Showing posts with label Aubrey Hamiiton Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aubrey Hamiiton Reviews. Show all posts

Monday, October 21, 2019

Aubrey Hamilton Reviews: The Colours of Murder by Ali Carter


The Colours of Murder by Ali Carter (Oneworld Publications, June 2019) is the follow-up appearance of Susie Mahl, after her introduction in A Brush with Death (2018). Susie is an artist whose work appears in the Tate Art Gallery and who also accepts commissions for pet portraits. She is in Norfolk for a couple of weeks, doing the ground work for six drawings of racehorses. Her mother has told a cousin with connections in the area that Susie is visiting, and the cousin’s connections get her a last-minute invitation to join the weekend house party of the Honourable Archibald Cooke Wellingham. Susie knows no one in this group of upper-crust folks but she accepts the invitation anyway.

After a long evening of drinking a burglar alarm wakens the household in the early hours of the next day, and that’s when the other outsider in the party, American Hailey Dune, is discovered dead. The police decide the death is due to natural causes but Susie’s intuition tells her otherwise. She continues to ask questions and report her findings to the detective inspector in charge, who displays great patience with her. A would-be boyfriend is not as tolerant.

P.G. Wodehouse echoes faintly throughout this book. I am not sure if it’s the almost too silly to be real names, the flippant prose, the over-the-top mannerisms of the gentry, or a combination thereof, but after a few pages I would not have been surprised to see Bertie Wooster walk in.

This story is more of a cozy mystery than I usually read these days, and I found the lack of adherence to standard police procedure hard to work through. The in-depth look at country house parties and horse racing was interesting, and of course there were dogs, horses, and a nice cat to attract my attention.

Reviews suggest the previous book is a stronger story than this one. Both are recommended for cozy readers who are looking for a new series that is a bit different.

 


·         Paperback: 320 pages
·         Publisher: Oneworld Publications (June 11, 2019)
·         Language: English
·         ISBN-10: 1786075601
·         ISBN-13: 978-1786075604


Aubrey Hamilton ©2019

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.

Monday, September 02, 2019

Aubrey Hamilton Reviews: The Defense by Steve Cavanagh


Steve Cavanagh’s fourth book about Eddie Flynn won the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year in July 2019 amidst formidable competition, which says just how good a read it is. Since I hadn’t encountered Eddie previously, I started at the beginning with The Defense (Flatiron Books, 2016) and found it an excellent legal thriller as well as a witty story of a resourceful con man trying to go straight and giving up when a law-abiding life couldn’t protect his family.
Eddie Flynn is a former grifter who learned the trade from his father. He abandoned a lucrative life running scams to attend law school and lead an average life. After a defense case gone horribly off the rails, he sold his share of his law practice and hit the sauce far too hard, losing his wife and daughter in the process. One morning awhile after Eddie began his slow climb back to sobriety, a member of the Russian mafia kidnaps him for a meeting with his chief, who is out on bail before his trial for homicide. The mafia chief Volchek explains to Eddie that he is holding Eddie’s daughter hostage until Eddie gets Volchek acquitted by killing the main witness against him.
In a desperate bid to save his daughter and stay out of jail himself, Eddie resurrects all of his rusty swindler’s tricks to outsmart the Russian gangsters as well as uses his considerable legal expertise to tap dance his way through a murder trial he’s had no time to prepare for. When it becomes clear the Russians have members of law enforcement on their payroll and no assistance can be expected from that quarter, Eddie has no choice but to call on the people he knew in his other life for help. They include his childhood friend who is now the leader of an Italian crime family, with his own agenda where the Russians are concerned.
An original and gripping plot with a host of first-rate characters. The suspense is expertly developed, resulting in some harrowing scenes, for instance, where Eddie scales the front of the old and crumbling courthouse building. Eddie Flynn is an exceptionally fine addition to the ranks of fictional lawyers, and I am pleased to make his acquaintance. 
Shortlisted for the Ian Fleming Steel Dagger Award for Thriller of the Year.
Publishers Weekly starred review
·         Hardcover: 320 pages
·         Publisher: Flatiron Books; 1st edition (May 3, 2016)
·         Language: English
·         ISBN-10: 1250082250
·         ISBN-13: 978-1250082251




Aubrey Hamilton ©2019

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.