Tag Archives: mysteries

Lupton Praise Well Deserved

I select large print for the Library. Space is limited, so every purchase is carefully considered. When Rosamund Lupton‘s debut novel Sister was published in large print I wondered if I should buy it for SCPL’s collection. The reviews were glowing on both sides of  the Atlantic, but what was most telling was the circulation statistics on our regular print copies of Sister. All of the copies were checked out and had circulated so well that I decided to buy Sister for the large print collection.

That was a year ago. Since then the Library has purchased Lupton’s Afterwards in regular and large print, again due to the positive reviews and strong circulation. A month ago I was browsing emediaLibrary for an available ebook and stumbled on Afterwards. I checked it out, happy I could read Lupton and decide for myself if her novels are as fabulous as the reviewers make them out to be.

“Wow” just does not begin to describe Afterwards. It’s part mystery, part police procedural, part domestic fiction–I loved this suspense-filled novel. For me, it delivered all the goods–character, plot, suspense, and a mystery with twists and turns. The protagonist and narrator is Grace. She is unconscious, as is her daughter, Jenny, both victims of arson at her son’s school. Grace and her daughter are visible, but only to each other. They can communicate with each other, but no one else. Grace relates what she observes of the investigation into the arson and along the way she learns about her husband, son, and daughter, and about herself. The mystery, of course, is solved after we happily chase some red herrings. Suspense is high as someone is still trying to take Jenny’s life.

I highly recommended Afterwards for its suspense, mystery, police procedural, character and plot development. Actually, I think it would be hard to find something not to like about it.

Right now I am listening to the audiobook edition of Sister, read by Juanita McMahon. This novel also straddles genres: murder mystery, psychological thriller, medical thriller, domestic fiction. Beatrice is our narrator, relating to the reader, as well as her younger sister Tess, the events surrounding Tess’ death and subsequent investigation. Bee, who had been living and working in New York, flew to London when her mother reported Tess missing. When the police find Tess dead and conclude it is by her hand, Bee refuses to believe it and investigates herself. The reader is drawn into the suspense from the very first page.

I can hardly wait for Lupton’s next novel. My excitement about her books reminds me of the way I felt about Jodi Picoult when I first discovered her. Part of me wonders if men would enjoy Lupton’s novels as much as women. I think so, or at least I hope men who enjoy suspense and mystery will give her books a try.

 

Hello, Old Friends!

It is a sad truth that – as much as we would like to – the Library simply can’t keep a copy of every wonderful book ever published.  Considerations such as shelf space and budget certainly play a role, but so does the availability of a book (i.e. if it goes out of print) and the “popularity” of a writer.  The latter is particularly hard to take when a once favorite author gets left behind in the wake of shiny new titles and changes in publishing trends.

St. Charles Public Library IL - A May Lay Dead by Ngaio MarshSo imagine my happiness to have two old favorites back on our shelves!  The first is A Man Lay Dead by Ngaio Marsh, the book that kicks off the series featuring gentleman detective Roderick Alleyn.  These days, some may be more familiar with her detective from the “Inspector Alleyn” miniseries (available on DVD at the Library) which are based on Marsh’s books. Marsh is one of the classic writers from the “Golden Age” of British detective fiction (think Agatha Christie and Dorothy Sayers) and the title was reissued by the funky Felony & Mayhem Press.

St. Charles Public Library IL - The King Must Die by Mary RenaultThe second old friend to return is The King Must Die by Mary Renault. This rich novel is a plausible recreation of what might have really happened to inspire the myth of Theseus (particularly the legend of the Minotaur).  I remember staying up late at night to finish it, and then years later buying my own copies of all Mary Renault’s titles so I can enjoy them whenever I want to.  (They fall into my “dangerous to dust” category of books, i.e. it’s a challenge for me to dust them without wanting to immediately stop the housework and start rereading them all over again!)  I think Renault will appeal to anyone who enjoys historical novels with rich characterization, adventure and an evocative sense of place.

Awesome Audios

Something about summer makes me want to make sure I am never without a good book – to read at home or to listen to in the car. I found some audiobooks I highly recommend.

St. Charles Public Library IL - Train Dreams Audiobook by Denis JohnsonDenis Johnson’s Train Dreams (AUDIO BOOK FIC JOH) is short at just 2.5 hours, but what an extraordinary tale it tells. Robert Granier is an ordinary man making a living in the northwestern U.S. during the first half of the 20th century. He is a logger, a bridge builder and a freight man. Through his eyes we see the beauty and harshness of the American West and hear the stories of the common folk he encounters. Audie Award winner Will Patton narrates with a variety of voices and inflection and my next audio selection will probably be narrated by him as well.

St. Charles Public Library - Blind Fury Audiobook by Lynda La PlanteFor suspense, it would be hard to top Blind Fury by Lynda La Plante (AUDIO BOOK FIC LAP), read by Kim Hicks. Detective Inspector Anna Travis is on the team investigating the killings of young, unidentified women. The police know there is a serial killer at large but are hard pressed for clues. When convicted serial murderer Cameron Welsh offers to help profile the killer, and insists he speak with Anna, her superiors press her to speak with him.

As is typical of La Plante’s writing, there is dogged police work interwoven with relentless suspense. Just the ticket for fans of contemporary British mysteries. Reader Kim Hicks does a fine job on all characters, but especially Anna, who is determined to excel in the man’s world she has chosen and forced to endure conversation with the repulsive Welsh.

St. Charles Public Library IL - Prague Fatale Audiobook by Philip KerrPrague Fatale (AUDIO BOOK FIC KER) is the 8th mystery in Philip Kerr’s Bernie Gunther series. It’s 1941 Berlin. Bernie is suicidal, overwhelmed by the horrors he experienced on the eastern front, when he is summoned to Prague to serve as bodyguard to Reichsprotector Reinhard Heydrich. When one of Heydrich’s adjutants is found murdered, Bernie investigates. Bernie’s caustic sense of humor, hatred for Nazis and his aggressive questioning of his superiors add to the tension. Paul Hecht narrates with just the right mix of sardonic commentary and pathos.

Edgar Award Nominations

Check out some of this year’s fiction nominees for the 2012 Edgar Allan Poe Awards by the Mystery Writers of America:
DevotionofSuspectX.jpg
BEST NOVEL

The Ranger by Ace Atkins
From an acclaimed, award-winning author comes an
extraordinary new series about a real hero, and the real Deep South.
“With terrific, inflected characters, and a dark, subtle sense of place
and history, “The Ranger” is an exceptional novel.”–John Sandford.

Gone by Mo Hayder
A carjacking goes from bad to horrifying in
Hayder’s gripping fifth thriller featuring Bristol Det. Insp. Jack
Caffery and Sgt. Phoebe “Flea” Marley.

The Devotion of Suspect X by Keigo Higashino
1222.jpgOne of Japan’s best-selling crime novelists makes
his American debut in an atmospheric thriller about a desperate woman,
Yasuko, who, craving a peacefull life with her daughter, Misato, kills
her abusive lout of an ex-husband.

1222 by Anne Holt
From Norway’s bestselling crime writer comes a
suspenseful locked-room mystery set in an isolated hotel where guests
who are stranded during a monumental snowstorm begin turning up dead.

Field Gray by Phillip Kerr
Kerr’s seventh Bernie Gunther thriller, starring
the cop turned PI in 1930s Germany who landed in Argentina and then Cuba
after the war, finally answers in full the question that has been
hovering around the edges of the series all along: What did you do
during the war, Bernie?

BEST FIRST NOVEL BY AN AMERICAN AUTHOR

LasttoFold.jpg

Red on Red by Edward Conlon
NYPD detective Conlon follows up his first-class
memoir, Blue Blood, with this superb first novel. Set in upper
Manhattan’s Dominican-dominated Washington Heights, it is a police
procedural with a potent mix of strong story line, police jargon, crisp
dialog, black humor, bleakness, gangs, drugs, shootings, murders, and
suicide, with complicated romances thrown in.

Last to Fold by David Duffy
Duffy’s promising debut introduces Turbo Vlost, a
gulag survivor who later worked as an undercover man for the KGB until
the Soviet Union’s breakup. Now living in New York City, Vlost works at
finding things for people.

All Cry Chaos by Leonard Rosen
PurgatoryChasm.jpgThis startling novel opens on an aging Interpol
agent taking his heart medicine and thinking of retirement. But Henri
Poincare can’t resist one more case: a mathematician is killed in a
puzzling explosion in an Amsterdam hotel.

Bent Road by Lori Roy
Set in the mid ’60s, Roy’s outstanding debut melds strong characters and an engrossing plot with an evocative sense of place.

Purgatory Chasm by Steve Ulfelder
Ulfelder couples precise, evocative prose with an original private investigator in his compelling hard-boiled debut.

For a list of all nominees, please see their press release (pdf).

marlise