Tuesday, March 27, 2018


Abir Mukherjee: A necessary evil, 9781784704773, Vintage (Penguin Random House UK) paperback, March 15, 2018

German edition: Ein notwendiges Übel, Heyne Verlag, 9783453439207, Juli 2018, paperback
 

I have to confess, I have become a big fan of Captain Sam Wyndham and Surrender-Not Banerjee, his Indian colleague, after having read “A Rising Man” for which he won the 2017 CWA Historical Dagger Award and now “A Necessary Evil”.  Much like Donna Leon’s atmospheric Venice novels, this historical crime fiction set in the 1920’s British ruled India is so colorful and smart; within a few pages it transports you into the British Raj with its exotic settings and obnoxious social regiments.  I cannot wait to read the third book, “Smoke and Ashes” due to be published in June.  “A Necessary Evil” is even better than his first book in my opinion.

When Captain Wyndham and Surrender Not meet with the soon to be ruler of the Kingdom of Sambalpore Prince Adhir in Calcutta, they have no idea they will be sharing the last hours in the Princes life becoming witnesses to his assassination.  Wyndham is able to shot the assassin who by his facial paintings is identified as a follower of Lord Jagannath, a Hindu deity.  The old Maharaja is inconsolable and requests the assistance of Surrender Not who was a friend of his favorite son at university.  Sam Wyndam travels alongside Surrender Not to Sambalpore to serve as an adviser on orders of the Viceroy. The
investigation by a British official looking into the death of an Indian prince would hardly be considered politically correct.  When both arrive in Sambalpore they find a court that hasn’t changed much in centuries with several high court officials having problems with the modern views Prince Adhir was about  to introduce.  The list of people who would benefit from the Prince's death becomes longer and longer the deeper Sam and Surrender-Not start digging, beginning with his half-brother Punit and the third young wife of his father, the old Maharaja….. 

I will not reveal more, the ending is superb and unexpected. If you enjoy historical crime novels looking critically at the politics of their time, with a tongue in cheek humor and cleverness, this is a brilliant series to read. Enjoy! 

Friday, March 23, 2018


Suzanne Rindell: Eagle & Crane, Putnam (Penguin Random House US) 9780399184291, 3. July 2018


When I was working at Penguin, we published Suzanne Rendell’s first novel, “The other Typist”, a brilliant, clever story I absolutely loved. Needless to say I was more than happy to read the proof of her upcoming latest book due July 2019.  “Eagle & Crane” is set in the time of the Depression in California following the lives of the Thorn and Yamada family and Earl Shaw’s Flying Circus.

This epic story is a doorstopper of a book, over 430 pages long which I personally found too long winded at times but the book gathers drama during the last 100 pages.  Eagle & Crane opens in 1943 with a lone FBI Agent looking into the disappearance of Kenichi and Harry Yamada from an internment camp. When inspecting the Yamada farm, he is surprised to find Louis Thorn and Ava Brooks residing on the Yamada property.  A dramatic turn of events occurs when a plane seems to drop from the sky crashing on the land during Bonner’s visit; two disfigured corpses are pulled from the wreck.  They appear to be Harry and Kenichi Yamada but something does not sit right with Agent Bonner and he starts digging despite the local sheriff’s refusal to help.

The Thorn family has felt hostile towards their Japanese neighbors for years accusing them of swindling them from their most fertile piece of land. Harry Yamada and Louis Thorn used to be friends as children but became estranged as adults. Bonner is surprised to unearth they both worked as aerial stuntmen in the Earl Shaw Flying Circus. With daredevil stunts travelling from rural towns to bigger cities they earned a reputation as “Eagle” and “Crane” gaining certain fame and excellent pay.  Rindell spins an entertaining yarn introducting two strong female characters, Ava Brooks and her mother Cleopatra, how they ended up in Earl Shaw’s travelling Flying Circus,  switching back and forth between the past and 1943.

The tragedy of Japanese Americans internment during WWII is fictionalized through the Yamada and Thorn family using these terrible events in US history as the basis for the novel.  Another inspiration for the novel came from Rindell’s family love for aviation.

“Eagle & Crane” is an entertaining read I enjoyed but it never really gripped me as   “The other typist” certainly did.   

Monday, March 5, 2018


Cara Hunter:  Into the Dark, Penguin Random House UK, 9780241283202, paperback,  Publication date: July 2018

 

 I read Cara Hunter’s “Close to Home” last year, the novel was chosen by the Richard and Judy book Club giving it a high popular rating. Her second novel due to be published in July was sent to me as a proof. Using the same set of Oxford detectives around DI Fawley , “Into the Dark” is even better than the first novel, superbly spun with many unexpected turns; I was completely hooked. A very fine, non bloody psychological thriller I can wholeheartedly recommend. 

A woman and child are discovered locked in a basement of a posh Oxford neighbourhood when a wall collapses that builders are trying to fix during renovation work on the house next door.  For the detectives involved, similarities to the Fritzl case in Austria immediately come to mind. The woman appears to have been held captive for some time and is in a very agitated state.  The little boy doesn't seem to be able to talk.  When the police arrive, they discover that the only person living in the house is an elderly academic who is in a state of neglect and seems to be suffering from dementia. Hardly the person capable of committing such a crime.

Cara Hunter is excellent in describing the detective’s step by step approach when trying to put pieces of the puzzle together. With the stress mounting in the team, all their character flaws are exposed.  Just when they believe to be close to solving the crime, previous theories start to collapse with newly discovered findings.  When the body of a missing female journalist who had been living around the corner from the crime scene is found in the garden shed, the case receives a new twist and they are forced to take a new look at suspects. I will not go into further details but some 400 pages later of this well-crafted psychological thriller the outcome is unexpected. 

Friday, February 16, 2018


Vesna Goldsworthy: Monsieur Ka, 9781784741181, hardcover, Chatto & Windus (Penguin Random House UK), pub date 22. February 2018


 
With her wonderful new novel “Monsieur Ka” Vesna Goldsworthy created an exceptional atmosphere reminding me so much of the underlying melancholies found running like a current through Russian classics. She is such a skillful writer. The idea to continue telling a story based on the Karenin family from Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina is exquisite and she pulls it off beautifully. “Monsieur Ka” is one of these quiet books I always longed to go back to, perfect storytelling.

It is the bitter cold winter of 1947 in post war London. Albertine Whitelaw, a young, newly wed Frenchwoman who met her husband Albie in Alexandria, is trying to feel at home in her cold Earls Court house while he is travelling on covert government business in Europe. Feeling even more lonely and estranged during Albie’s absence, she accepts a job as a companion to elderly Monsieur Carr, a Russian count whose son Alex is looking for someone who can converse and read French to his father after a stroke. Albertine soon discovers Count Carr to be none other than the son of Anna Karenina, Count Sergei Karenin. A deep friendship and trust develops between these unlike exiles and Alex Karenin’s family over the ensuing months which begin to have an effect on her life. As Count Karenin starts telling her about his dramatic life, Albertine decides to surprise him by chronicling his life in a book.

One feels like one is sitting right next to Albertine as she unravels her own life story and that of the Karenin family. An atmospheric literary page turner I greatly enjoyed.

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Amy Bloom: White Houses, 9780812995664, Penguin Random House US, hardcover


Amy Bloom is such a fine writer, I never read anything by her before and was truly astonished at the quality of her writing.  A literary novel but a page turner at the same time is how I would describe her latest book centering on Eleanor Roosevelt’s suspected Lesbian liaison during her time in the White House with journalist Lorena Hickok. This was never confirmed, historians are split over the issue but Hickok was known to be a Lesbian and 3000 letters between the couple are part of the Roosevelt archives.


Lorena Hickok gives this exquisite novel her voice and what a voice it is. Her upbringing was truly a horrific one which left no room for sentiments. One of the most memorable passages of the book is her description of her childhood and coming of age. The book stays close to historical facts; Lorena became one of the best known female journalists of her time gathering many firsts.  When assigned to cover Franklin D Roosevelt’s election campaign, she meets Eleanor Roosevelt for the first time to do a portrait of the soon to be first wife.  Both women fall madly in love with each other and in the novel Lorena makes no bones about their love being a very physical one.  I was very moved by her description of their deep love and understanding during adverse times and circumstances lasting their entire life. 

This intimate, cracking novel of an unusual relationship with revealing juicy bits about the Franklin D Roosevelts household at the White House will probably appeal to women readers mostly. What could have easily become  a soapy, romantic story about Lesbian love by a less talented writer was turned into a delicate, intriguing literary novel by Amy Bloom. Superb.

Monday, January 29, 2018

Jane Harper: Force of Nature, 9781408711019, C format paperback, Little Brown, publication date February 1, 2018


Ever since reading the CWA Dagger Award winning novel “The Dry”, I am a big fan of Jane Harper. I was thrilled to be able to read her new novel “Force of Nature” before pub date February 1st and boy, does this woman know how to spin a yarn! “Force of Nature” is just as gripping as “The Dry” and Aaron Falk, the very sympatico detective featured in The Dry, is making his reappearance.  I hope she continues the Aaron Falk series and might chose a case with more illegal financial transactions, Aarons special investigation skills. Not that I do not like her current novels set in the Australian bushland…..

 
Five women embark on a company sponsored team building trekking tour into the bushland not far outside Melbourne. When they reappear a few days later, one of them has gone missing and their world is upside down.

Alice Russel, a manager and troublemaker at work and in the hiking team, has disappeared in the Giralang Ranges.  Bree and Beth, the unlike twins, are battered and bruised, one of them suffering from a snake bike. Lauren, Alice’s old friend and Jill Bailey, co-owner of family owned Bailey Tennants, are unharmed but deeply shaken. Falk and his colleague Carmen Cooper are called into the investigation as Alice had been aiding their team as a whistle blower supplying information of supposed illegal financial irregularities within Bailey Tennants. Her last sign of life was an interupted call to Falk. 

What unfolds is a nail biting page turner of a thriller.  Harper unravels the story in two story lines. One follows the day by day events of the women’s hike and the other Falk’s and the search teams discoveries.  Until the very end several outcomes seem possible as to why and how Alice disappeared  and this suspense is kept up pretty much to the last pages.  A fantastic crime novel set in Australia from start to finish, I loved it!

Saturday, January 20, 2018

Robert Harris: Munich, Hutchinson (Penguin Random House), 9780091959203, large format paperback

German Edition: München 1938,  Heyne Verlag, 9783453271432, gebunden



New titles by Robert Harris always land right at the top of the bestseller lists worldwide. Never having read one of his books, I was keen to try his latest book „ Munich” as it deals with an explosive period in Germany’s history before World War II.

The book is set during several fateful days in September 1938 when everything points towards war breaking out on the issue of the Sudetenland, then Czechoslovakia which the Germans want to annex by force.  Prime Minister Chamberlain is dead set to do everything in his power to avoid war and has managed to maneuver Hitler into agreeing to a meeting between the British, France and Italy.

Hugh Legat, one of Chamberlain’s private secretaries, is surprised to learn he is about to meet one of his former Oxford friends again. Paul Hartmann, now a German career diplomat in Berlin, has secretly joined the resistance movement despite being close to Hitler’s inner circle of staff.  Both men have not seen each other for several years and are harboring secrets of their own.  Their bilingual language skills have gained them enterance to be part of the support staff assisting Chamberlain, Hitler and high ranking government officials attending this historical gathering in Munich.
 
Very skillfully Harris weaves historical detail and fiction into a thriller.  Despite being aware of the historical outcome of the story, curiousness about the fate of Hugh Legat and Paul Hartmann makes one turn the pages faster especially towards the last third of the book. However, I personally prefer thriller writer Daniel Silva for this type of escapist reading .