I continued my
armchair travels a couple of weeks ago by reading Icarus (Atlantic
Monthly Press, 2015) by South African author Deon Meyer, who has been on my
reading list for awhile. Ernst Richter was the inventor and CEO of the
controversial South African firm Alibi, an organization that arranged, for a
fee, a concrete cover-up for matrimonial cheaters. Hotel receipts and
conference credentials could be produced that were indistinguishable from the
originals, and telephone calls supposedly from managers requesting the presence
of the marital double-dealer at the office could be made at times specified.
Rock-solid anonymity of the firm’s clients was of course guaranteed. Richter and
his company were media darlings so his disappearance was a shock to everyone
who knew him. The discovery of his body three weeks later in a sandy grave struck
a seismic blow to his company and his reputation.
Assigned to
the case is alcoholic Detective Captain Benny Griessel of the Directorate of
Priority Crime Investigations, Violent Crimes Group, in Capetown, South Africa,
who is on the wagon but still struggling hard with sobriety. The Violent Crimes
Group has a new commander and everyone is anxious to make a good impression
while they take the Major’s measure, especially Griessel’s partner Cupido
Vaughan who has been given the task as team leader of the investigation.
Alternating
chapters with those describing the work of the police to discover Richter’s
killer is a lengthy description of one family’s history in South African
winemaking. It is a fascinating discussion, particularly because South Africa
is not one of the countries I associate with wine making. However interesting
the story is, its purpose is not immediately clear as it does not connect to
the crime until quite late in the book but connect it does in a dramatic
fashion.
This is the
fifth book in Meyer’s series about Griessel and his colleagues. It received a
starred review from Publishers Weekly, and it was a finalist for the 2016 CWA
International Dagger Award and the 2016 Nielsen Booksellers’ Choice Award. It
was named a Best Book of the Year by the Boston Globe and Financial
Times.
·
Hardcover: 352 pages
·
Publisher: Atlantic
Monthly Press; Translation edition (October 6, 2015)
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 0802124003
·
ISBN-13: 978-0802124005
Aubrey Hamilton ©2019
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It
projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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