Recent crime novels
Wednesday, 27th January 2010
Andrew Taylor writing in The Spectator
Blue Lightning (Macmillan) is the fourth novel in Ann Cleeves’ excellent Shetland quartet. It is just as good as its predecessors. Cleeves has found a way to serve up many of the pleasures of the traditional mystery in an unusual modern setting.
Her series detective, Jimmy Perez, returns to his own island, Fair Isle, with his artist fiancée, Fran. Autumn storms cut the island off from the rest of the world. Perez anticipated that he would suffer mild embarrassment when he introduced Fran, an outsider from the south saddled with a six-year-old daughter, to his family home. But soon he has to cope with a murder investigation as well, when a woman is found dead with feathers in her hair at the local bird observatory. And far worse is in store, for the killing hasn’t stopped.
As usual, the plotting is strong and the background fascinating. Cleeves is particularly good at assembling domestic detail that adds a cumulative poignancy and depth to her characters’ lives. The narrative builds to a truly shocking climax with a grimly convincing epilogue. The good news is that this won’t, after all, be the last novel to feature Jimmy Perez and the Shetlands. The quartet is now due to become a quintet at least.
Sara Paretsky’s V. I. Warshawski has been a prominent feature in the landscape of crime fiction for so long that it’s hard to remember just how revolutionary she was when she first appeared in 1982.
Together with Val McDermid on this side of the Atlantic, Paretsky did much to pioneer the idea of strong women detectives operating in contemporary society.
Hardball (Hodder & Stoughton) is the 13th novel in the series. Warshawski, who is growing more melancholy and reflective as time passes, is involved in a case with its roots in the Chicago race riots of 1966, when a black woman was murdered. A few months after the riot a young man, also black, dis- appeared, and now his mother and aunt want to find him before they die. In another strand of the plot, a cousin, whom Warshawski has never met, comes to Chicago to work on a senatorial campaign. Warshawski’s office is burgled and trashed, and the cousin, Petra, is nowhere to be found.
For the rest of the review of Hardball, plus reviews of Long Time Coming (Bantam Press, Robert Goddard and Snow Hill (HarperCollins), Mark Sanderson, link here to The Spectator online.
Reviewer Andrew Taylor’s latest novel is Bleeding Heart Square (Penguin).
For a review of this title link here.
1 comment:
I just discovered Paretsky this summer with 'Hardball'and have now read 3 others! Her autobiographical and essay pieces in "Writing in the age of silence" are illuminating as to her ideas and causes which she cares deeply about and which she weaves into her books. Especially readable [almost essential reading]is the last piece on censorship of ideas and publications in the so called land of the free - how one can easily become accused of being a terrorist , terrorists' supporter or at the very least non-patriotic since 9/11. And in some cases punished for what we would regard as our basic rights.
Her 'Bleeding Kansas' is nothing like the others and I found it disappointing - wondered if it was something she'd had on the simmer for many years and her publisher persuaded her to hand it over.
Post a Comment