George V. Reilly

Review: Oblivion

Title: Oblivion
Author: Peter Abrahams
Rating: ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Harper Torch
Copyright: 2005
Pages: 362
Keywords: suspense
Reading period: 11–13 September, 2008

Two days into his in­ves­ti­ga­tion of a missing teenage girl, PI Nick Petrov has a seizure that wipes out his recent memories. As he tries to rediscover what it was he was doing, he comes to realize that this case is somehow connected to his most famous case, ten years before.

The brain-damaged detective struggling through a once-easy in­ves­ti­ga­tion made for an in­ter­est­ing story. The plot moves briskly, but by the end has devolved into total im­prob­a­bil­i­ty with gaping holes.

Consider my creduli­ty—and char­i­ty—s­trained.

Review: Mortal Causes

Title: Mortal Causes
Author: Ian Rankin
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Orion
Copyright: 1994
Pages: 320
Keywords: crime, fiction
Reading period: 9–11 September, 2008

(An earlier Rebus book than The Hanging Garden or The Naming of the Dead.)

A brutally murdered man has ties to Protestant loyalist para­mil­i­taries in Northern Ireland. He also happens to be the un­ac­knowl­edged son of Rebus’s old nemesis, Big Ger Cafferty, who wants revenge. Never a team player, Rebus goes his own way, solving the case against the backdrop of the Edinburgh Fringe Festival and a socially deprived housing scheme.

Review: Blind to the Bones

Title: Blind to the Bones
Author: Stephen Booth
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Bantam
Copyright: 2003
Pages: 581
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 27 August–6 September, 2008

Later in the series of Cooper-Fry books than Dancing with the Virgins. Detective Constable Ben Cooper's working re­la­tion­ship with Det. Sgt. Diane Fry has improved somewhat, with Fry now according Cooper a modicum of wary respect.

They find themselves separately in­ves­ti­gat­ing two crimes in the remote Derbyshire village of Withens: the dis­ap­pear­ance of a teenage girl two years ago and the recent murder of a young man. At the heart of local matters are the extended Oxley fam­i­ly—­sus­pi­cious, clannish, and looked down upon—and Ben must find out what they continue.

Review: Bleed Out

Title: Bleed Out
Author: Joan Brady
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Pocket Star Books
Copyright: 2005
Pages: 523
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 7–8 September, 2008

Twenty years ago, David Marion, then a near-illiterate teenager, was sent to prison for life for the murder of two grown men. Hugh Freyl, a rich, blind lawyer, spots something ex­tra­or­di­nary in him, and spends years educating him behind bars, then securing his release. Now, Freyl has been brutally murdered and David tracks down the killer.

Brady weaves together two stories, Hugh's narrative of the last twenty years and David's in­ves­ti­ga­tion, dove­tail­ing them neatly. David is intense and paranoid, al­ter­nate­ly charming and terrifying those he comes in contact with.

The book is continue.

Review: JavaScript: The Good Parts

Title: JavaScript: The Good Parts
Author: Douglas Crockford
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: O'Reilly
Copyright: 2008
Pages: 153
Keywords: pro­gram­ming, javascript
Reading period: 27 May–15 June, 2008

Crockford is one of the world's leading JavaScript experts. In this slim volume, he explores the features of the core language, both the good parts and the warts.

JavaScript has been redeemed since 2005 with the explosive pro­lif­er­a­tion of Ajax websites. Long regarded as a toy language, suitable for little more than generating popups, we have come to learn that in the hands of experts like John Resig (of jQuery fame), JavaScript can be a powerful, expressive language. Anonymous functions, duck typing, and dynamic objects are all good continue.

Review: Somebody Else

Title: Somebody Else
Author: Reggie Nadelson
Rating: ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Faber and Faber
Copyright: 2003
Pages: 274
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 16–28 August, 2008

Betsy Thornhill had a face lift. It worked so well that she now passes for her mid-thirties, instead of 51. After decades in London, she moves back to Manhattan a few months after 9/11. Within days, a man who came on to her is dead, and she's the main suspect.

I didn't like this book or Betsy. I couldn't believe that all the male characters would throw themselves at her—she looks great, but her per­son­al­i­ty and confidence are lacking. Im­plau­si­bly, Betsy fails to think about her estranged daughter, Franny, for 160 pages, despite the continue.

Review: Thirteenth Night

Title: Thirteenth Night
Author: Alan Gordon
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: St. Martin's Minotaur
Copyright: 1999
Pages: 259
Keywords: mystery, historical
Reading period: 16–17 August, 2008

We saw Shake­speare in the Park's production of Twelfth Night at Seward Park last week, which prompted me to re-read this book.

Fifteen years ago, Theophilos, an agent of the Fool's Guild, then working in his guise as Feste the Jester, initiated the events roughly described in Shake­speare's play, and foiled Saladin's agent, Malvolio. Now the duke of Orsino is dead under suspicious cir­cum­stances, and Theo goes back, disguised as a German merchant.

Theo is witty, quick-witted, and po­lit­i­cal­ly astute, making for an engaging narrator of this medieval mystery.

Review: Black Arrow

Title: Black Arrow
Author: I.J. Parker
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Penguin
Copyright: 2006
Pages: 368
Keywords: mystery, historical
Reading period: 9–16 August, 2008

Sugawara Akitada has been appointed as the governor of a remote northern province in feudal Japan. Aided only by a handful of retainers, he is beset by his own doubts and hostile locals. Winter is closing in and he must exert his fragile authority to rein in a mutinous baron, while also in­ves­ti­gat­ing some mysterious deaths and righting old wrongs.

Parker evokes the spare, stark beauty of Japan, in a well-written historical mystery.

Review: The Daughter of Time

Title: The Daughter of Time
Author: Josephine Tey
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Scribner
Copyright: 1951
Pages: 207
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 6–9 August, 2008

King Richard III, hunchback, last of the Plante­genets, one of Shake­speare's blackest villains, and long decried as the murderer of Princes in the Tower. But did he really murder his nephews to cement his hold on his throne?

Inspector Grant, confined to a hospital bed, is given a portrait of Richard III, and finds that he cannot believe that this was the face of a cold-blooded villain. Aided by a young historial researcher, he conducts an inquiry from his bed, and makes a convincing case that another was the murderer.

More at continue.

Review: Dead to the World

Title: Dead to the World (Sookie Stackhouse #4)
Author: Charlaine Harris
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Ace
Copyright: 2004
Pages: 291
Keywords: mystery, vampire, romance
Reading period: 5–6 August, 2008

Sequel to Club Dead.

A coven of evil, powerful witches has moved into the area, and are causing havoc amongst the local su­per­nat­u­rals. The local vampire boss has been bespelled and lost his memory, and Sookie has to look after him. He's very attractive and she's on the rebound. And her brother has gone missing.

Sookie is a nice gal, struggling with a disability -- telepathy causes more trouble than it solves -- and trying to survive on the edges of the dangerous world of continue.

Previous » « Next