Because I know there are dozens, even hundreds, of mysteries
out there that I would like if I could just find them, sometimes I go to the
library and select books at random by five authors unfamiliar to me. The
outcome is what you might expect: several books are returned after I read a few
chapters, some I finish with no particular desire to read more by the author,
and a few are gems. I found the mysteries of Parker Bilal that way; they are
one of my great finds of 2017.
Jamal Mahjoub published several critically acclaimed novels
before he began writing about Makana, an exiled Sudanese police investigator,
under the name Parker Bilal. Set in Cairo in the early part of the 21st
century, these books, six so far, reflect the political turmoil and religious tensions
of the Middle East as they affect the day-to-day lives of ordinary people. For
those of us who, thankfully, only know about these affairs as they are reported
in news outlets, this very different perspective is illuminating.
Dogstar Rising (Bloomsbury, 2013) is the second Makana. (I read
The
Burning Gates, Makana #4, earlier this year.) This episode takes place
in late summer 2001, as a serial killer victimizes street boys and a mysterious
figure that many believe to be an angel appears on roofs throughout the city,
both causing religious zealotry, always simmering, to approach an outright boil.
The son of an old friend asks Makana, now acting as an unlicensed private
investigator, to help the owner of a travel agency who has received threatening
letters, a seemingly simple task that is complicated when a murder takes place
outside the office and the local police and the state intelligence detectives want
to know what Makana is doing. While staying out of their way, he stumbles
across clues to the serial killer and crosses paths with an arms dealer.
An engrossing plot with multiple threads and more characters
than I could easily keep track of. Perhaps it is just me but Makana seems to
get beaten up far too often to bounce back as easily as he does. However, Mahjoub
writes beautifully. His use of imagery is lyrical and imbues the mundane with a
bit of magic. Water spraying from a hose resembles a silvery peacock tail, cats
walk like queens, the moon is a copper penny tossed into the air. The ending
paragraphs of the book are nothing less than inspired.
Part political thriller, part detective fiction, these
stories defy easy categorization but they make exceptional reading. Highly
recommended.
·
Hardcover: 400 pages
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Publisher: Bloomsbury USA; 1st edition (February 19, 2013)
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Language: English
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ISBN-10: 1608198715
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ISBN-13: 978-1608198719
Aubrey Hamilton © 2017
Aubrey Hamilton is a former
librarian who works on Federal IT projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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