George V. Reilly

Review: The Snowman

Title: The Snowman
Author: Jo Nesbø
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Vintage Crime/Black Lizard
Copyright: 2007
Pages: 500
Keywords: crime, mystery
Reading period: 5–10 March, 2015

Every year when the snow first arrives in Norway, a woman disappears and there's a snowman in the vicinity. No one's noticed the pattern until now. Harry Hole, the alcoholic detective inspector, starts seeking the links between the cases.

Nesbø's novels are gripping but over the top.

Review: Chinese Cooking for Diamond Thieves

Title: Chinese Cooking for Diamond Thieves
Author: Dave Lowry
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Mariner
Copyright: 2014
Pages: 288
Keywords: crime, cooking, humor
Reading period: 26 February–7 March, 2015

Tucker may be a white guy but he's been cooking Chinese food since he was a child, and he's good at it—good enough to get a job at a Chinese restaurant as a cook. Then there's Corinne, trying to avoid the Chinese gangsters who are convinced she has their diamonds.

Lowry shows a light touch in this quirky and en­ter­tain­ing boy-meets-girl story.

Review: A Death in Summer

Title: A Death in Summer
Author: Benjamin Black
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Picador
Copyright: 2011
Pages: 275
Keywords: mystery, historical, Ireland
Reading period: 1–5 March, 2015

An Irish newspaper magnate has been found with his head blown off by a shotgun. Quirke, the pathol­o­gist, looks into it and realizes that it's not suicide but murder. As he digs deeper, he finds secrets that the wealthy elite of 1950s Dublin do not want revealed, and he finds himself drawn to the dead man's French widow.

Benjamin Black (aka John Banville) deftly recreates 1950s Ireland through the eyes of Quirke, who, though well placed, is more of an observer than an insider, and of continue.

Review: Revenger

Title: Revenger: a John Shake­speare Mystery
Author: Rory Clements
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Bantam
Copyright: 2010
Pages: 448
Keywords: mystery, history
Reading period: 10–25 February, 2015

It's 1592 and Elizabeth I has ruled England for nearly 35 years. The Virgin Queen has never named her heir, creating both un­cer­tain­ty and op­por­tu­ni­ty. John Shake­speare used to be an "in­tel­li­gencer" for the late Sir Francis Walsingham, Eliz­a­beth's spymaster. With reluctance, Shake­speare is drawn back into that life when the Earl of Essex insists upon com­mi­sion­ing him to find a woman who should be dead—a survivor of the lost Roanoke settlement has been sighted in London. Essex wants her as does his mysterious ally, a continue.

Review: Blood of Tyrants

Title: Blood of Tyrants
Author: Naomi Novik
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Del Rey
Copyright: 2013
Pages: 486
Keywords: alternate history, fantasy
Reading period: 22–24 February, 2015

Eighth and penul­ti­mate book in the Temeraire series, which began with His Majesty's Dragon. It's a delightful take on the Napoleonic wars with in­tel­li­gent dragons.

The book opens with William Laurence awaking ship­wrecked and amnesiac on the shores of Japan, where European foreigners are strictly forbidden. His dragon Temeraire fran­ti­cal­ly seeks him, while the rest of the crew think him dead. After being reunited in Nagasaki, they travel on to the Chinese court in Peking and enlist the help of the emperor's dragons in fighting Napoleon, who continue.

Review: River of Gods

Title: River of Gods
Author: Ian McDonald
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Pyr
Copyright: 2004
Pages: 599
Keywords: sf
Reading period: February 14–23, 2015

India has split apart by 2047, into a dozen competing states desperate for the life-giving monsoon rains. New castes have appeared, as have the new gender of nutes. Aeais (artificial in­tel­li­gences) abound but are strictly proscribed from attaining full sentience. And an asteroid with seven-billion-year-old images of now-living people has been discovered.

McDonald draws together nine people from different walks of life, weaving their tales into one tapestry. India, ancient yet up-to-the-minute, is the vibrant backdrop for this explosion of ideas.

Review: Last Train to Paradise

Title: Last Train to Paradise: Henry Flagler and the Spec­tac­u­lar Rise and Fall of the Railroad that Crossed an Ocean
Author: Les Standiford
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Broadway Books
Copyright: 2002
Pages: 274
Keywords: history, Florida, rail
Reading period: 24–24 February, 2015

Three years ago, we visited our friends Louise and Melissa in South Florida, and we drove down Highway 1 through the Florida Keys to Key West—the south­ern­most city in the United States. Recently, they sent me a copy of this book.

Henry Flagler was well-known in his own time as one of the Robber Barons of the Golden Age. He founded Standard Oil with John D. Rock­e­feller and became fabulously continue.

Review: Cry Father

Title: Cry Father
Author: Benjamin Whitmer
Rating: ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Gallery Books
Copyright: 2014
Pages: 320
Keywords: thug lit
Reading period: late Jan­u­ary–ear­ly February, 2015

Patterson Wells lives dan­ger­ous­ly, clearing fallen trees in hurricane season. Since the death of his young son a few years ago, he's been lost in a self-de­struc­tive fog. His life becomes entangled with that of his neighbor's grown son, Junior, another lost soul. Wells and Junior bond after a fashion, as their lives spiral further out of control, with drug deals gone bad, drunken sprees, and murders.

Fas­ci­nat­ing in a grim can't-look-away-from-the-trainwreck fashion. Whitmer writes lyrically about broken lives and disposable people.

Review: Blood Eye

Title: Blood Eye
Author: Giles Kristian
Rating: ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Bantam
Copyright: 2012
Pages: 448
Keywords: history
Reading period: early February, 2015

When the Norse raiders arrive in the English village, Raven, the young outsider who was found two years before with no memory, realizes that he speaks their language. He is drawn to them and he joins them in their quest for glory, plunder, and battle.

After a slow start, the plot moves along with enough fighting to hold one's interest. Aside from Raven, the characters are poorly drawn, with little to dis­tin­guish or motivate them.

Review: Traitor's Blade

Title: Traitor's Blade
Author: Sebastien de Castell
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Jo Fletcher Books
Copyright: 2014
Pages: 384
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: late January, 2015

Five years ago, the Greatcoats were the lawgivers of Tristia. And then the good king was deposed by the dukes and the Greatcoats were broken up. Now despised, only a few are left, taking work as caravan guards and sellswords. Falcio, the former First Cantor, finally starts to care again, as he is sucked into the dukes' intrigues.

Traitor's Blade starts out light-hearted and joky, growing darker and more passionate as Falcio opens himself up and re­dis­cov­ers his honor. De Castell is a fine sto­ry­teller and the continue.

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