The New Iberia Blues: A Dave Robicheaux Novel by James Lee Burke --- 448 pages including acknowledgements.
James Lee Burke is an acknowledged master, who writes complex and compelling mysteries set in the dying wetlands of Louisiana, and his way with words is often compared to Faulkner. This, the 22nd novel in his Dave Robicheaux series, moves like a dream verging on nightmare as Dave laments the corruption eating away at the land and the people in New Iberia Parish and beyond.
Dave doesn't know many success stories, but Desmond Cormier’s rags-to-riches tale is a rare exception. Dave first ran across Desmond as a scrawny street kid living rough in New Orleans, dreaming of Hollywood and a career in the movies.
Now, 25 years later, Robicheaux arrives at Cormier’s Cypremort Point estate. Desmond Cormier is the next big Hollywood director, with a Golden Globe Award and an Academy Award nomination. Cormier's come back to Louisiana to shoot his new film, which everyone involved is convinced will be a masterpiece, comparable to John Ford's iconic My Darling Clementine (1946). But Dave isn't there to welcome the Prodigal Son home.
Dave and a young deputy called Sean McClain have discovered the body of a young woman who’s been crucified and dropped into the bay. She was found floating off Cypremont Point. Cormier and his house guest, Antoine Butterworth claim complete ignorance, but Dave is suspicious enough to do some digging and discover Butterworth's unsavory reputation in California.
The dead woman was a volunteer with the Innocence Project, doing preliminary interviews with death row prison inmates. She was adopted as a baby by a local black minister and his wife. Her adoptive mother is deceased, and her adoptive father is devastated by his daughter's murder.
Then more murders occur, each of them somehow associated with cards from the tarot. The murderer is making some point, but it's hard to see how the victims are linked other than the tarot connection and the increasing violence of their deaths.
Suspects include not just Cormier and Butterworth, and Lou Wexler, the producer of Cormier's film (who's making a play for Dave's daughter Alafair); but an escaped Texas death row inmate, Hugo Tillinger, who's been spotted in the area; a psychopathic serial killer, Smiley Wimple (who has crossed Dave's path before); and a corrupt sheriff's deputy, Axel Devereaux. As always, Dave's former partner, Clete Purcel (now a private investigator) and his daughter Alafair, get involved in the investigation, putting themselves at risk too.
And then there's Bailey Ribbons, a former school teacher now a sheriff's deputy, who's partnered with Dave. She's beautiful and vulnerable and much too young for Dave, but she doesn't think so.
James Lee Burke was born in Houston, Texas, but spent most of his childhood on the Texas-Louisiana Gulf Coast. He attended the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and the University of Missouri, receiving a BA and MA in English Literature from Mizzou.
At various times he worked as a truck driver for the U.S. Forest Service, as a newspaper reporter, as a social worker on Skid Row, Los Angeles, as a land surveyor in Colorado, in the Louisiana State unemployment system, and in the Job Corps in the Daniel Boone National Forest in Eastern Kentucky. He taught at five different colleges before getting on the tenure track teaching creative writing at Wichita State University before he became a best-selling author.
He's won numerous awards and several of his novels have been made into films.
Burke and his wife, Pearl, live in Montana. They have four children, including Alafair Burke, a law professor and best-selling crime writer.
Click HERE to read the * review in Publishers Weekly.
Click HERE to read the review in Kirkus Reviews.
Click HERE to read the review in the New York Journal of Books.
Click HERE to read the review in the Bloomington-Normal IL Pantagraph
Showing posts with label serial killers - fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label serial killers - fiction. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 22, 2019
Monday, December 10, 2018
My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite
My Sister, the Serial Killer: A Novel by Oyinkan Braithwaite --- 226 pages including Acknowledgements.
Nigerian author, Oyinkan Braithwaite's debut novel, My Sister, The Serial Killer may be described as Nigerian Noir. The book is a black and edgy comedy about two Nigerian sisters. Korede, the elder, is the responsible, self-effacing sister who cleans up the messes made by her younger sister, Ayoola, who has a bad habit of killing her boyfriends.
But the book also has a serious point to make: both sisters are emotionally damaged because of the abuse they suffered at the hands of a vicious and controlling father, and a society that enables and encourages the subjugation of women.
If you liked the Dexter series by Jeff Lindsay, you may enjoy this book too. It will be interesting to see what Oyinkan Braithwaite comes up with next.
Click HERE to read the * review from Publishers Weekly.
Click HERE to watch the video trailer for My Sister, the Serial Killer on Youtube.
Click HERE to read the review in the Washington Post.
Click HERE to read the review in the New York Times.
Nigerian author, Oyinkan Braithwaite's debut novel, My Sister, The Serial Killer may be described as Nigerian Noir. The book is a black and edgy comedy about two Nigerian sisters. Korede, the elder, is the responsible, self-effacing sister who cleans up the messes made by her younger sister, Ayoola, who has a bad habit of killing her boyfriends.
But the book also has a serious point to make: both sisters are emotionally damaged because of the abuse they suffered at the hands of a vicious and controlling father, and a society that enables and encourages the subjugation of women.
If you liked the Dexter series by Jeff Lindsay, you may enjoy this book too. It will be interesting to see what Oyinkan Braithwaite comes up with next.
Click HERE to read the * review from Publishers Weekly.
Click HERE to watch the video trailer for My Sister, the Serial Killer on Youtube.
Click HERE to read the review in the Washington Post.
Click HERE to read the review in the New York Times.
Tuesday, March 6, 2018
The Woman in the Water: by Charles Finch
The Woman in the Water: A Prequel to the Charles Lenox Series by Charles Finch --- 292 pages
American author Charles Finch has taken a fresh approach to his long-running Victorian mystery series featuring an aristocratic ex-member of Parliament who finally takes up his long held ambition to become a private detective.
This prequel, set some twenty years prior to the original series, gives us a look at the young Charles Lenox, just come down from Oxford and taking up residence in London. As the younger son of a baronet, Charles has no preordained occupation --- his brother Edmund is the heir to their father's title and estate. As a gentleman with a private income and a university degree, however, the range of socially acceptable occupations for Charles is actually quite limited: the Army, the Church, government service such as the diplomatic corps or a seat in Parliament, or (just barely beginning to be tolerated) some very discreet connection with investments in the City.
But Charles, to the dismay of his family and friends, is fascinated by crime. So when he finds a letter published in one of the London tabloids, in which the writer boasts he has committed the "perfect"murder, and intends to murder again in one month, so that people are forced to pay attention, Charles takes it as a personal challenge. He and his valet, Graham, connect the boastful letter to the body of a young woman found strangled inside an old trunk washed up on an island in the Thames. So far the police have failed to identify the victim, much less her killer. Lenox pulls strings to see Sir Richard Mayne, the Commissioner of London's fledging police force at Scotland Yard. His offer of assistance is initially declined, but when a second murder does occur, and Lenox is able to prove that it is linked to the first, Mayne offers him a role in the investigation.
Click HERE to read an interview with the author talking about The Woman in the Water.
Click HERE to read the review in Publishers Weekly.
Click HERE to read the review in Kirkus Reviews.
Click HERE to read the review in the Washington Post.
American author Charles Finch has taken a fresh approach to his long-running Victorian mystery series featuring an aristocratic ex-member of Parliament who finally takes up his long held ambition to become a private detective.
This prequel, set some twenty years prior to the original series, gives us a look at the young Charles Lenox, just come down from Oxford and taking up residence in London. As the younger son of a baronet, Charles has no preordained occupation --- his brother Edmund is the heir to their father's title and estate. As a gentleman with a private income and a university degree, however, the range of socially acceptable occupations for Charles is actually quite limited: the Army, the Church, government service such as the diplomatic corps or a seat in Parliament, or (just barely beginning to be tolerated) some very discreet connection with investments in the City.
But Charles, to the dismay of his family and friends, is fascinated by crime. So when he finds a letter published in one of the London tabloids, in which the writer boasts he has committed the "perfect"murder, and intends to murder again in one month, so that people are forced to pay attention, Charles takes it as a personal challenge. He and his valet, Graham, connect the boastful letter to the body of a young woman found strangled inside an old trunk washed up on an island in the Thames. So far the police have failed to identify the victim, much less her killer. Lenox pulls strings to see Sir Richard Mayne, the Commissioner of London's fledging police force at Scotland Yard. His offer of assistance is initially declined, but when a second murder does occur, and Lenox is able to prove that it is linked to the first, Mayne offers him a role in the investigation.
Click HERE to read an interview with the author talking about The Woman in the Water.
Click HERE to read the review in Publishers Weekly.
Click HERE to read the review in Kirkus Reviews.
Click HERE to read the review in the Washington Post.
Thursday, June 15, 2017
The Thirst by Jo Nesbo
The Thirst: A New Harry Hole Novel by Jo Nesbǿ; translated from the Norwegian by Neil Smith --- 462 pages
The eleventh in Nesbǿ's series of police thrillers featuring his obsessive, alcoholic, self-destructive detective Harry Hole, is another tightly wrought tale of obsession and vengeance.
Harry has a new life now with the woman he loves; a new job as an instructor at the police college, training young police officers; he's climbed out of the wreckage he'd made of his life and found a fragile, precarious happiness.
But unfortunately, a serial murderer has begun targeting women who use an online dating service called Tinder to meet men. But the killer has more in mind than just murder; he's using his victims to attract attention. And Harry begins to suspect it's his attention the killer is seeking.
The eleventh in Nesbǿ's series of police thrillers featuring his obsessive, alcoholic, self-destructive detective Harry Hole, is another tightly wrought tale of obsession and vengeance.
Harry has a new life now with the woman he loves; a new job as an instructor at the police college, training young police officers; he's climbed out of the wreckage he'd made of his life and found a fragile, precarious happiness.
But unfortunately, a serial murderer has begun targeting women who use an online dating service called Tinder to meet men. But the killer has more in mind than just murder; he's using his victims to attract attention. And Harry begins to suspect it's his attention the killer is seeking.
Nesbǿ is one of the best known and most popular writers of Nordic Noir.
Click HERE to read the review in Publishers Weekly.
Click HERE to watch an interview with Nesbǿ on Youtube.
Click HERE to read an interview with Nesbǿ from the UK Independent.
Wednesday, April 19, 2017
Where the Dead Lie by C.S. Harris
Where the Dead Lie: A Sebastian St. Cyr Mystery by C.S. Harris --- 338 pages
In the twelfth book in Harris' Regency mystery series, Sebastian St. Cyr, Viscount Devlin, is confronted with his most gut-wrenching case yet. Homeless children from London's slums are being stalked, kidnapped, brutalized, tortured and murdered by a serial killer --- and what passes for the law of that time is largely indifferent to their fate.
When the midnight disposal of one young boy's mutilated remains on an industrial wasteland is accidentally witnessed, the watchman who is summoned to the scene recognizes the corpse and rather than dropping it in the "poor hole" --- the mass grave reserved for paupers and unidentified corpses ---takes it to Sebastian's friend from army days, Paul Gibson, a surgeon and anatomist. Gibson enlists Sebastian's aid.
But Sebastian's investigation is complicated by family connections. He discovers that one of his leads, a notorious brothel that caters to wealthy men who like young girls and whips, is under the protection of his politically powerful father-in-law, who uses the brothel as a means of compromising his political enemies. One suspect, a dissolute aristocrat with a string of scandals attached to his name, has just become betrothed to Sebastian's headstrong niece. Another suspect is equally depraved, but as a blood relation to the royal family, untouchable by the law. A third suspect caters to the licentious desires of aristocratic ladies. Such men can commit their crimes with impunity. Society does not care. But Sebastian does, and he will use any means necessary to bring this killer to justice.
An unsparing portrait of the bitter reality behind the elegant facade of British high society. Definitely NOT your typical Regency romance!
Click HERE for the review from Kirkus.
Click HERE for the review from Publishers Weekly.
In the twelfth book in Harris' Regency mystery series, Sebastian St. Cyr, Viscount Devlin, is confronted with his most gut-wrenching case yet. Homeless children from London's slums are being stalked, kidnapped, brutalized, tortured and murdered by a serial killer --- and what passes for the law of that time is largely indifferent to their fate.
When the midnight disposal of one young boy's mutilated remains on an industrial wasteland is accidentally witnessed, the watchman who is summoned to the scene recognizes the corpse and rather than dropping it in the "poor hole" --- the mass grave reserved for paupers and unidentified corpses ---takes it to Sebastian's friend from army days, Paul Gibson, a surgeon and anatomist. Gibson enlists Sebastian's aid.
But Sebastian's investigation is complicated by family connections. He discovers that one of his leads, a notorious brothel that caters to wealthy men who like young girls and whips, is under the protection of his politically powerful father-in-law, who uses the brothel as a means of compromising his political enemies. One suspect, a dissolute aristocrat with a string of scandals attached to his name, has just become betrothed to Sebastian's headstrong niece. Another suspect is equally depraved, but as a blood relation to the royal family, untouchable by the law. A third suspect caters to the licentious desires of aristocratic ladies. Such men can commit their crimes with impunity. Society does not care. But Sebastian does, and he will use any means necessary to bring this killer to justice.
An unsparing portrait of the bitter reality behind the elegant facade of British high society. Definitely NOT your typical Regency romance!
Click HERE for the review from Kirkus.
Click HERE for the review from Publishers Weekly.
Monday, February 15, 2016
Career of Evil by Robert Galbraith
Career of Evil: A Cormoran Strike Novel by Robert Galbraith --- 492 pages
The third novel in the Cormoran Strike series of crime novels by J.K. Rowling writing under the pseudonym of Robert Galbraith, is equally suspenseful as its predecessors, The Cuckoo's Calling and The Silkworm.
This time out, Strike and his assistant Robin Ellacott, are in pursuit of a sociopath serial killer who is stalking Robin because of a long festering grudge against Strike. The trouble is, Strike can think of at least four men from his past who could be twisted, sick, violent and vengeful enough to qualify as suspects.
Adding to the tension in the office is Robin's ambivalent attitude about her relationship with her fiance, the insufferable Matthew, and the wedding lurking on the horizon. In the course of the investigation we learn more about both Robin and Strike's backstories, which helps explain a lot about their difficult partnership.
A real page turner, almost impossible to put down, and once finished, you'll want to go back and pick out the clues you missed the first time through.
Click HERE for the Chicago Tribune review.
Click HERE for the National Public Radio review.
Click HERE for the New York Times review.
Click HERE for the Boston Globe review.
The third novel in the Cormoran Strike series of crime novels by J.K. Rowling writing under the pseudonym of Robert Galbraith, is equally suspenseful as its predecessors, The Cuckoo's Calling and The Silkworm.
This time out, Strike and his assistant Robin Ellacott, are in pursuit of a sociopath serial killer who is stalking Robin because of a long festering grudge against Strike. The trouble is, Strike can think of at least four men from his past who could be twisted, sick, violent and vengeful enough to qualify as suspects.
Adding to the tension in the office is Robin's ambivalent attitude about her relationship with her fiance, the insufferable Matthew, and the wedding lurking on the horizon. In the course of the investigation we learn more about both Robin and Strike's backstories, which helps explain a lot about their difficult partnership.
A real page turner, almost impossible to put down, and once finished, you'll want to go back and pick out the clues you missed the first time through.
Click HERE for the Chicago Tribune review.
Click HERE for the National Public Radio review.
Click HERE for the New York Times review.
Click HERE for the Boston Globe review.
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