George V. Reilly

Review: Hardcase

Title: Hardcase
Author: Dan Simmons
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: St. Martin's/Minotaur
Copyright: 2003
Pages: 263
Keywords: crime, thriller, noir
Reading period: 26 May, 2015

Joe Kurtz is a hardboiled ex-PI who just spent eleven years in Attica for killing the men who killed his partner. He's out now, in­ves­ti­gat­ing the dis­ap­pear­ance of a mob accountant, and he quickly makes new enemies. Mayhem ensues.

Review: Bad Boy

Title: Bad Boy
Author: Peter Robinson
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Harper
Copyright: 2010
Pages: 387
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 10–12 May, 2015

A woman calls at a Yorkshire police station to talk to her friend, Detective Inspector Alan Banks, about the gun she found in her daughter's bedroom. Banks is out of the country, however. An un­reg­is­tered gun is a serious offence under British law and the police take it very seriously. The daughter's friend—Banks' own daughter, Tracy—goes to warn the owner, and he goes on the run with Tracy. She's willing at first then realizes that she's in way over her head with this bad boy.

Another good entry in Robinson's long-running continue.

Review: A Midwinter Murder

Title: A Midwinter Murder
Author: Peter Tonkin
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Endeavour Press
Copyright: 2003
Pages: 251
Keywords: historical mystery
Reading period: 10–13 May, 2015

Tom Musgrave, sword master and master of logic, is called away from the Eliz­a­bethan court to the Scottish borders, where his brother has been found dead­—ap­par­ent­ly frozen in terror by the sight of a hellhound. Musgrave uncovers a nest of intrigue and murder when he returns home to in­ves­ti­gate.

Tonkin has written a good historical mystery, though I found the pro­ta­gan­ist's ra­ti­o­ci­na­tive powers improbable.

Review: In Cold Blood

Title: In Cold Blood
Author: Truman Capote
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Vintage
Copyright: 1965
Pages: 343
Keywords: true crime
Reading period: 3–8 May, 2015

In Cold Blood, Truman Capote's best­selling non-fiction novel, describes the 1959 murder of a wealthy farmer and his family, which terrorized Kansas; the in­ves­ti­ga­tion by the Kansas Bureau of In­ves­ti­ga­tion; the arrest six weeks later of two parolees, Dick Hickock and Perry Smith; and the lives and deaths of Hickock and Smith. Smith was a ne'er-do-well, brought up by footloose alcoholic parents, with two siblings dead of suicide, while Hickock had been brought up in a good home.

Capote “recre­at­ed” the events of the Clutter murder and, in­ci­den­tal­ly, helped create the genre continue.

Review: Skin Game

Title: Skin Game
Author: Jim Butcher
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Roc
Copyright: 2014
Pages: 600
Keywords: urban fantasy
Reading period: 5–7 May, 2015

Fifteenth book in the Dresden Files series of urban fantasies.

Harry Dresden is Chicago's only pro­fes­sion­al wizard and the Winter Knight to Queen Mab. Mab compels him to team up with one of his old enemies to rob an im­preg­nable vault, a vault that belongs to Hades, lord of the Underworld. Harry distrusts Nicode­mus—right­ful­ly, as Nicodemus turns on him. But Harry can stab backs too.

A solid entry in this long running series. Harry is in­creas­ing­ly careworn but he still cracks wise, en­ter­tain­ing the readers if not his an­tag­o­nists.

Review: The Sherlockian

Title: The Sher­lock­ian
Author: Graham Moore
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Twelve
Copyright: 2010
Pages: 346
Keywords: historical mystery
Reading period: 27 April–May 2, 2015

Two mysteries are in­ter­twined in this novel. In the present day, a long-lost diary of Arthur Conan Doyle's from 1900 has apparently been re­dis­cov­ered, but the finder has been murdered, while in 1900, Doyle and Bram Stoker in­ves­ti­gate the murder of several young women.

The two mysteries are artfully in­ter­twined and the plots move along nicely. I was irritated by the author's ignorance of Victorian England—"It was a Victorian-era shilling, worth only five pennies in its day" (twelve, dammit, until dec­i­mal­i­sa­tion in 1971)—and weak grasp of ACD's style.

Review: The Crocodile Bird

Title: The Crocodile Bird
Author: Ruth Rendell
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Dell
Copyright: 1994
Pages: 384
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 4 April–4 May, 2015

Liza lives with her reclusive mother, Eve, in the gatehouse of Shrove, a remote English country house. Liza has never been to school and has been kept apart from the world. When Eve is about to arrested for murder, she sends Liza away to a friend in London. Instead Liza runs off with the boyfriend she had met recently. She spends much of the book, like Scheherazade, telling the story of her life to Sean, as she gradually learns to live in the world.

The story may be quiet and continue.

Review: Dreams Underfoot

Title: Dreams Underfoot
Author: Charles de Lint
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Tor
Copyright: 1993
Pages: 416
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 19–26 April, 2015

A collection of related short stories, all taking place in the city of Newford, which might be a little closer to other worlds than most places.

De Lint writes haunting tales of love and music and wishes being granted at a cost.

Review: The Reckoning

Title: The Reckoning
Author: Rennie Airth
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Penguin
Copyright: 2014
Pages: 320
Keywords: historical mystery
Reading period: 15–18 April, 2015

A murder in Sussex bears sim­i­lar­i­ties to another recent murder in Scotland, but what could the link between the two men be? One of the victims left a half-written letter addressed to John Madden, who is now retired from Scotland Yard. Soon there are more victims and Madden and the police struggle to find the killer.

Airth evokes both the First and Second World Wars, exploring the damage done to those who survived and the injustices visited upon some who did not.

Review: The Innocent

Title: The Innocent
Author: Ian McEwen
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Anchor Books
Copyright: 1989
Pages: 270
Keywords: historical fiction
Reading period: 2–4 May, 2015

Operation Gold was one of the CIA's great exploits of the Cold War: a tunnel running from West Berlin into the Russian sector to tap into the Soviet com­mu­ni­ca­tion lines. It was believed to be a great success when the Russians broke into the tunnel in 1956. Later it was discovered that George Blake, the MI6 traitor, had betrayed the tunnel from the beginning.

Leonard Marnham is a British Post Office engineer who is sent to Berlin to help the Americans. A naive 25-year-old virgin who lives at continue.

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