Well I read 12 books this month which got me back on track with my year-end revised target of 119.
110 completed, 9 to aim at in December. (119 will mean my 3 year total since 2010 will be 300!)
Anonymous - 9 - Hard Bite (2012) (4)
Martin Amis - House Of Meetings (2006) (1)
Charlie Owen - Two Tribes (2009) (3)
Danny Gillan - A Selection Of Meats And Cheeses (2011) (3)
Roger Smith - Mixed Blood (2009) (5)
Joe R Lansdale - Bullets And Fire (2013) (3)
Richard Rayner - Murder Book (1997) (2)
Julian Barnes - Flaubert's Parrot (1984) (3)
E L James - Fifty Shades Freed (2012) (1)
Jim Nisbet - Lethal Injection (1987) (5)
Mark Sullivan - Corned Beef Sandwich (2007) (3)
Miranda Forbes ed. - Ultimate Spanking (2010) (2)
The month started with a big bang and Anonymous-9's Hard Bite.
It went quickly downhill with Martin Amis, and meandered along until Roger Smith jumped me with Mixed Blood - a fast,violent, ride through Cape Town.
Dipped afterward with Lansdale, Rayner and Barnes, until positively plummetting off the cliff with Fifty Shades Grim.
Jim Nisbet cranked things back with Lethal Injection, before my pulse dropped back down to normal with a Manc-crime caper novel and a bit of soft titillation.
2 neck and neck contenders for book of the month, first prize on the basis of it being an unbelievably good first novel - Roger Smith and Mixed Blood,
Silver medal - Jim Nisbet,
Bronze medal - Anonymous-9
Pages
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Pages
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Friday, 30 November 2012
MIRANDA FORBES ed. - ULTIMATE SPANKING (2010)
Blurb.....
There's nothing like a good spanking - customers have proved that this is a bestselling theme! Editor Miranda Forbes has selected 20 more bottom-tingling stories to make your buttocks blush in this fourth volume of naughty treats! Spanking has never been so popular. Find out why ... Xcite Books offer the very best erotic writing. Clear branding and consistently good reviews in magazines such as Forum, Desire Scarlet have helped build Xcite into a bestselling brand.
Ok then, awkward, how to explain why I read this, when it’s so far out of my usual ball-park.
Well, I was browsing in a bookshop in my hometown, Leighton Buzzard, and I needed one more item to make up a price-saving bundle…….and I didn’t want a 600 page Nelson DeMille blockbuster, or a 20 year-old Jeffrey Archer pre-prison beach-read, or a Peter Hamilton science-fiction tome the size of a house brick……….so I chose this soft-porn volume of 20 erotic tales. Excuses out of the way, then!
Well, I read them on and off over a period of a couple of months, all reasonably written and all concerning the same subject matter – spanking or corporal punishment. No real need to go into any greater detail.
I’m well aware that no-one particularly has any interest in my personal predilections, and I’m not too interested in divulging them either, but suffice to say I’m not about to rush out and acquire any accessories in the leather whip department after reading this.
Should there be a subsequent volume published, I won’t be stampeding people in my haste to acquire it.
2 stars from 5.
As stated I bought this copy
MARK SULLIVAN - CORNED BEEF SANDWICH (2007)
Blurb.....
Winner of the Crocus North West Novel Competition in 2001, Corned Beef Sandwich is a side-splitting, fast moving crime caper set in one of the seedier districts of South Manchester. Somewhere between Ealing Studios and Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, it follows the exploits of a Bookie's assistant who accidently takes home a gun man's swag bag. Housemates, surf god Axel, nuclear PR whiz Sheena and big plans Theo - are none too happy with the chaos that ensues.
I tracked this down after seeing a recommendation for it on a now long-forgotten crime fiction blog. Whilst it was enjoyable, it didn’t rock my world in the same way it did for the blogger.
I had previously attempted to read this but put it aside, but on returning to it managed to go from start to finish in a day; which whilst it’s not the length of War and Peace.at 230 pages long, does tell me two things. One it’s a decent book with pace, that was interesting enough to keep me turning the pages. Two, I happen to be quite adept at picking up the right book at the wrong time, as my "started never finished" list on the blog shows.
Sib, the bookie’s assistant is comically portrayed as a lonely, sad-sack social-misfit, stuck in a dead-end job with her parents lamenting the lack of direction in her life and only her fishes for comfort. Opportunity strikes when she ends up with the shop’s takings after an inept armed robber bungles the heist. Mayhem ensues affecting Sib and her housemates, including her sex-driven brother when the hapless criminal attempts to recover his ill-gotten gains.
Right book, right time, with a reasonable resolution. I have tried to discover if the author Mark Sullivan, not to be confused with Mark T. Sullivan, has anything else in print, but I haven’t been able to find anything.
3 from 5 – a reasonably entertaining crime-caper.
I bought this new probably 6 or 7 years ago.
JIM NISBET - LETHAL INJECTION (1987)
Blurb.....
The
gritty noir cult classic is now back in print - and the first of nine Nisbet
books from Overlook!
Jim Nisbet's cult classic Lethal Injection, one of the first Black Lizard Books originals, has been out of print in the United States for an unforgivably long time. Overlook is remedying that with this paperback - the first of nine reissues that will make up a Nisbet revolution.
It's about as noir as you can get. In a bleak Texas prison Royce, an alcoholic doctor administers Bobby Mencken's last 'high,' convinced that the convicted killer was innocent. When Royce's marriage crumbles he takes off for Dallas to search for the real killer.
Of Nisbet, Germany's Die Welt wrote, 'Neither Norman Mailer nor Truman Capote has in their writing been able to produce such an intensity as Nisbet has achieved.' With sharp humor and a poet's ear for language, Nisbet's world may be bleak, but it is frighteningly real. Overlook is proud to bring him to a new generation of readers.
Jim Nisbet's cult classic Lethal Injection, one of the first Black Lizard Books originals, has been out of print in the United States for an unforgivably long time. Overlook is remedying that with this paperback - the first of nine reissues that will make up a Nisbet revolution.
It's about as noir as you can get. In a bleak Texas prison Royce, an alcoholic doctor administers Bobby Mencken's last 'high,' convinced that the convicted killer was innocent. When Royce's marriage crumbles he takes off for Dallas to search for the real killer.
Of Nisbet, Germany's Die Welt wrote, 'Neither Norman Mailer nor Truman Capote has in their writing been able to produce such an intensity as Nisbet has achieved.' With sharp humor and a poet's ear for language, Nisbet's world may be bleak, but it is frighteningly real. Overlook is proud to bring him to a new generation of readers.
My first taste of this author and someone who I will
be returning to in the future. (I don’t have a choice I have a stack of his
books in the attic!)
Lethal Injection is short, sharp, dark and funny;
following Franklin Royce, an alcoholic prison doctor’s journey to discover the
real killer behind the crime that his most recent patient was convicted of. Mencken;
who Royce believes to be innocent, won’t be requiring further treatment once
Royce has done his $600 of dirty work.
Royce with marital and financial woes usually seeks respite
in the bottom of a whiskey bottle, but shoots for some level of redemption by trying
to uncover the truth, without abandoning his whiskey. Catching up with Mencken’s former partners in
crime; Eddie, a low-life sociopath, and a junkie ex-girlfriend with a penchant
for dirty sex before, during and after
getting high. Royce with his Gladstone bag full of morphine and his constant
bottle descends into a haze of crime, sex, drugs and squalor while trying to avenge
Mencken.
Nisbet won’t appeal to all readers but if you enjoy a
roll in the gutter and want a view on the seamier side of inner-city America,
Nisbet’s the man.
Hopefully this book and Overlook’s plans to reprint
some of his previous work will bring to the attention of a wider audience.
5 from 5 – highly recommended!
I bought this new a couple of years ago.
Monday, 26 November 2012
E L JAMES - FIFTY SHADES FREED (2012)
Blurb………
When unworldly student Ana Steele first encountered the driven, damaged young entrepreneur Christian Grey, it sparked a sensual affair that changed both their lives irrevocably. Shocked, intrigued, and ultimately repelled by Christian's singular sexual tastes, Ana demanded a deeper commitment; determined to keep her, Christian agreed. Now, together, they have more-love, passion, intimacy, wealth, and a world of infinite possibilities. But Ana always knew that loving her Fifty Shades would not be easy and being together poses challenges neither of them ever anticipated. Ana must somehow learn to share Christian's opulent lifestyle without sacrificing her own integrity, identity, or independence; Christian must somehow overcome his compulsion to control and lay to rest the horrors that blighted his past and haunt his present. Just when it seems that together their love can conquer any obstacle, tragedy, malice and fate combine to make Ana's worst nightmares come true. Alone and desperate, she must face down the poisoned legacy of Christian's past. Seductive, shocking, sad, and funny, Fifty Shades Freed is the compelling final volume in the trilogy.
Well I can’t say that I am sorry to have seen the back of these three books. The first was bearable, the second slightly less so and this one was just total torture from start to finish………….oh Christian, oh Ana, Oh Christian, Oh Ana, blah, blah, blah for nearly 600 pages.
The sex scenes were dull……..oh Christian, oh Ana, oh Christian, oh Ana, with a couple of ooohhs and aaahhhs thrown in.
DULL, DULL, REPETITIVE, BORING, COMPLETE AND UTTER MINCE FROM BEGINNING TO END, WITH SOME GRIM BITS IN THE MIDDLE.
Each copy should be sold with bottle of bleach that you can pour in your eyes just to make it stop!
I’m sure some people enjoyed it, but not me. Fortunately my wife agrees so we won't have to suffer like this again next year.
1 from 5 - on the basis that you can't give a book a ZERO (Am I too generous?)
JULIAN BARNES - FLAUBERT'S PARROT (1984)
Blurb......... Geoffrey Braithwaite is a retired doctor haunted by
an obsession with the great French literary genius, Gustave Flaubert. As
Geoffrey investigates the mystery of the stuffed parrot Flaubert borrowed from
the Museum of Rouen to help research one of his novels, we learn an enormous
amount about the writer's work, family, lovers, thought processes, health and
obsessions. But we also gradually come to learn some important and shocking
details about Geoffrey himself.
Always a sucker for a smart
cover, and add in the fact that it had been enjoyed and praised by no less than
the likes of John Irving and Graham Greene, with a price tag of a whopping 30p
in whatever charity shop I was browsing about 10 years ago and it was pretty
much a given that I would be reading this sometime in the distant future.
After a previous start, stall,
stop attempt to read this some years ago, I reopened it with a new found determination
to read it start to finish and hopefully at the same time enjoy it.
Well in places it was okay,
amusing and informative. In other places it was dull and tedious and though it
is classed as a novel, it has a strange structure to it. One of the plus points
was it was relatively short!
I’ve found some detail out about
Gustave Flaubert that I previously didn’t know; a French author of the 19th
Century, who’s first published work – Madame Bovary - brought him and his
publisher up on immorality charges, of which he was acquitted. Flaubert is
regarded by some as one of the greatest novelists of Western Literature. He
never married, he took on average about five years or so on each book, plus he
at some time borrowed a stuffed parrot.
I haven’t been inspired to go and
seek out anything from Flaubert to form my own opinion on his value as a great exponent
of Western prose. Similarly neither have I been encouraged to seek out much
else that Barnes has penned, apart from his recent book - A Sense Of An Ending
- which I’ll get to sometime, though it might be another 10 years or so.
On reflection, it was probably a bit
better than a 2 from 5, but not quite a 3, but in the process of rounding up 3
from 5 it is.
As indicated earlier, I bought
this copy second-hand.
Sunday, 25 November 2012
RICHARD RAYNER - MURDER BOOK (1997)
Blurb...... About as noir as it can be…excellent’ Frances Fyfield, Daily Telegraph
The city is Los Angeles, the birthplace of the
American dream, a city that has come to symbolize both heaven and hell. Billy
McGrath is an enigma, half American, half English, who once dreamed of pursuing
a career as an academic philosopher, but for the last fifteen years he’s been a
homicide detective – one of LA’s best. He knows the rules, and understands a
justice system that punishes the underprivileged and lets the rich go free.
He’s an unhappy man, divorced from the wife he still adores and separated from
a daughter for whom he’d willingly die. If he hasn’t yet thought of suicide, he
soon will.
McGrath is called to a crime scene – a woman dead on a kitchen floor in one of the city’s seamiest neighbourhoods, an apparently routine assignment until he discovers that the murdered woman’s son is LA’s biggest crack dealer, an idol of the ghetto who offers him a one-million-dollar bounty for the name of the killer. Making the wrong choice for what might be the right reasons, McGrath initiates both his own fall from grace and, as he strives to redeem himself, a series of wild and furious actions that hurtle him through the many identities of corrupt Los Angeles.
In McGrath, Rayner has created a sympathetic everyman who becomes both victim and victor. Set against a bleak cityscape, Murder Book is a dark, violent and sexy thriller that is impossible to put down.
McGrath is called to a crime scene – a woman dead on a kitchen floor in one of the city’s seamiest neighbourhoods, an apparently routine assignment until he discovers that the murdered woman’s son is LA’s biggest crack dealer, an idol of the ghetto who offers him a one-million-dollar bounty for the name of the killer. Making the wrong choice for what might be the right reasons, McGrath initiates both his own fall from grace and, as he strives to redeem himself, a series of wild and furious actions that hurtle him through the many identities of corrupt Los Angeles.
In McGrath, Rayner has created a sympathetic everyman who becomes both victim and victor. Set against a bleak cityscape, Murder Book is a dark, violent and sexy thriller that is impossible to put down.
I bought
this when it was first published back in the late 90’s having been drawn by the
LA Times remark on the cover of my copy.....”Neo-neo-Noir”........hell, not
just Noir but Neo-neo-Noir!
I tried
reading this some years ago, but as often happens to me the book you pick up at
the time doesn’t suit your mood, so quickly gets returned to the shelf, whilst
something more suitable steps up in place.
Well this
time around I was maybe 40 pages in and thinking.........hmmm, not too bad, and
then it died on me. I must have spent a week persevering through the next
100-150 pages at which point the pace picked up again and maintained until the
end.
Okay-ish, in
a sort of I don’t care too much what happens manner.
Beginning - good, long, long, middle -total grimness,
last section - alright.
Conclusions:
Neo-neo-noir
is some horrible 90’s inferior version of noir and if I ever pick up another
title recommended by Francis Fyfield it will be because I’ve suffered amnesia
probably after being hit round the head by a box full of remaindered copies of
Rayner’s other books, if this one is anything to go by.
2 from 5
ROGER SMITH - MIXED BLOOD (2009)
Blurb...... An American fugitive hides out in Cape Town—one of the world’s most beautiful and violent cities—in this riveting debut thriller that asks: Can you ever outrun your past?
Reluctant bank robber Jack Burn is on
the run after a heist in the United States that left $3 million missing and one
cop dead. Hiding out in Cape Town, South Africa, he is desperate to build a new
life for his pregnant wife and young son. But on a tranquil evening in their
new suburban neighborhood they are the victims of a random gangland assault
that changes everything.
Benny Mongrel, an ex-con night watchman
guarding a building site next to Burn’s home, is another man desperate to
escape his past. After years in the ghetto gangs of Cape Town he knows who went
into Burn’s house. And what the American did to them. He also knows his only
chance to save his own brown skin is to forget what he saw.
Burn’s actions on that night trap them
both in a cat-and-mouse game with Rudi "Gatsby" Barnard—a corrupt
Afrikaner cop who loves killing almost as much as he loves Jesus Christ—and
Disaster Zondi, a fastidious Zulu detective who wishes to settle an old score.
Once Gatsby smells those missing American millions, the four men are drawn into
a web of murder and vengeance that builds to an unforgettable conclusion.
I was unaware of Roger
Smith, until a recent browse around a Waterstones had me scurrying to the till
with Dust Devils. I was intrigued enough to dig through his back list and track
down this copy of his first novel. I’m so glad I did.
Smith has delivered a
fast-paced, violent, gritty little book, peppered with intriguing characters
from both sides of the tracks; Burn – an ex- US marine with a gambling Jones
that forces him on the run, Mongrel - a survivor of the ghettos and some
serious jail-time, now trying to move on with his life and leave the gangs
behind and Gatsby – a corpulent, stinking, corrupt and zealous-Jesus loving
cop, feared by all on the impoverished Cape Flats.
With Burn fearful of
losing his family and his liberty after dealing with a violent home invasion,
witnessed by Mongrel and Gatsby under threat from an outside investigation, led
by Zondi, their paths cross.
Gatsby cracks Burn’s
cover and senses opportunity to get out from under Zondi and mayhem follows.
In addition to the
strong characters Smith has drawn, none of them particularly likeable, but all
memorable; his portrayal of a city of contrasting fortunes acts as an
interesting back-drop for the book. Gangs, ghetto, drug use, tik-whores,
poverty and apathy......it’s all in here.
Having recently read
both Deon Meyer and Mike Nicol, I would put Smith and Mixed Blood equal first
with Nicol’s Payback and a little way ahead of Meyer’s Trackers, in my SA crime
league table. I have further books to read from all three, which I’m hoping
will enliven the months ahead.
As this was Smith’s
debut novel, can he possibly get better with his subsequent books?
I’ll track down the others and find out,
Cape Town
Novels
Novellas
Best book this month so
far, 5 from 5.
Highly recommended.
I bought my copy on e-bay
after a bit of bargain hunting. Thursday, 22 November 2012
GEOGRAPHY, CRIME FICTION AND AN AVERSION TO SCANDINAVIA!
I have been
trawling around some of my favourite crime fiction sites and blogs and what is noticeable
is the preponderance of Scandinavian crime fiction, being read and written
about.
For many
years, I used to disregard crime fiction set in the UK, on the basis that I
didn’t really what to read about where I live. When I read, I want to be
transported elsewhere for the number of hours I’m immersed in the book.
I have now expanded
my scope to include home-based fiction, on the grounds that I was obviously
denying myself access to some great books with my myopic viewpoint.
When I
looked abroad for my fix of crime fiction I was immediately drawn to America
and some of the fantastic crime writers they have spawned; Jim Thompson, Elmore
Leonard, Charles Willeford to name a few.
Spreading my
wings further, I sought out books set in Australia, New Zealand, Canada,
Ireland, South Africa........and Scandinavia.
Over the
past few years of book browsing, I have acquired a fair few books from the likes
of Henning Mankell, Arnuldar Indridason and the double act of Sjowall/Wahloo
amongst others. Plus I’ve added Jo Nesbo and Asa Larrson recently to my TBR
pile.
Checking my
reading list for the past three years, it’s apparent that whilst I like reading
about Scandinavian crime fiction, I don’t actually read any.
2012
Scandinavian crime fiction read = ZERO,
2011 Scandinavian
crime fiction read = 3 (Kepler, Larsson, Jungstedt}
2010 Scandinavian
crime fiction read = ZERO,
Pre-2010 Scandinavian
crime fiction read – memory dredging.....Sjowall/Wahloo – 1 of, Mankell – 2 of,
and one of them was set in Africa!
Why do I
actually have an aversion to reading these books?
Well a lot
of the time I want to read about places that I’d like to go visit; somewhere
warm, sunny, vibrant, inviting, relaxing.......none of which springs to mind
when I think of Scandinavia.
Scandinavian
word-association game...............cold, dark, bleak, dull, boring, Winter,
Volvos, pickled herrings, Abba, Ulrika........none of which I’m viewing as positives.
The only
major positive I can think of is Henrik Larsson and his wonderful days at
Celtic, maybe if he wrote crime fiction, I would jump aboard.
Scandinavian
crime fiction will be one of my reading targets for 2013 – one a month should
be a reasonable aim.
Saturday, 17 November 2012
CAUGHT UP!
Well I've caught up on my saved list of reads since 2010, I can get back to posting my incoherent ramblings and musings on what I've just read.
It was interesting to see how much I could remember of what I've read in the past 3 years.
It seemed that the ones I enjoyed the least stuck with me the most. I visited various websites to jog my memory, and even after doing that some books just didn't come back to me.
Maybe I don't really read, maybe I'm just skimming across the pages not really absorbing that much?
Who cares?
Still I reckon I've surpassed my 100 target for 2012 already - so if I can get to 119, for the year - that will pull the figures back into line for the last three!
2010 - 104
2011 - 77
2012 - 98 to October end......21 to go!
It was interesting to see how much I could remember of what I've read in the past 3 years.
It seemed that the ones I enjoyed the least stuck with me the most. I visited various websites to jog my memory, and even after doing that some books just didn't come back to me.
Maybe I don't really read, maybe I'm just skimming across the pages not really absorbing that much?
Who cares?
Still I reckon I've surpassed my 100 target for 2012 already - so if I can get to 119, for the year - that will pull the figures back into line for the last three!
2010 - 104
2011 - 77
2012 - 98 to October end......21 to go!
AUGUST 2012
August
2012.........12 books this month
Richard
Francis – Taking Apart The Poco Poco
Dave
Zeltserman – Outsourced
Tony Black –
RIP Robbie Silva
Jack Danne/Jeanne
Van Damme ed. – In The Field Of Fire
David Craig –
Bolthole
William
Caunitz – One Police Plaza
Eric Garcia –
Anonymous Rex
Harlan Coben
– Shelter
Jeff Connor –
Pointless
Philip
Wilding – Cross Country Murder Song
Stephen
Wright – Going Native
Anthony
Bourdain – Bobby Gold
Stephen
Wright and Philip Wilding are in contention for the supreme accolade – namely the
author of least enjoyable book ever in the history of books since the year dot.
Also vying for the title, Kerouac - Lonesome
Traveller, probably anything Dean Koontz has written in the past 15 years,
Leonie Swann – Three Bags Full.
A close call – probably Going Native will
shade it....slightly less painful reading this than boiling my head in a pot on
the stove, but it was a close run thing.
Garcia wasn’t
great – not a patch on Matchstick Men.
Caunitz – ok,
but not as good as I was hoping for.
Richard
Francis – won’t be going back there, thank you.
Field Of Fire
– Nam stories with a “fantasy” spin – as with any story collection, some a lot
better than others.
Tony Black’s
novella just didn’t rock me the way I had hoped for.
Jeff Connor’s
account of a year following Scotland’s worst football team was interesting enough.
Keep the faith – East Stirlingshire fans!
Bolthole was
an early Bill James thriller written under an alias, bit better than average in
my opinion.
Coben’s Shelter
– I think is a YA targeted book that this MA (middle-aged) reader enjoyed.
Book of the
month – Bobby Gold........certainly glistened for me!
Blurb.........
Bobby Gold is a lovable
criminal. After nearly ten years in prison, he's no sooner out than he's back
to work breaking bones for tough guys. His turf: the club scene and restaurant
business. It's not that he enjoys the job-Bobby has real heart-but he's good at
it, and a guy has to make a living. Things change when he meets Nikki, the cook
at a club most definitely not in his territory. Smitten, he can't stay away.
Bobby Gold has known trouble before, but with Nikki the sauté bitch in his
life, things take a turn for life or death.
A fast, furious, pitch-perfect story of food, sex, crime, and mayhem, The Bobby Gold Stories is Bourdain at his best
A fast, furious, pitch-perfect story of food, sex, crime, and mayhem, The Bobby Gold Stories is Bourdain at his best
Recommended
JULY 2012
July 2012.....
11 this month
Joseph Torra
– Gas Station
Michael
Connelly – The Reversal
Gil Brewer –
Appointment In Hell
Andy McNab-
The Grey Man
Len Deighton
– Declarations Of War
Charles
Portis – Dog Of The South
Charlie Owen
– Bravo Jubilee
Robert Cremins
– A Sort Of Homecoming
E L James –
Fifty Shades Of Grey
Ed Smith –
On And Off The Field
Dave Zeltserman
– Blood Crimes 1
Not a
brilliant month truth be told.
Torra,
Portis, Deighton all dragged a bit.
Cremins, McNab
(Quick-Read), Zeltserman, and Brewer were okay in an average sort of way.
Owen and his
police propaganda-jokey-set ups and anecdotes amused and wasn’t too irritating.
Fifty
Shades...what can I say? Or shall I leave the talking to my inner goddess? Fair
play to her – hopefully she’s made enough to retire and can knock the books on
the head.
Connelly –
still disappointing me Michael. You could do better, you have done in the past.
I’ll keep the faith for two more books!
Book of the
month Ed Smith – year long cricket diary. Who’d have thought a cricket book
would get the top prize?
JUNE 2012
June 2011....11
books this month
Cormac
McCarthy – The Orchard Keeper
Craig
McDonald – Toros And Torsos
John Harvey –
Bluer Than This
Jeremy Duns –
Free Agent
Michael
Zadoorian – Second Hand
Brady Udall –
Setting Loose The Hounds
Charlie
Williams - One Dead Hen
Dave Zeltserman
– Killer
Lynn Kostoff
– The Long Fall
Robert
Campbell – The Junkyard Dog
Benjamin Whitmer
– Pike
A more
enjoyable month’s reading overall.
McCarthy and
Harvey (poetry – what was I thinking of when I bought this?)....were the two
low points.
McDonald,
Williams and Zeltserman I’ve read previously. I would read again if the mood
took me. Williams’ book was the I think the fourth and last in his Mangel
series with Royston Blake, having read the previous three it ended on a high.
Campbell’s
book was a re-read from someone I used to read a lot of about 20 years
ago.............the old mysterious press paperbacks that used to grab me. Plenty more of them in the attic!
Three books
competing for pick of the month – Duns and Free Agent.
Blurb........ In July 1945 MI6 agent Paul Dark took part in a top
secret mission to hunt down and execute Nazi war criminals. He will discover
that everything he understood about that mission, about its consequences, and
about the woman he once loved, has been built on false foundations. Now it's
1969 and a KGB colonel called Slavin has walked into the High Commission
inLagos, Nigeria,and announced that he wants to defect. His credentials as a
defector are good - he has highly suggestive information which indicates that there
is yet another double agent within MI6, which would be a devastating blow for a
Service still coming to terms with its betrayal by Kim Philby and the rest of
the Cambridge Five. Paul Dark has been largely above suspicion during MI6's
years of self-recrimination. But this time he can see his number coming up. For
some it would be fight or flight time. But when you discover that everything
you've taken for granted and trusted for twenty four years turns out to be
untrue, and when your arrest may only be moments away, then perhaps the only
option is both fight and flight. Free Agent is a twisting, intense thriller set
between London and Nigeria during the height of the Cold War. It's a novel of
innumerable cliffhangers, all set within a constantly evolving moral universe,
and the surprises keep coming until the very last page.
Zadoorian and Second Hand
Blurb....... Richard sees treasure
everywhere. In that old eight-track quadraphonic stereo, that pink granite
bowling ball, or a Niagara Falls napkin holder. While most people scramble for
the newest and the best, Richard searches for the odd and obsolete -- and sells
it at his second-hand shop on the edge of Detroit.
Why does he do it? For Richard, junk is a way of life, a calling, and a passion. Until his comfortable second-hand life gets a first-hand jolt.
Richard's mother has died, and left behind a valuable house full of packed-away junk -- including some old photos that will change everything Richard thought about his parents. And then there's the hip, thrift-attired woman who comes into his store with more than junk on her mind.... Suddenly some very unexpected things are entering Richard's life, including some surprising revelations about love and loss -- and what's really important in life.
With an unerring blend of the comic and the poignant, Michael Zadoorian has written an unforgettable novel about knick-knacks, garage sales, romance, and the bonds we form with people and things -- the perfect story for anyone who has ever loved something second hand.
Why does he do it? For Richard, junk is a way of life, a calling, and a passion. Until his comfortable second-hand life gets a first-hand jolt.
Richard's mother has died, and left behind a valuable house full of packed-away junk -- including some old photos that will change everything Richard thought about his parents. And then there's the hip, thrift-attired woman who comes into his store with more than junk on her mind.... Suddenly some very unexpected things are entering Richard's life, including some surprising revelations about love and loss -- and what's really important in life.
With an unerring blend of the comic and the poignant, Michael Zadoorian has written an unforgettable novel about knick-knacks, garage sales, romance, and the bonds we form with people and things -- the perfect story for anyone who has ever loved something second hand.
On the basis that it didn’t quite
reach the heights attained by The Leisure Seekers, pick of the month is
Lynn Kostoff – The Long Fall
Blurb...... At once authentic and
flip, by turns wildly funny and deadly serious, as riveting as it is inventive,
The Long Fall twists sibling rivalry inside out and sets the conventional crime
novel on its head. In sunbaked Phoenix, Arizona, this never-predictable tale
tosses into its antic mix a dead father, his two sons—one a small-time ex-con
with a consistent genius for sabotaging his own best interests, the other a
straight, uptight solid citizen with a moneymaking chain of dry-cleaning stores
and a restive ex-stewardess of a wife named Evelyn—and a sicko cop with a
twisted worldview. Recently released from prison—twenty-four months for
possession of a truckload of black-market saguaro cacti—and in deep debt to an
unforgiving crank dealer, Jimmy Coates returns home only to discover that his
brother has cut him out of his inheritance. A not-unjustifiable desire to settle
old scores and new sends Jimmy on a robbery spree that wipes out four of his
brother’s dry-cleaning establishments. But when he finds himself tumbling for a
mutinously sexy Evelyn, the impulse to vengeance reverses itself. Unwittingly,
however, Jimmy has already set in motion a series of dangerous
consequences—adultery, blackmail, love, betrayal—that culminate in a blueprint
for murder. And it could be Jimmy himself who is taking the long fall.
Recommended.
MAY 2012
May 2012.....
10 books read
Lionel Shriver
– We Need To Talk About Kevin
Deon Meyer –
Trackers
Michael
Zadoorian – The Leisure Seekers
Dominic Prince
– Jumbo To Jockey
Karl
Pilkington – An Idiot Abroad
Stewart O’Nan
– The Speed Queen
Jack Kerouac
– Lonesome Traveller
Jonathan
King – The Blue Edge Of Midnight
Uswal Dey –
Freedom Fiction Journal (12-04)
Christopher
Fowler – Full Dark House
Average sort
of a month......
King, Fowler, Meyer – all above average on the
enjoyment scale. 7’s from 10
Pilkington
and Price- ok but no more please.
Shriver – ok
but didn’t rock my world, a bit churlish to complain about finding a mass
murderer and his family annoying maybe? Probably the author’s voice was more
the problem.
Jack Kerouac
– if this is typical of his writing, then I don’t understand all the plaudits.
I wanted the pain to stop but the short book went on and on for ever, seemingly.
By a country
mile - book of the month........Zadoorian’s Leisure Seeker.
Blurb....... In Michael Zadoorian's The Leisure Seeker the Robinas have shared a wonderful life for more than sixty years. Now in their eighties, Ella suffers from cancer and John has Alzheimer's. Yearning for one last adventure, the self-proclaimed "down-on-their-luck geezers" kidnap themselves from the adult children and doctors who seem to run their lives and steal away from their home in suburban Detroit on a forbidden vacation of rediscovery. With Ella as his vigilant copilot, John steers their '78 Leisure Seeker RV along the forgotten roads of Route 66 toward Disneyland in search of a past they're having a damned hard time remembering. Yet Ella is determined to prove that, when it comes to life, you can go back for seconds—even when everyone says you can't.
A geriatric
Thelma and Louise style road trip – an absolute knockout.
Highly
recommended.
APRIL 2012
April
2012........8 books this month
Jo Brand – Look
Back In Hunger
James Lee
Burke – The Glass Rainbow
Robert
Harris – The Ghost
Dave
Zeltserman – Bad Karma
Michael
Connelly – Chasing The Dime
James Sallis
– Drive
Liz Thomas –
Dust Of Life
David Guterson
– The Country Ahead Of Us The Country Behind Us
Brand –
funnier on TV than the written page.
Connelly – a
re-read as I found it amongst the clutter. Not one of his better earlier ones.
Liz Thomas –
interesting account of a nurse/charity worker with a conscience who upped sticks
and headed to Saigon in the early 70’s moved by the plight of the street kids
living in a war zone.
JLB – similar
to Ellroy insofar as I’m reading him out of a sense of duty rather than because
of any continued enjoyment from his too-long-stale series. An addiction I’ll be
curing myself of soon......after I read the next one!
Sallis was
short, sharp and dark – really enjoyable. There’s also a follow-up book and a
film of this one that I need to track down.
Book of the
month though Harris’s Ghost.......even if I did slightly spoil it for myself by
watching the film first!
Blurb........
Britain's former prime minister is holed up in a remote, ocean-front house in America, struggling to finish his memoirs, when his long-term assistant drowns. A professional ghostwriter is sent out to rescue the project - a man more used to working with fading rock stars and minor celebrities than ex-world leaders. The ghost soon discovers that his distinguished new client has secrets in his past that are returning to haunt him - secrets with the power to kill.
Robert Harris is once again at his gripping best
with the most controversial new thriller of the decade.