with a clever gimmick. He uses fine-print footnotes––and footnotes within footnotes––to tell important bits of the story. One chapter, titled Terms & Conditions of Sex, consists of a half-line long sentence and three pages of footnotes. But this isn't just a book with a clever gimmick. It's a vastly entertaining black comedy with a heart.

I do have some books not written by English authors on my 2014 best-reads list; all written by women, whatever that might mean. First, let's take the Eurostar over from England to Paris for The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles (Penguin Books, 2013), the first in Katherine Pancol's "Joséphine" trilogy and, so far, the only one translated to English.

Joséphine Cortès lives in an unstylish apartment on the outskirts of Paris with her daughters, the nightmare of teenage rebellion, Hortense, and the still-sweet little girl, Zoé. The apartment was once home to husband Antoine, but he's now run off with his hairdresser mistress to manage an African crocodile farm. Joséphine earns practically nothing in her job as a history researcher and now she needs to figure out some way of bringing in enough to support the girls.

Joséphine is not about to ask for help from her snobbish mother, Henriette, or her chic society wife, Iris, though both have plenty of money. But help arrives anyway, in a most unexpected fashion. Iris, bored and hoping to impress her other idle friends, announces to them that she is writing a historical novel. Now she's stuck, because she's certainly not interested in doing the work. She proposes that Joséphine use her expertise to write the novel, which Iris will present as her own work, funneling the proceeds to Joséphine.

When the novel becomes a runaway success, the secret begins to ooze out, complicating everyone's lives. But that's not the only complexity, because Pancol also introduces us to a large cast of supporting characters, with their own messy lives and loves. There is Marcel, Joséphine's stepfather, who escapes from his ice queen wife, Henriette, into the arms of his voluptuous and warm-hearted secretary; Joséphine's neighbor and friend Shirley, who has a mysterious past in England; the teenage Hortense and her attempts to grow up too soon; and, of course, Antoine and his life on the crocodile farm.

The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles is a fast-paced, funny and poignant French-style Cinderella story. It inspired a lively discussion at my book club a few months ago, where we agreed that we would all plan to read the next two books in the series when they are finally translated.

Finally, let's get over to the US and two novels that round out my favorite reads of last year. Susan Rieger's The Divorce Papers (Crown, 2014) is one that I lent around to a few friends, and the title always got a rise out of their husbands. I don't know if that would be a benefit or a detriment at your house, but fair warning in any case!

Rieger's protagonist is Sophie Diehl, a Yale Law School grad and young associate at a small, prestigious firm in the fictional town of New Salem in the equally fictional northeastern state of Narragansett. Sophie enjoys her criminal law practice and is dismayed when managing partner David Greaves ropes her into representing Mia Meiklejohn, the daughter of one of the firm's most important clients, in her divorce from Dr. Daniel Durkheim, one of the country's foremost experts in pediatric oncology.

The highfalutin' word for the form of this novel is epistolary; in other words, it tells its story through a series of documents––like the very popular Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, for example. In this case, the documents include the formal, such as legal memoranda, court filings, legal cases, settlement offers and financial records; personal letters and notes among Mia, her daughter, Daniel, Daniel's (first) ex-wife and his current mistress; and emails between Sophie and her friends and family, and David Greaves. It was great fun not to know when I turned the page whether I'd be reading a handwritten nastygram from Mia to Daniel; a formal (but razor sharp) settlement offer from Sophie to Daniel's shyster lawyer; or a gossipy email from Sophie to her friend Maggie about her dates or sometimes difficult relationships with her parents and her in-office nemesis.

This is not so much the story of divorce as the tale of Sophie's personal and professional coming of age. But it is almost as much Mia's story. This feisty woman steals every scene she's in. She gave up her journalism career to support Daniel's practice and to raise their daughter, but Daniel makes a big mistake in thinking he can steamroller her. She's a force of nature and a real pistol.

This one won't be for everybody, since many people don't like the epistolary form or novels about lawyers. Its characters also embody a certain eastern elite style that may be off-putting to some. But for me, it was a consistently entertaining story of two strong female characters.

Kate Racculia's Bellweather Rhapsody (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2014) is a much quirkier coming-of-age story, and one that would be particularly good to read this winter, since it takes place at the down-at-heel Bellweather Resort in the Catskills, just as a blizzard approaches. But I'm getting ahead of myself.

The Bellweather is hosting its annual music convention for New York's high schoolers. Twins Rabbit and Alice Hatmaker (great names, huh?) will be there, Alice as a singer and Rabbit as a bassoonist. Alice's roommate, Jill, is a brilliant flautist who is determined to use the weekend as an opportunity somehow to get away from her mother, Viola Fabian, the new organizer of the competition. Viola is as striking and sociopathic as Cruella de Ville, and she's already left scars on the competition's symphony conductor and the Hatmakers' chaperone, Natalie Wilson.

Although the hotel is awash with high-strung, hormonal musical teenagers and their overstretched adult supervisors, there is another guest. Minnie Graves is returning to the Bellweather, hoping to exorcise the demons who have haunted her ever since she witnessed a horrifying event outside Room 712 exactly 15 years earlier. When a new horror occurs in that room, the already-present intensity is ready to pop like an over-tightened violin string.

Racculia is like a music conductor herself, brilliantly directing her large cast of characters, sometimes in harmony and sometimes clashing. Every character is a bit of a misfit, but her writing is filled with understanding and sympathy for them––well, that's not quite right. Viola is 99% villain, and one you just love to hate. So you've got a young adult coming-of-age tale and an amateur detective story, sprinkled with romance, magical realism, some horror/suspense––and one of the funniest scenes I've ever read, when Minnie Graves encounters Viola Fabian in a Bellweather elevator.

A few weeks ago, our friend and occasional contributor Lady Jane Digby's Ghost recommended Ben Elton's Time and Time Again and it was well up on my list of best reads of the year. However, I'll let her tell you more about it when she joins us next week with her list. In the meantime, all best wishes to you for a wonderful new year in life and one of its greatest pleasures, reading.

Note: Portions of this piece appear in prior reviews on Read Me Deadly and in reviews Amazon and other reviewing sites under my usernames there.

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Winter Preview 2014-2015: Part Seven

It's odd how the publishing world works sometimes. I've complained before about the long waits for UK books to be published in the US, and those delays for Christopher Fowler's Peculiar Crimes Unit series books are particularly lengthy. But, for some reason, his books are often available on audio in the US quite awhile before they are published in hardcover or e-book form. And that's why I recently listened to the latest, Bryant & May and the Bleeding Heart (Bantam, December 2) before it was available here in other formats.

The PCU has now moved from its previous rundown quarters to new (to them) rundown quarters within the City of London, that square mile within the huge metropolis, where the original Roman settlement was and that constituted the entire city for hundreds of years. The City has its own police authority, and the PCU is now part of it, rather than London's Metropolitan Police. The good news is that their longtime nemesis boss, the saturnine Oscar Kasavian, is now out of the picture. The bad news is that while the new boss, Orion Banks, is younger, female and easier on the eyes, she has just as much impatience with the PCU's methods.

Banks thinks the remit for policing the City is the huge financial crimes that happen every day, not the kind of oddities that the PCU normally handles. This time around, it's the suicide's buried corpse that a couple of stargazing teens see climb out of his coffin, lurch around and utter what sounds like "Ursa Minor." Then there's the hit-and-run killing of one of the teen witnesses and, just because these things always come in threes, the disappearance of the ravens from the Tower of London; the ravens whose presence is said to protect the crown from falling.

The book is as delightful as this series always is. Maybe the ancient and slovenly curmudgeon Arthur Bryant isn't quite as loony as usual, but the tradeoff is that we find out a bit more than we knew about his past. Although the book is filled with the characters that regular readers will love to revisit, this is one of those series titles that can be enjoyed almost as much by someone who hasn't read the PCU books before.

If you like the macabre, there's plenty more after you finish the PCU's necromancy.

Jonas Karlsson's The Room (translated from the Swedish by Darcy Hurford; Random House, February 17) is a short novel, but reviewers are saying it's long on entertainment value. Our narrator is Bjorn, an office drone among many others, in a company called The Authority. Bjorn has a wildly inflated view of his own superiority and has plenty of things to say on these pages about the shortcomings of his co-workers.

One day, Bjorn comes across the perfect office space. Everything about the way it is furnished is optimal, and it even includes a mirror that reflects the best face of Bjorn. In this office, he is supremely productive; his best self. So why is it empty? He shows it to his office colleagues and insists they cram in there for meetings. But the others tell him there is no office there. They are creeped out by watching Bjorn sit in an empty space, staring off and telling them he's actually working in that perfect office.
Who is right? We already know Bjorn is an unreliable narrator, so is he imagining this office, or are his colleagues such ground-down drones that they can't see what is right in front of them? Some readers are calling this a masterpiece, both funny and creepy.

The creep factor is extremely high in Phil Hogan's A Pleasure and a Calling (Picador, January 6). I was lucky enough to read an advance copy of the book last week and I had to revise my list of top reads of 2014 pronto. And I don't normally much like the creepy stuff.

William Heming owns a real estate firm in a leafy and prosperous village within commuting distance of London. He started there as a young apprentice and, over the years, he's been inside a large proportion of the houses in the village. Here's the thing, though. The last time he was inside many of those houses was long after they were sold and the new owners had moved in. You see, Heming always cuts a copy of the house key when he's showing a house, and very few buyers change the locks after they move in. It's almost like they're giving him permission to come in.

Heming likes his village and he likes things to be just so. To do that, access is sometimes important. For example, if a neighbor refuses to clean up after his dog, that neighbor may need to learn a lesson by having the dog's mess transferred to the nice white carpet in his living room. To anticipate what might need to be done, monitoring is a good idea, too, isn't it? Heming pays close attention and learns what people's schedules are and when their houses are unoccupied. He likes to get in there and just see what the residents are all about––and maybe collect a souvenir or two. Nothing expensive, really; just a token memento for his collection.

When Heming finds himself powerfully attracted to a young librarian, Abigail, who he learns is having a love affair with a married man whom Heming knows is a cad, well, it's his duty to do something about it. And things become very complicated, very fast.

This book has tension and atmosphere by the bucketload, and some guilty laughs as well. The next time I look in a lighted window as I'm going down the street, or I wish I could exact some lone justice on an inconsiderate driver, I'll think of Mr. Heming. But what, exactly, will I be thinking?

There is nobody like Alfred Hitchcock for atmosphere, so when a book comes along that promises to be Hitchcockian, that's one I want to check out. In The Girl on the Train (Riverhead Hardcover, January 13) by Paula Hawkins, Rachel is a woman well into a downward spiral. The drinking started when she was unable to conceive and her husband left her. It accelerated when he remarried and had a baby with his new wife. Now a blackout-level drunk, she's lost her job.

Rachel doesn't want to admit she's been fired to her flatmate, so she continues to commute on the train. She begins to fantasize about a young couple she sees having breakfast on their roof deck every day. They seem so happy; they have the life she was meant to have and they live so close to where her ex-husband now lives. But one day, Rachel sees the female half of the couple in what appears to be a passionate embrace with another man.

The female half of the couple later disappears and Rachel decides to play amateur sleuth. It's not like she has much else to do. But when the police become involved and Rachel is entangled, her blackouts and her imagination will make her a person of interest. Rachel is another unreliable narrator whose story (and a grain of salt) I want to take on soon.

How about some thrills along with the chills? I'm a big fan of Mick Herron's Slough House series (Slow Horses and Dead Lions), but Nobody Walks (Soho Crime, February 17) is a standalone. Herron paints strong characters with a few strokes, adds layers of sarcasm with a knife and finishes off his canvas with sprays of violent action.

Herron's latest protagonist is Tom Bettany, former Special Ops agent with MI-5. Tom retreated to a life of mind-numbing toil in France after his wife died, but now he's brought back to London because of the death of his son, Liam. The story is that Liam was out on his narrow balcony smoking a joint of powerful "Muskrat" when he fell to his death. Tom wants to know who sold Liam the Muskrat and how it is he was smoking it when there's no sign of a match or a lighter in Liam's flat.

Reappearing in London and asking questions soon makes Tom a target from several quarters, including a gangland captain, some crooks he put away in the past and the new chief of Tom's old MI-5 unit. Will one of his pursuers get to Tom before he finds out who's responsible for Liam's death and wreaks his revenge?

If you liked Ted Lewis's Get Carter (originally titled Jack's Return Home) or the movie starring Michael Caine, I'm thinking Nobody Walks will be right up your dark and menacing street.

One of the all-time great espionage thrillers is James Grady's Six Days of the Condor (which was made into the terrific Three Days of the Condor with Robert Redford and Faye Dunaway). Forty years have passed since that book, so I was very pleasantly surprised to hear that Grady has written a sequel, titled The Last Days of the Condor (Forge, February 17).

Blowing the whistle on the CIA and then going on the run, as the Condor did back then, takes its toll on a guy over all those years. Condor, also called Vin in this book, has had a heart attack and is on some heavy-duty drugs for PTSD. When a federal agent who is supposed to be his minder is found killed at Condor's place, Condor goes on the run again, pursued by a killer called Monkey Man and a whole menagerie of others who want him dead.

Who to trust and who to kill, as Condor takes to the streets of DC? Kirkus Reviews says the "prolonged action scenes are terrific, and the bounding energy of [Grady's] writing carries you along the rest of the time." There is also a rumor that the book has already been optioned for a movie. I wonder if Robert Redford will return as the Condor?

We can't let the men have all the thriller action, so how about a couple of female protagonists getting in on the fun?

Sarie Holland is a college honors student who gets into a big jam in Duane Swierczynski's Canary (Mulholland, February 24). Sarie makes the mistake of doing a favor for her boyfriend and gets busted by the narco squad. She refuses to roll on her boyfriend, but to avoid prosecution, she agrees to become a CI, a confidential informant, passing on information about the drug dealers she knows to her police contact, Ben Wildey.

Sarie's a smart cookie and such a good CI that the ambitious Wildey presses her to get further inside and provide information about the more dangerous higher-ups in the business. That backfires in a big way, leaving Sarie targeted by the gang and the bent cops who work with them. But they didn't bargain for someone as clever as Sarie, someone who is sick and tired of being used and wants to get her own back.

Rebecca Scherm's Unbecoming (Viking Adult, January 22) seems like a perfect title for a book about a young woman, Grace, who is constantly shedding her old self to regenerate into someone different. But the new persona always seems to be what somebody else wants her to be, not who she really is––because that person, she feels, has never been good enough.

At the moment, Grace from Tennessee is now Julie from California, living in Paris and working as an art restorer for a sketchy little company. She monitors her old hometown paper on the internet, though, to keep tabs on Riley and his best friend, Alls. Grace had masterminded a heist scheme that would get the three enough money to leave little Garland, Tennessee way back in their rearview mirror. But while Grace made it overseas with a rolled-up painting canvas from the stately home they robbed, Riley and Alls were caught and sent to prison. They could be paroled soon and Grace wonders if they'll be coming for her.

Flashbacks take the reader to that previous life in Garland, when Grace felt the lack of her parents' love, then the welcoming warmth of Riley's family. She wanted to be what Riley and his family thought she was, but she could only be that girl on the surface. She always wanted something more, something different.

Early readers are saying that Grace is a thoroughly unlikeable but intriguing character. The marketing types are comparing the book to works by everybody from Patricia Highsmith to Donna Tartt and Gillian Flynn. I get that the protagonist is amoral, like Highsmith's Tom Ripley, and a manipulative conniver, like Flynn's Amy Dunne, but I hope there's more to the Donna Tartt comparison than a rolled-up stolen canvas. What I really hope is that there's only the most superficial truth to all of these comparisons, and that Rebecca Scherm has written a story all her own.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

My Peculiar Summer

I don't mean that the summer has been odd; what I mean is that in just the last few weeks, I've read two books in Christopher Fowler's Peculiar Crimes Unit series. A few weeks ago, I reviewed the ninth in the series, Bryant & May and the Memory of Blood, here. Now I've just read––or listened to, to be more accurate––the tenth in the series, Bryant & May and the Invisible Code.

The latest tale begins in the churchyard of St. Bride's. On a bench sits a young woman, reading a book, while two children play nearby. When they annoy her, she goes into the quiet and deserted church. The children, who are playing a game called Witch Hunter, stealthily follow her in, because one of them is convinced she is a witch. Minutes later, the woman keels over, dead. The children believe that the witch-killing curse they cast on her did its job.

When the autopsy fails to identify a specific cause of death, Arthur Bryant, the nuttier half of the Bryant & May team and co-leader of the Peculiar Crimes Unit, naturally wants the case. But the City of London police have jurisdiction and the PCU, being personae non gratae in the Home Office, lack the political backing to muscle them aside.

Certainly, their enemy-in-chief, that satan in a three-piece suit, Oscar Kasavian, isn't about to lift a finger to help them. He has promised to wipe out the PCU and, particularly, its beyond-retirement-age leads. Imagine Bryant and May's surprise, then, when Kasavian almost humbly asks them to help him with a problem involving his wife, Sabira.

Sabira is much younger than Kasavian, and is an émigré from a working-class family in Albania. She's finding it trying to be the wife of someone whose job is full of secrets, and has begun thinking that she is being stalked and threatened. She is depressed and volatile. Sabira is also habitually and cruelly taunted by the mean-girl sorority of wives of Home Office top-level bureaucrats. Small wonder she has begin acting out in ways that could jeopardize Oscar Kasavian's position.

Bryant and May are hardly thrilled by what they see as a baby-sitting job and a no-win assignment but, as they and the rest of the PCU team begin to investigate, the case takes on ever larger proportions. Governmental corruption, whistleblowers in private industry, mental illness and its history in London, private clubs and their arcana, Russian gangsters, codes and ciphers, and the supernatural are all thrown into this heady mix. On top of all that, there are disquieting revelations of how the British class system, cronyism and the complete disregard of commercial/governmental conflicts of interest all conspire to ensure that a cabal of venal and ruthless men stay in power.

But this is no grim, cynical, deadly serious police procedural. With the PCU, that's just not possible. Arthur Bryant is the absent-minded fellow with his latest meal evidenced down the front of his rumpled clothes, his cell phone rendered unusable by the melted sweets all over it, and a brain that defines "nonlinear." He can't understand why people take exception to his insults––or to his conducting experiments at home and in the office involving things like pig carcasses and explosives. John May is Bryant's opposite: sartorially impeccable, careful to massage egos when necessary, and a believer that the simplest answer is usually the right one.

Despite their vast differences, Bryant and May make an effective team and, as always, they go right down to the wire in their investigation. I was listening to the book while walking and was so riveted by the book's last chapters that I walked a lot further than I'd intended. (Hmm, how about a new marketing approach for audiobooks: So enthralling you won't even notice you're exercising while listening!)

Most modern police procedurals remind us how reliant current investigations are on database searches, GPS, phone and internet records, forensics and all the accoutrements of our technological age. Bryant and May operate in our world, but their methods are refreshingly old-fashioned. You will never have to read about establishing time of death by analyzing the life cycle of maggots, for example. Arthur Bryant may find some other way to gross you out, but you'll be laughing at the same time.

Christopher Fowler just tells a good, entertaining story and doesn't gum it up with attempts to show he is knowledgeable about the latest gadgetry and techniques (that will all be hopelessly outdated in about five minutes anyway.) And he doesn't use protagonists who we know are supposed to be cool because of the way they dress, or talk, or listen to edgy music, or seduce people, or take or give a beating. Bryant and May are old, they wouldn't know what a lifestyle is if it smacked them upside the head, and yet they are cooler than any other detectives I can think of because they know what's right and they're going to keep on doing it, just the way they've done it since they got together way back in World War II, with blithe disregard for all that's changed around them.

Like so many books in the Peculiar Crimes Unit series, this one is also notable for its use of London settings in the story. Fowler tells us that St. Bride's Church is known as the journalists' church because of its location on Fleet Street, traditional home of London newspapers. It sits in the oldest part of London, known as the Square Mile, or the City of London, which is still a city in its own right, and has its own Lord Mayor––who, by the way, is not Boris Johnson, the flamboyant Mayor of London we saw during this summer's Olympics. The City is also home to the legal community's Inns of Court, which also play a dramatic part in the story, along with Sir John Soane's Museum, across from Lincoln's Inn Fields, and home to Hogarth's A Rake's Progress.

Fowler's descriptions of churches, museums, streets and history bring the city alive. He clearly loves London, especially its hidden places, like alleyways, mews, back passages of old buildings and tunnels. If you're fascinated by London, too, you might want to spend some time visiting Christopher Fowler's blog, especially this London walk, or this one, or this one with teeny tiny statues, or this collection of 15 excellent London websites. And these are just from 2012.

If you're already a fan of the PCU series, I can give you a preview of what's coming up, courtesy of Fowler's blog. He wrote recently that this latest book wrapped up a story arc, and he asked for comments to help him solidify his ideas about where to go for his next book. Here's his conclusion:

"One of these [next two PCU novels] will definitely feature an incapacitated Bryant and lots of old cases in the course of uncovering a new one, while the other book will be pretty sinister and dark-themed.
Plus, more eccentric characters, strange bits of London, oddments of history, arcana, sleuthing, impossible murder and general weirdness. Oh, and something impossible happening in the ultimate locked room, the Tower of London."
I can hardly wait.

Note: Mysteriously, Bryant & May and the Invisible Code is not yet published in book form in the U.S., even though the audiobook is. Being a naturally impatient person and a big fan of both this series and the narrator of the books, Tim Goodman, I got it as soon as it was available. Based on the U.S. publication date of the preceding book, I'd guess that this one will be published in the U.S. sometime in the first half of 2013.

The next-to-last image and the two Bryant & May cartoon images in this post are from Christopher Fowler's blog. Versions of this review appear on the Amazon and Audible product pages, under my username there.