Xavier (Photo by Barry) |
As regular readers of Kevin's blog may have noticed,
I haven't sent him any book reviews for more than a year. (Reviews of mine
that've occasionally been posted are from the "archives.") The reason
is simple: I haven't written any new ones because I just haven't been in the
mood. Thus, and leaving you to look up the titles that may be of interest (go
through Kevin's Amazon link if you do), here are the books I've read so far
this year that I enjoyed--some with brief comments--and others I felt less
charitable about:
Goodnight, Irene
by James Scott Byrnside is a pretty good locked-room mystery introducing a new
detective and his Watson.
The Case of the Murdered Model
by Thomas B. Dewey is an early entry in the author's excellent series about
Chicago private eye Mac.
The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out
of the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson:
Allan Karlson is Sweden's answer to Forrest Gump in this seriocomic novel.
The Pot Thief Who Studied the Woman at
Otowi Crossing by J. Michael Orenduff
Six-Gun in Cheek
by Bill Pronzini
The Return of H*y*m*a*n K*a*p*l*a*n
by Leo Rosten: the sequel to the first book written by Rosten as Leonard Q.
Ross.
Ah, Treachery!
by Ross Thomas
Missing
by Jonathan Valin: the (so far, between now and original publication of) final
entry in the excellent Harry Stoner series that Valin stopped writing when he chose
to review high-end stereo equipment and related matters. (I say this as a
refugee from the retail audio/video business who used to read the magazines he
wrote for.)
Just so-so:
The Eyre Affair
by Jasper Fforde: 1st book in the Thursday Next literary fantasy series.
Cleverly done, I readily admit, but not the kind of thing that generally grabs
me. (And I have another title in the series I may get to one of these years.)
The pits:
The Poisoned Chocolates Case
by Anthony Berkeley. I was on the verge of quitting this "classic"
Golden Age whodunit when a friend urged me to keep at it. I shouldn't have
listened. It's ploddingly slow and dull.
The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton. This one tries desperately to take a clever approach to the detective story, but for this reader it was a slog full of confused lack of characterization because of the way its premise handles that crucial element, and because ultimately I just wanted the damn thing to end.
Barry Ergang ©2011, 2021
Some of Derringer Award-winning author’s Barry
Ergang’s work is available at Smashwords and Amazon.
For the month of July, a number of Barry’s titles at Smashwords are marked down
as he participates in the annual Smashwords Summer Sale.
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