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BABY CRIMES by Randall Hicks: It's been much too long since The Baby Game debut; I hope the wait isn't as long for the next book in this wonderful series. Toby is back, teaching tennis and lawyering on the side. He's seeing his childhood sweetheart, Rita, and life is good - until he's hired to unravel a 16 year old adoption mess. But there's more to the mess than just a legal imbroglio; blackmail, organized crime and murder take this to a darker place. Fully realized characters, intricate plotting, a bit of romance and good writing combine to make this a wondrous book; fun and compelling, yet comforting. Hicks has a unique voice - don't miss it. 09/07 Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch BABY CRIMES by Randall Hicks: Arrange an adoption. That’s what Toby Dillon, Esquire does – when he is not serving as Assistant Tennis Pro at Coral Canyon. The prospective parents are County Supervisor Nevin Handley and his wife; the child is healthy and apparently adoptable. The only hitch? Lynn, the sixteen-year-old tennis prodigy, has been living as the daughter of the Handley’s since birth. It seems that they “adopted” her without benefit of the law sixteen years ago, and now are being threatened with blackmail, they think by Lynn’s birth mother. Just the kind of mess Toby is best suited to stumble through and, hopefully, come out the other end relatively unscathed. The follow-on to 2005’s The Baby Game is just as good. Don’t wait for the library. Go order a copy today. The new kissing scene with Rita is worth the price of admission alone. Think of the rest of the book as a bonus. 08/07 Jack Quick THE BABY GAME by Randall Hicks: A renowned adoption attorney turns his hand to mystery and writes a winner about what he knows best - adoption. Toby Dillon is a young lawyer who decides to keep his job as a tennis pro just in case the law thing doesn't work out. His two best childhood friends, Brogan and Rita, ended up married to each other and oh yeah, they're like the Tom Cruise/Nicole Kidman Hollywood power couple (back when they were happy) and they ask Toby to help them adopt a baby. Just as the happy couple are celebrating their successful adoption, they get a phone call that changes their lives. Then the birth mother goes missing, bodies start piling up, the police are baffled and not very helpful, and Toby and Brogan decide to take matters into their own hands. These are some wonderful, true to life characters (even the bad ones) and despite the desperation of the situation, there are plenty of laugh out loud moments as well as some really sweet ones, too, including one of the best "first kiss" scenes ever. An incredible first effort that I couldn't put down and didn't want to end. But it did, and it ended well. I'm hoping for more from this gifted new author. 08/05 Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch THE BABY GAME by Randall Hicks: The Baby Game is one of those rare books where the improbable works seamlessly. The serious parts make the hairs on the back of your neck tingle and the funny parts are laugh out loud hilarious. An ex Peace Corps, assistant tennis pro, home schooled California attorney, who drives a Ford falcon convertible with a wooden cigar store Indian permanently wedged in the passenger seat sounds like the loser of a Dumb and Dumber contest, but Toby Dillon turns out to be believable, lovable, and competent, in roughly that order. The plot is deliciously twisty and at the halfway point, I still had no idea who the bad guys were. Although there is real jeopardy, there is still some question at that point as to whether a crime had even been committed. Well, actually Toby was well along the way to the five felonies he commits in the course of the book, but otherwise...All is well that ends well and the ending of The Baby Game - “And then I kissed her.” The best way to describe it, The Baby Game is similar to Lawrence Sanders’ McNally series, only a whole lot better. 08/05 ~This review contributed by Jack Quick. BABY MOLL by John Farris: Hardcase Crime #46. Once in, never out. Peter Mallory thought he had quit the mob, started his own business and built a home for his bride-to-be, but Florida mobster Macy Barr needs Mallory’s help and has the goods to force him to cooperate. Otherwise, he can kiss his future wedding plans good-bye and maybe the rest of his life as well. Prior to Mallory ever hooking up with Barr, a family was accidentally murdered after the father refused to be extorted. Now someone is killing everyone associated with that arson. Not only must Peter seek the killer, he also has to contend with a paid assassin, a rival mob chief and squabbles within the Barr household. Classic pulp where the bad guys aren’t all bad, and maybe the good guys have some flaws as well. Another good one from Hardcase Crime. 09/08 Jack Quick BABY SHARK by Robert Fate: Let me add my heaping of praise for this debut, a throwback to another era. Set in 1952 Texas, the main character, Kristin Van Dijk, becomes known as Baby Shark. Her father was a pool hustler and she traveled the road with him until he was killed in front of her by a motorcycle gang, who then raped and savagely beat her, set the pool hall on fire and left her for dead. She survives and a year later she's a trained killing machine, bent on revenge. Oddly enough, considering the male/female dichotomy here, there is something reminiscent of Mike Hammer in this character. It's very well written and suitably fitting for the time period, touching on women's roles, politics, and prejudice. Hardboiled fiction really doesn't get much grittier than this. 12/06 Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch
Baby Shark by Robert
Fate: Kristin Van Dijk was only seventeen years old in 1952 when her
father, a pool hustler, was killed by a motorcycle gang. Kristin was brutally
beaten, gang raped, and left for dead when the gang torched the pool hall. If it
hadn’t been for Henry Chin, the wounded owner of the pool hall, who dragged her
out of the fire, she would have been dead. If Henry hadn’t had her trained in
self-defense and shooting, she wouldn’t have become Baby Shark, a young woman
willing to hustle pool while waiting to seek revenge against the members of that
motorcycle gang. When Baby and Henry discover that the cops have been bought
off, they hire a private investigator, Otis Millett, to track down the gang.
Fate’s first novel in the Baby Shark series is a graphic, beautifully
descriptive novel of the stark life in Texas in 1952. Fate’s Texas is a violent
place in the 1950s, where motorcycle gangs and crooked cops are common. It’s a
place where female pool hustlers are rare. It’s a place where a Chinese man
living with a young white woman would be frowned on. It’s a place where many
would think Kristin got what she deserved, hanging out in a pool hall. Baby
Shark brings this world to life in a story that is compelling, despite and
because of the violence. If this was a film, moviegoers would be cheering as
Kristin attacks the gang members, seeking justice for herself, her father, and
her friends. 09/06 Lesa Holstine BABY SHARK by Robert Fate: I understand a shark must constantly move to prevent its suffocation and that its attention span is so short that it can learn little from experience. Kristin, the baby shark of this book, moves a lot but she has also learned a lot and each experience leads her closer to the revenge she seeks. In October 1952, at the tender age of 17 she watched four bikers kill her pool hustler father in a Texas pool hall fight that leaves two other men dead as well. Sexually assaulted, beaten, and left for dead, she is rescued by the pool hall owner Henry Chin, a Chinese immigrant and father of one of the other murder victims. Since the local police are no help, Chin hires a private investigator to start searching for the killers. Then he hires two “tutors” for Kristin. She develops into one tough package, who also shoots a mean game of stick. At eighteen the Baby Shark is ready to hunt for the killers as she hustles pool in west Texas. Revenge is sweeter when it is served cold, but what happens afterwards. This is the first in a projected series of novels about a teenaged woman taking up the family business – pool hustling. I wish Mr. Fate well with his plans, as I think this will become a very interesting series of reads. 09/06 Jack Quick
BABY SHARK’S BEAUMONT BLUES by Robert Fate: Fate is apparently channeling the hardboiled masters of the 1950's and 60's with this terrific series that is just a breath of fresh air. Baby Shark is Kristin van Dijk, the 17-year-old who was raped, beaten and left for dead in the first book. She turned into a veritable killing machine, avenged those who did her wrong, and became a "girl dick" - partnered with Otis Millett, Private Eye. Set in the wild west of 1950's Fort Worth, Texas, they are hired to find a runaway heiress. But there are a few road blocks, several twists, a little romance and more dead bodies than even a coroner could wish for before they get the job done. Don't miss this fast, fun and furious page turner. Baby Shark's Panhandle Caravan is slated for release in March, 2008, and I can't wait. 05/07 Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch
BABY SHARK’S BEAUMONT BLUES by Robert Fate: A tough talking private investigator who shoots a mean game of pool as an income supplement. No big deal, except she is the 5’ 7”, 130 pound Baby Shark. Kristin Van Dijk and partner Otis Millett are on the trail of a missing Texas oil heiress and have to contend with Beaumont gangsters, Dallas cops, and the overwhelming scent of Evening in Paris. This is definitely a Friday night book, because no matter how fast you read you are going to be up late, late, late, and suffer from an adrenalin deficit the next day. Baby Shark just keeps getting better. I’ve lost count of the number of guys she has put down and even though she has been shot, stabbed, and slugged, no one has gotten the best of her yet. Hey Robert, where and when for Baby Shark Number Three? 05/07 Jack Quick BABY SHARK'S HIGH PLAINS REDEMPTION by Robert Fate: Pulp fiction makes a comeback with this series featuring Kristin Van Dijk, better known as Baby Shark, the pool-hustling, butt-kicking 18-year-old heroine of Baby Shark and Baby Shark’s Beaumont Blues. Kristin is comfortable in her job as a private eye at the Millett Agency in 1950’s Texas. Their latest case seems simple enough; pick up bootlegger Travis Horner’s girlfriend and bring her back to him. Horner is one of the biggest bootleggers in Oklahoma, and his girlfriend happens to be the daughter of his biggest rival, Bull Smike. But someone doesn’t want that to happen, Otis is set up and Baby Shark walks into a fight and a shootout. The fights and shootouts continue nonstop until Baby Shark finds out that Horner considers himself to be a world class pool player. She challenges him to a game, and all scores are settled. These books must be read in order as there are no explanations as to what came before or how and why all these relationships were formed. The language is rough and the body count high in this fast paced shoot-‘em-up. 05/08 Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch BABY SHARK’S HIGH PLAINS REDEMPTION by Robert Fate: Bull Smike and Travis Horner run the two biggest bootleg operations in Oklahoma. Bull controls the east and Horner runs the west. In the middle are two things – Oklahoma City - and Baby Shark. Kristin Van Dijk and her PI partner, Otis Millett, travel to Oklahoma to track down Savannah Smike, Bull’s daughter and Horner’s girlfriend, who ís being held for ransom. Although they are successful, the entire operation raises questions, which turn into real concerns when Millett is later shot. That leaves Van Dirk to kick some serious butt to get things back on track. Third time out for the Shark, and another solid win for series character we hope will be around for a long, long time. 06/08 Jack Quick BABY SHARK'S HIGH PLAINS REDEMPTION by Robert Fate: No one does action-packed, visual books as well as Fate does. Once again, he brings Baby Shark, Kristin Van Dijk, to life. Kristin, who lost her pool hustler father to murder, and her own life as she knew it to a group of men who beat and raped her, is now a private investigator teamed up with Otis Millett. They agree to find a bootlegger's girlfriend, but by the time Kristin arrives on the scene, Otis is beaten, and they face a number of gunmen. It takes all of Kristin's skills to escape with Otis and the girl, Savannah Smike. By the time they discover that Savannah is the daughter of a rival bootlegger, it's too late, Kristin and Otis are targets of ruthless killers, willing to shoot them down, for some unknown reason. As in the two previous Baby Shark books, readers will be cheering for Kristin as she takes down the bad guys, with a pool cue, and her wits. 05/08 Lesa Holstine BACK TO BOLOGNA by Michael Dibdin: Mr. Dibdin passed away not so long ago and this was his second last book. Reading it reminded me of seeing a Tom Stoppard play called After Magritte many years ago. As the play opened the entire cast was caught stopped in what appeared to be inexplicably ludicrous positions. As the play moved along, it told a story and by the end when the characters reassumed their initial positions, it all made perfect sense. Similarly, B to B seemed like slow going at first. But as I moved through it, I realized that Dibdin was just putting the characters in their necessary place to produce wave after wave of farce (at which I laughed as I read) until it culminated in a finish equivalent to Its a Mad, Mad, Mad World (at which I roared). I am going to miss Mr. Dibdin, his descriptions of the various locations in Italy and, of course, Inspector Aurelio Zen. 09/07 Geoffrey R. Hamlin
BACK ROADS by Tawni O’Dell: This tale of a dysfunctional family is not a mystery per se. At the outset we know that the mother of nineteen-year-old Harley Altmyer is in prison for murdering her abusive spouse. Harley is left with the task of rearing his three younger sisters left behind. Working days as a bagger in the local grocery and delivery person for an appliance shop, Harley has to deal with cold cereal dinners prepared by six year old Jody and the way 16 year old Amber is sleeping her way through the town’s teenage boy population. Middle sister Misty, once her father’s favorite, seems to only be interested in shooting, a trait which worries him. Faced with these challenges, Harley ends up having an affair with married Callie Mercer, Jody’s best friend. The images evoked in this hardscrabble tale of struggle in the Pennsylvania backwoods are reminiscent of some of the efforts of Mark Billingham and Stephen Booth. Picked for the Oprah Book Club. Well written, but gloomy. Would avoid if easily depressed. 12/06 Jack Quick
BAD BLOOD by Linda Fairstein: Alexandra Cooper is back and she is feistier than ever. I love the beginning of this book; Fairstein takes us immediately into the courtroom as Cooper's star witness is destroyed on the stand by the defense attorney in a case about a wealthy man accused of hiring someone to kill his wife, but it goes beyond that when an underground explosion interrupts the trial. Fairstein takes us along as she unearths the history of the water supply in New York City and the men who built the underground tunnels that support it, and more importantly, how they are related to the defendant. Family tragedies coupled with heightened fears of explosions in the beleaguered city make this a timely, well executed story. I have to add here that I have such tremendous respect for Ms. Fairstein and what she's done for victims of violence in her work as the former chief of the Sex Crimes Unit in the Manhattan District Attorney's Office. Taking that experience and running with it here works. 03/07 Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch Bad Boy Brawly Brown
by Walter Mosley: It is good to have Easy Rawlins back in the 'hood.
Time has moved on and Easy now has to deal not only with racist police but also
Black Power activists and people with both white and black skins that try to
manipulate them. BAD DEBTS by Peter Temple: When Australian Jack Irish—ex-lawyer and sometime debt collector, cabinetmaker and barfly— gets a desperate message from Danny McKillop, whom he defended years before on a hit-and-run charge "at the beginning of the forgotten zone, the year or so I spent drunk," he takes a while to call him back. When he does, Danny, who was fresh out of prison, is dead. Jack's guilt fuels his search for the truth about Danny's murder. 06/06 Jack Quick BAD LUCK AND TROUBLE by Lee Child: Jack Reacher is back, and this time it's personal - and really, really good. If you are new to the series, this book will work because each book works quite well on its own, and if you've read them all, you will love this book because you finally get some of Reacher's back story. Reacher hooks up with some of the select military group that's been hinted at in previous novels. This time we get the real deal, meet all the characters and really learn what makes Jack tick. A mysterious deposit into his bank account tips him off that something's up and Reacher is off to California, where he hooks up with some of his former military team and finds out at least one of their members has been tortured and killed. There's lots of catching up to do, but more importantly, a murder needs to be solved, and avenged. Park your disbelief by the door and enjoy - the action is non-stop, the body count high, and the pages just fly. Child really has mastered the art of the series; every book betters the one that preceded it, and considering he started with a home run, that really says a lot. 05/07 Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch BAD LUCK AND TROUBLE by Lee Child: Reacher’s newest adventure begins with the bad guys throwing a badly battered but still living Calvin Franz out of a Bell 222 helicopter 3,000 feet above the California desert floor. Unfortunately for the bad guys, Franz was not only Military Police; he was a member of Reacher’s Special Investigations Unit. The rest of the book is reminiscent of the little boy in Sunday school who, upon hearing about the Crucifixation, looked up at his teacher and solemnly proclaimed, “They wouldn’t have done that if the Lone Ranger had been there.” A former colleague sends Reacher a coded SOS; the two rendezvous in L.A. and they bring more members of the band back together, only to discover that Franz isn't the group's only casualty. From there on it gets kind of hairy, so fasten your seatbelt and hang on for the best Jack Reacher to date. Hint: the ending is imminently satisfying but definitely not for the faint of heart. 06/07 Jack Quick BAD THOUGHTS by Dave Zeltserman: Call it horror or call it crime fiction – either way it’s an intriguing read with a bizarre ending. Bill Shannon is a police detective who is bothered with nightmares stemming from the discovery of his mother being murdered. Now, approaching the twentieth anniversary of her death, the nightmares are worse and seem connected to current cases. Is his mother’s killer at work again? But he was sent to his grave twenty years ago. Or could all this be a manifestation of Shannon’s own sense of guilt? There’s no shortage of blood and gore, but if you don’t mind sinking into it, this may be the start of an ingenious series along the lines of Darkly Dreaming Dexter. 08/07 Jack Quick BAGMAN by Jay MacLarty: No-questions asked delivery man Simon Leonidovich is approached by Big Jake Rynerson, a wealthy hotel magnate (think Donald Trump as portrayed by John Wayne). Rynerson's daughter, an eco-activist, has just been kidnapped in South America, and he wants Simon to deliver the ransom. It doesn't take long for Simon and Big Jake’s people to realize that the kidnappers have every intention of killing the daughter, money or not, and a simple delivery will no longer suffice. This is the second book of the series and the characters are much better developed than in the debut effort – THE COURIER. This has the makings of a great, somewhat offbeat, series. 07/06 Jack Quick BAHAMARAMA by Bob Morris: Okay, I admit it. I didn't read this series in order. But there's only two books so far, this one and the recently released Jamaica Me Dead (review below) and either way, both books are as much fun as a romp on the beach with a frozen rum drink in hand. In Bahamarama, we meet Zack Chasteen, a former Miami Dolphin who has been retired by an injury. He's living on his ancestral palm tree farm and working as a fishing guide off the coast of Florida. That is, until he takes the fall for a counterfeiting ring that left their equipment on his boat. Fresh out of two years in a country club jail, Zack finds trouble as he walks out the gate of the prison. Instead of his girlfriend Barbara picking him up, there's an SUV with a couple of gorillas quickly followed by a limo with a driver who claims to have been sent by the girlfriend. A no brainer, Zack takes off in the limo leaving the gorillas behind and hurting. He's supposed to meet Barbara in the Bahamas, but when he gets there she's working down on the beach. She never returns and then there is a ransom demand. Wonderful characters and crackling wit make this a page turner and one hell of a debut. And you don't have to read them in order. 11/05 Stacy Alesi, the BookBitch BAHAMARAMA by Bob Morris: Well written debut tale of ex-Miami Dolphin strong safety Zack Chasteen who has just completed a two-year prison term on bogus charges. His plans to join his girlfriend in the Bahamas are quickly disrupted by a gang of Cuban thugs who are after the loot Chasteen alleged had stolen. Then his girlfriend is kidnapped. Believable action thriller with a colorful cast of characters, and first rate descriptions of the Bahamas. Adventure number two - Jamaica Me Dead - has already been released. 11/05 ~This review contributed by Jack Quick. Balance
of Power by Richard North Patterson: Patterson has written an
extraordinary tour de force on gun control. BALBOA FIREFLY by Jack Trolley: What could be more challenging that preventing a madman from shooting down a commercial airliner in the glide path into San Diego’s Lindbergh Field? How about stopping two madmen, working independently trying to do the same thing? How about two madmen who know each and one is planning to frame the other for his actions? San Diego police sergeant Tommy Donahoo must prove himself up to the task in this well-written thriller in which Trolley weaves a complex plot so well that you can follow all the nuances. Hopefully he will do more. 03/06 Jack Quick BALTIMORE NOIR edited by Laura Lippman: This is the eighth volume in Akashic's series showcasing dark tales of crime and place and Editor Lippman delivers a winner as editor and contributor. Other brand new stories included are from Rafael Alvarez, Jack Bludis, Tim Cockey, Dan Fesperman, Lisa Respers France, Jim Fusilli, Rob Hiaasen, Sujata Massey, Ben Neihart David Simon, Charlie Stella, Marcia Talley, Joseph Wallace, Robert Ward, and Sarah Weinman. Half of the sixteen authors have ties to the Baltimore Sun and the works range from noir to the supernatural with both period and futuristic pieces as well. So how about some fresh Chesapeake Bay seafood washed down with some Clipper City brews. 12/07 Jack Quick BALTIMORE, OR, THE STEADFAST TIN SOLDIER AND THE VAMPIRE: An Illustrated Novel by Mike Mignola and Christopher Golden: After being injured by enemy fire, Lord Henry Baltimore, now Captain Baltimore, awakens to find himself left for dead in a trench filled with the bodies of his fellow soldiers. Strange bat-like creatures have descended into the pit to feed on the flesh of the dead. One of the creatures is distracted by Baltimore and approaches in curiosity. In his horror, Baltimore lashes out at the creature, slicing its face with his bayonet. His actions are the cause of a new unprecedented war between the vampires and humans, and the creature in question swears vengeance against Baltimore. In the time that has passed since the incident, a plague has spread amongst humans. Baltimore’s own family has fallen prey to the infection and months have passed since Baltimore’s friends have last seen him. The three men - a sailor, a soldier, and a doctor – have each received a summons from Baltimore. They are to meet him at an inn, and that is all they know. While waiting for him to arrive, each man tells two tales - how they came to meet the Captain and why they each accepted Baltimore’s strange tale as truth. Each man’s individual stories serve as vignettes that tie the whole thing together. This is not your typical vampire/horror novel. Instead, this is a look at war itself told through the scope of supernatural events. Well worth the read. 10/07 Becky Lejeune Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress by Dai Sijie: Set in China during the Cultural Revolution of the 1970's, this is an extraordinary story about the life-altering power of literature. This one probably should have gone on my Best Books of the Year list. Sigh. Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch BANG BANG by Theo Gangi: Mystery Scene Magazine calls Gangi the “Hip-Hop Elmore Leonard”. Izzy is a 38 year-old stick up kid – a gunman who preys on other criminals. He and his partner Mal have one absolute rule – if someone gets killed, than all the witnesses have to die. Sometimes this can lead to a roomful of bodies, but since the victims are usually criminals themselves, well that’s the price of admission. Now if you will suspend belief for a few minutes, Izzy meets Eva and likes her, then Eva walks into the middle of a job going down because of her junkie cousin Theresa. For once, Izzy, just can’t apply rule one – which ultimately leaves him at the mercy of a gang of vicious Albanian drug dealers. No, it’s not quite logical, but Gangi makes it work in this gritty debut thriller, that indeed, does read like an Elmore Leonard outing. If you are a realist, never mind, but if you are willing to go with the flow, Izzy and his posse will guarantee you some entertainment. Looking for a sequel. 11/07 Jack Quick BANGKOK HAUNTS by John Burdett: Thai police detective Sonchai Jitpleecheep shows old friend Kimberley Jones, an American FBI agent, a vicious snuff film he's received depicting the murder of an ex-lover of his named Damrong. The two then set out to find Damrong’s killers, finding an important banker, an American teacher, a Buddhist and an exclusive men's club called the Parthenon. In the meantime, corrupt police colonel Vikorn, orders Jitpleecheep to help start a porn film business. Add in the pregnancy of Chanya, a former prostitute with whom Jitpleecheep lives and it’s no wonder things can be a bit confusing. However, if you persevere you will find that Burdett has once again woven an exotic tale with what has to be one of the most unusual policemen ever created. 07/08 Jack Quick BANGKOK LAWS by Jim Hansen: Thirty four year old Bryson Coventry, head of Denver’s homicide unit and serial womanizer, has survived four previous outings but this one may be his undoing, as he becomes involved in the collateral damage of a global killer. Newly licensed attorney Paige Alexander is employed on her very first case. It involves a deadly high-stakes international conspiracy that first manifested itself in Bangkok and will end who knows where. The connection between Alexander and Coventry is San Francisco private investigator Ja’Von Deveraux who combines a lifeguard’s body with movie star features. Deveraux has survived a terrible experience and is now looking for revenge. She enlists Alexander to help her and then Coventry. Not for the weak hearted but full of action and coffee drinking, crime solving Coventry and his cast of cohorts continue to evolve with each outing. Rough as the Rockies, but also refreshing. Can’t wait for the next in the series. 12/07 Jack Quick BANGKOK TATTOO by John Burdett: “Killing customers just isn’t good for business.” With this opening line for the sequel to Bangkok 8, Burdett returns us to District 8 – the underbelly of Bangkok’s underworld and Royal Thai Police Detective Sonchai Jitpleecheep. Life is even more complicated post 9/11 and Sonchai must walk with care as he works through a particularly brutal murder of a CIA agent. Policeman by day and brothel keeper by night (the brothel’s co-owners are his mother and his police superior), Sonchai is very honest and moral but with values different from our expectations of cops. Burdett’s writing style brings his characters to life such as Sonchai describing an encounter with a recalcitrant prisoner - “ agonized over every cop’s dilemma in such circumstances: shoot the bastard or merely beat the shit out of him.” Sonchai’s take on a female CIA officer - “There is about her the restrained superiority of a senior librarian with access to secret catalogs,” and finally his description of “American” society - “The fear of letting go prevents you from letting go of the fear of letting go.” You will either love or hate Sonchai. I loved Bangkok 8 and think this one is even better. Recommended. 07/05 ~This review contributed by Jack Quick.
Bark M for Murder
by J. A. Nance, Virginia Lanier, Chassie West, and Lee Charles Kelley: It is
rare to have a collection of stories all about canines. This book has four of
them. I enjoyed all four fairly well, but I did have my favorites that I cheered
for as the stories progressed. Basket Case by Carl Hiaasen: This is a terrific mystery that hits a little closer to home for Mr. Hiaasen; the protagonist is a journalist. Our hero publicly humiliates his publisher, and is subsequently banished to the obituary desk where he becomes somewhat obsessed with death. When a rock 'n roll star dies under mysterious circumstances, the caper begins. While this time around there is a distinct lack of the usual frenetic insanity that often takes over his tales, I found this book hard to put down. Engrossing and entertaining. Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch The Battle of the Labyrinth by Rick Riordan: The fourth book in the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series has everything a good fantasy should have: characters we’ve grown to love and hate, new monsters, an interesting new pet, some humor, and a terrific battle scene. Riordan’s series about Percy and his fellow half-bloods, kids that are half human with a god as the other parent, is about kids on their own at camp, fighting for good over evil, during summer vacation. In this one, Percy and his friends set out out a quest through the labyrinth, a maze that keeps changing directions while it moves from one section of the country to another. It’s another exciting book in a terrific series. 05/08 Lesa Holstine The Beach House by James Patterson & Peter De Jonge: Sure to be the beach read of the summer, this fast paced, multi-chaptered (well over 100 chapters! - will someone please explain why he does that???) is set in the quintessential summer getaway, the Hamptons, and pits the working class against the rich and powerful. Entertaining and fun. Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch BEACH ROAD by James Patterson: The James Patterson factory of book writing returns to the world of the Hamptons, where Patterson set 2002’s The Beach House. Tom Dunleavy is a small-time lawyer who lands a big case defending a high-school basketball star accused of murdering three young men with whom Dunleavy plays basketball. Dunleavy is assisted in working the case by his ex-girlfriend, a high-powered Manhattan lawyer. The rich are truly different, as is amply pointed out in this typical Patterson larger than life tale. 06/06 Jack Quick The Bear & the Dragon by Tom Clancy: Typical Clancy, entertaining even at over 1000 pages. 'Nuf said. Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch BEAUTIFUL CHILDREN by Charles Bock: What happens in Las Vegas, stays in Las Vegas. In this case, that’s a good thing. This is the story of America’s “mutant” children, raised on video games, independence, and a disconnect with reality as most of us see it. Newell is a twelve year old runaway, not from anything or toward anything, but just because he can. Cheri Blossom doesn’t see anything wrong with mutilating her body in the name of “art”. Bing Beiderbixze is into pornography as an alternative to the real world where he is singularly physically unattractive. Ponyboy, who is mentally challenged, gay Kenny and his wacky aunt – all of these characters are larger than life and distorted by the life in which they exist. "What am I supposed to do," Kenny asks at the end of the book, not only on his own behalf but in the name of lost and confused humanity. "Just what am I supposed to do now?” BEAUTIFUL CHILDREN is not an easy read, nor is it a polished work. I read it in an electronic version. Perhaps in print, where you could more easily move back and forth to keep up with the various threads, it would be better. I came away with that dull washed out feeling you get after too little sleep, too much stimulation, and wondering if it was all worth it. 04/08 Jack Quick BEAUTIFUL LIES by Lisa Unger: Ridley Jones is a freelance writer living in New York City and gets her fifteen minutes of fame when she saves a toddler who wandered out in front of a truck - and the incident is caught on film. Her heroic deed gets her noticed by the Today Show and also by someone claiming to be her father. Her parents deny and when new neighbor Jake saunters into her life, he helps her figure out what is really going on - or does he? Twists and turns and lots of action make this an exhilarating read centered around a "Safe Haven" program where parents who don't want their babies can leave them with no questions asked, like at hospitals or clinics. While being touted as a debut novel, the careful plotting and well developed characters should tip off any reader that this author has been around - and indeed she has, as Lisa Miscione. 04/06 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch The Bee Season by Myla Goldberg: Very interesting, Jewish mystical theme, felt like it needed more of an ending though. Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch BEFORE YOU KNOW KINDNESS by Chris Bohjalian: Very interesting story about a New England family and how they deal with a tragedy. Twelve-year-old Charlotte accidentally shoots her animal-activist-vegan father with her uncle's hidden hunting rifle. Bohjalian presents more than just another family saga, however; the whole PETA-type tangent is front and center and clearly illuminated. But ultimately it is the characters that drive the story; Charlotte, having to deal with more than any child should have to deal with; her uncle and his guilt over the gun; her cousin, with whom she shares a secret; her mother and aunt and their reactions; and the matriarch of the family, her grandmother, Nan Seton, of strong, stoic New England stock. Much of the novel is autobiographic, especially the beautiful New Hampshire home and countryside which Bohjalian really brings to life. Another fine effort from this very talented author. 04/06 Stacy Alesi AKA The BookBitch Beginner's Luck by Laura Pedersen: Sixteen-year old Hallie Palmer is a wise-ass with big plans; as the small Ohio town's most successful gambler, she's saving her money to buy a car to take her to Vegas. But she skips school one time too many and gets kicked off the soccer team, gets kicked out of the casino permanently, loses her life savings on a bad bet at the track, and her mother is pregnant with child number eight, the cumulative effect being that Hallie quits school and runs away from home. Fortunately, she doesn't run far. She answers an ad for a yard person and goes to work for the town eccentrics; Olivia Stockton, a sixty-something radical feminist who alternates writing sonnets with writing pornography; her husband, the Judge, is in the last stages of Alzheimer's; her son Bernard, an antique dealer and old movie aficionado with an obsession for cooking gourmet meals with a theme; his lover, Gil, the "normal one" (although he is a tooth prognosticator); and Rocky, an alcoholic chimpanzee the Stockton's saved from a certain death - he was trained to work with a paraplegic, who died. Hallie moves into their summerhouse and into their lives, and gets more of an education than she ever would have at school. This poignant, quirky, unforgettable coming-of-age story is filled with humor, pathos and love. Note: This is the first trade paperback original published by the Ballantine Reader's Circle. It comes with the reading group guide, an interview with the author and an excerpt from the author's next book (which was terrific - a comedic romance between a Scotsman with terminal cancer and a dying nun) all bound in the back. Thanks to Ballantine Books, you can follow the links provided to see all of it, plus read an excerpt from Beginner's Luck. Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch Bel Canto by Ann Patchett: It's interesting to note that the chief criticism with this book about terrorists holding over 70 people hostage for several months is that it is unbelievable. A couple of the hostages fall in love and there seems to be almost a party air about the situation. I got some feedback from my reading group, and read some of the customer comments on Amazon and I have to point out that this book, while fiction and heavily dramatized, is based on an actual event - a revolutionary group called Tupac Amaru's takeover of the Japanese Embassy in Lima, Peru in 1996 that lasted several months. There were stories in the media about apparent pizza parties, soccer games on the lawn, and romance - and these stories triggered this novel for Patchett, who added an interesting character to the mix; a world famous American opera star. It's a fast moving story that is well written and deserving of all the awards and accolades it has won. It is now being written as an opera. Beowulf, a new verse translation by Seamus Heaney: Beautiful! The Best a Man Can Get: A Novel of Fatherhood and It's Discontents by John O'Farrell: Cute story about a man with a Peter Pan complex and how he learns to grow up the hard way. BEVERLY HILLS DEAD by Stuart Woods: World War II is over and Hollywood is in full swing. Rick Barron, once a lowly Beverly Hills cop, is now a decorated war time pilot and head of production for Centurion Pictures. He is cranking up a western that has all the makings of a smash hit using little known talent and shooting in the mountains around Jackson Hole Wyoming, a locale not previously used for movie making. Then Rick’s friend, Sidney Brooks, author of the screenplay from which Rick is making his movie, is called to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee. But it doesn’t stop there as the witch-hunt extends to other close friends and even his wife, the glamorous Glenna Gleason. Fast paced and full of action, Woods captures this time of uncertainty and turmoil when it was better to be “dead than red.” 01/08 Jack Quick BEYOND REACH by Karin Slaughter: Lena gets a mysterious phone call from her uncle Hank's neighbor, saying that he is in a bad way. But when she tries to reach him, she can't, so she heads home and finds the stuff nightmares are made from. When Jeffrey gets a phone call that Lena's been arrested as a possible person of interest in a gruesome murder, and hasn't uttered a word, he grabs Sara and they head off for the small Georgia town of Lena's childhood. Sara is escaping from a malpractice suit that has completely undermined her confidence in everything she believes in; her skill as a doctor, and more importantly, her trust in her patients. But something is rotten in Elawah County, and it has to with methamphetamine dealers and crooked cops and crooked politicians and lurid deaths. I cannot remember the last time I read a book that made me this angry. And not in a good way. Without giving anything away, I will say that I am not sorry that I was two books behind in this series, but very sorry that I decided to read this one instead of catching up in order. If you are invested in this series, don't read this book. If you've never read Slaughter and want to start here, go for it but you probably will never read another. I know I certainly won't, at least not in this series. The author left some comments at the end, and a longer explanation on her website (with lots of spoiler alerts) so I'm certainly not going to spill the beans here. But if anyone reads it, and wants to discuss it, I'd love to hear from you. Just don't say I didn't warn you. 09/07 Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch BEYOND REACH by Karin Slaughter: Slaughter's sixth thriller in her Grant County, Georgia crime series focuses primarily on the problems of reckless detective Lena Adams who gets mixed up in a dangerous web of methamphetamine trafficking, white supremacy, and long buried family issues. Her boss, police chief Jeffery Tolliver, is trying to help Lena but also is needed by his wife, Dr. Sara Linton, the county's resident pediatrician and medical examiner, who is mired in a devastating malpractice lawsuit. Slaughter builds the suspense to a perfect crescendo, finally connecting every loose plot strand into a devastating and unforgettable climax. As always she spares none of the ugly details. Fast becoming one of my must reads alongside Burke, Rankin, Muller, Pronzini, Child, et al. A warning. If you are one of those people who habitually turn to the end of the book to “see how its going to end”, resist that temptation with this one. 08/07 Jack Quick BIDDING FOR LOVE by Katie Fforde: When Flora Stanza inherits 51% of an auction house, she’s eager to join and learn the family business. Her stuffy cousin, Charles, and his fiancée, Annabelle, are not as excited to have her there. Although Charles loves the business, Annabelle has hopes of turning the building into flats, and selling it. However, she reluctantly agrees to let Flora use a holiday cottage while she’s working there. Between learning the business, dealing with a pregnant cat, and later kittens, coping with an unusual artist who was holed up in the cottage, and joining the choir, Flora has no time to miss her life in London. Instead, she finds herself falling in love with the auction business, and, losing her heart in the bargain. Katie Fforde’s English romantic comedies always have strong female characters, with interesting lives. Bidding for Love is no exception. And, as usual, there’s a satisfying ending to this warm story. 03/07 Lesa Holstine The Big Bad Wolf by James Patterson: There is something to be said for consistency. Alex Cross is back and even though he's newly employed by the F.B.I., everything still feels familiar and right. "Club Fed" training is going as well as one would expect, Nana is still making the best coffee in town, and Alex is still feeling guilty about his workaholic ways. When the wife of a federal judge is kidnapped, making it F.B.I. business, Alex is pulled out of class and sent to the crime scene, creating an interesting dichotomy of newly minted federal agent/star. It turns out to be just the latest in a string of such kidnappings and the F.B.I. suspects a possible white slavery ring. The Russian Red Mafiya king has been shaking things up with La Cosa Nostra and tops the lists of suspects, and Alex has a nasty new nemesis to deal with. Things are shaking up at home, too - a custody dispute emerges when Little Alex's mom blows into town. There are no tidy endings here, just an engrossing story that will leave readers clamoring for the sequel. The Big Bad Wolf is the biggest, baddest Alex Cross novel in years. Copyright © 2003 Cahners Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. Reprinted with permission.
THE BIG BAMBOO by Tim Dorsey: Tampa Bay's master of the madcap crime
novel is near the top of his form once more in The Big Bamboo. The
story involves Serge, Dorsey's homicidical history buff psycho killer,
travelling to Hollywood to perform a caper at the behest of his ancestor
Sergio's old cronies in crime. Hollywood is, of course, the perfect setting
for Serge. Like Florida, Hollywood is a place that no one is from, but
everyone comes to. And like Florida, it is full of maps that tells you where
what you think you ought to see is. And like Florida, that means you overlook
all the good stuff that made the place what it is in favor of what you want to
see. Fortunately, Dorsey and his alter ego Serge notice the important stuff
and want to remind us about it.
Unfortunately (for Serge and his faithful companion, Coleman), this caper
involves kidnapping a movie star from two coke addled, hornier than hamsters
studio executives whose studio is being financed by Japanese crime lords.
Serge is more than capable of dealing with the police and the studio thugs,
but the crime lords have a secret weapon who is silent and deadly. This
cold-blooded killer has had his face tattooed as a skull and is consequently
known in the trade as "The Tat." (Rhymes nicely with Wu Fat, by the way).
Will Serge and Coleman survive the Tat?
More importantly, will he survive the movie actress? Even after a bout of
Serge sex, she remains a spoiled whiner, who insists on going shopping. The
resulting sprees make them all folk heroes, but sort of expose them to
everyone who is chasing them.
All of this is grist for Dorsey's mill because it gives him the basis for
a slam bang chase scene finish with Harold Lloyd ladder stunts, frequent
references to Its A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World's finale and reminded me no
little bit of the romp through the studio at the end of Blazing Saddles
(which for Dorsey, curiously, is not credited.)
Along the way, Dorsey's ear is as fine as ever. His Hollywood cops do a
perfect Jack Webb number early in the story. The references to The Big
Lebowski, one of my all time favorite movies, warmed my heart and of course,
the homage to Mad World brought back high school in '63 and seeing the movie
on the big screen with The Blonde.
I liked having Serge on the road and remain hopeful that he (Mr. Dorsey)
will see fit to mine Southeastern Arizona and the old copper town of Bisbee
one of these days.
This is a very funny and enjoyable book and along the way you will learn a
few things. Buy it. For that matter, check out Mr. Dorsey's website, Serge's
store and the links to the late, great Bamboo bar in Kissimmee's website.
04/06 Geoffrey R. Hamlin
THE BIG BOOM by Domenic Stansberry: In Chasing the Dragon, Italian American Dante Mancuso, native of San Francisco’s North Beach, lost his father and his uncle. The former deep-cover CIA agent is back where he grew up, working as a private detective and trying to put his life together when a corpse found floating in the bay is identified as Angie Antonelli, a former lover. Her parents ask him to investigate, and the trail leads both back into North Beach history and forward into that twenty-first-century demilitarized zone where cyberspace collides with flesh-and-blood reality. Dante confronts Angie’s boss at a dot-com startup company and tracks down other employees who have moved on in the volatile job market. Soon the PI meets the crew of killers with a perverse fondness for drowning. The classic detective story lives on in Stansberry’s gritty but realistic portrayal of both sides of change, the good parts and the dark parts. Who gains and who loses. Hopefully there will be more. 07/07 Jack Quick BIG CITY, BAD BLOOD by Sean Chercover: Real-life Chicago PI Chercover, in his hard-boiled debut, writes Chicago like Ed Dee writes New York and Loren D. Estleman writes Detroit – gritty, dirty, scary, bold, and beloved by its citizens. Ray Dudgeon is a former Chicago reporter who has turned private detective. Bob Loniski is just trying to lock up some locations for movie making when he gets entangled in a ”Rent What You Don’t Own” scam. As a potential witness at the trial of the scammer, his life is threatened so he hires Dudgeon to look after him. Suddenly Dudgeon finds himself in the middle of an organized crime war complete with crooked politicians and assorted violence. Dudgeon turns out to be a classic private eye of the old school who can take a licking and keep on ticking – and quit is a word he never heard. Hopefully the first of many adventures for a guy that even has a nurse for a dame – and he needs one. 03/07 Jack Quick BIG MONEY by Jack Getze: Prior to the Bear Sterns collapse it was hard to picture a sympathetic character in the big time financial world. But suspended and scruffy stockbroker Austin Carr is back to battle mobsters, women and his own big mouth. The story starts with Carr in the company of a gorgeous naked lady – holding a shotgun. It’s all in a day’s work for him as he’s being extorted into opening a money-laundering account for local crime boss Bluefish; an auditor who had been looking into his company’s books has turned up murdered; a female state police captain has him pegged as the key to her organized crime investigation; and his boss’s mother has been picked up for fixing her church bingo game. Somehow Carr survived his previous outing in last year’s BIG NUMBERS, so he’ll probably survive all this. Suggestion, try not to drink any beverages while reading this one, however, as you just might get the pages all wet. 03/08 Jack Quick BIG NUMBERS by Jack Getze: This is one tough book. It arrived at my home in a package that looked like it had been used as a training aid for the USPS heavy equipment operators training school. Inside the somewhat battered covers was a dark but funny story about the near demise of a down on his luck stockbroker. Normally, one would not think of a stockbroker as a particularly sympathetic protagonist but when he is living in a truck bed camper in a public parking lot trying to avoid clients like Psycho Samson, a former professional wrestler whose first career choice of the NFL was denied him because of his “bad attitude”….. Austin Carr sums it all up “I swear the only subjects of interest around here are money, sex, and sports, in that order. Hopefully there will be a sequel to Big Numbers so we can get Carr’s take on sports. Recommended. 03/07 Jack Quick THE BIG OVER EASY by Jasper Fforde: Fforde has left the world of classical literature that he wrote about in his Thursday Next novels, such as The Eyre Affair, to enter a world where The Nursery Crime Division is part of the police force. The Big Over Easy is a crime novel for readers who can suspend disbelief and enjoy crimes featuring the Gingerbreadman and the three pigs. Jack Spratt is partnered with Mary Mary to investigate the death of Humpty Dumpty, who shattered into pieces when he fell off a wall. Unfortunately, Spratt just lost a case against the three pigs, and has a reputation for killing giants. The department might be shut down, and the case turned over to a prominent officer in the Guild of Detectives, Friedland Chymes. Spratt’s entire career is in jeopardy in this fun story. As Fforde himself might say, the reader will be rooting for the good egg, not the hard-boiled detective. 08/05 ~This review contributed by Lesa Holstine. THE BIG SECRET by Pete Earley: Nick LeRue is an unusual protagonist, a U.S. Senate investigator working for the Senate Judiciary Committee. He is approached by Melanie Cole, the twin sister of his former lover Heather, asking for his help in finding Heather who is missing in Mississippi. Heather, a reporter, is trying to unearth the secrets behind a 1955 lynching in that state when she is kidnapped and killed by one of the principals from the lynching. LeRue is a neat character but there is a bit too much woo-woo for me in the form of dream sequences that reveal key plot turns, etc. This is Earley’s fiction debut so hopefully future efforts will focus more on the reality of the characters rather than using plot gimmicks. 10/05 ~This review contributed by Jack Quick. THE BIG SWITCH by Jack Bludis: Finally, I got a Jack Bludis’ book to read and it is great. Kane is a Hollywood P.I. in 1951. This particular job isn’t that glamorous, but the pay is okay and it’s not that difficult. He has been hired to catch a cheating husband – not hard when the man has not one, not two, but three different starlets that are “special friends.” But when Kane shows up at the errant spouse’s home to deliver his report, he finds that the lady of the house is not, in fact, the lady who hired him. Before Kane can solve this one, starlet number one is found dead, and although Kane isn’t responsible, there is a possibility his fingerprints are on the murder weapon. Throw in some good scotch, discreet sex, and drop dead gorgeous women, and you wonder why this isn’t a series. Definitely recommended. 12/07 Jack Quick BIG CHERRY HOLLER by Adriana Trigiani: The second book in the Big Stone Gap series finds Ave Maria Mulligan MacChesney married for eleven years to her Jack and busy parenting a ten year old daughter, Etta. Losing their son Joe a few years earlier had devastating effects on both Ave Maria and Jack, but neither is facing the problem. Stress builds as the coal mine closes and Jack is out of work, forming a construction company with a couple of likewise unemployed friends. The marriage appears to be floundering, giving this novel a more serious tone than the first one, but Trigiani's trademark humor is still present and perhaps more poignant because of the seriousness of the story. A trip to Italy brings about more questions but ultimately the answers are found back in Big Stone Gap. Trigiani has a gift for telling a great story that is driven by these characters that feel like family. Can't wait to meet up with them again in Milk Glass Moon. 02/07 Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch THE BIG CLOCK by Kenneth Fearing: Number Four in an awesome anthology entitled CRIME NOVELS: American Noir of the 1930’s and 40’s. In the 1948 film of the same name, Charles Laughton played the punctuality obsessed, slave-driving head of a publishing empire (Earl Janoth) who won't let his crime magazine's star editor George Stroud (Ray Milland) take a day off to spend with his family. This was remade in 1987 with Kevin Costner as No Way Out. The overworked Stroud goes on a sorrow-drowning, barhopping bender with Janoth's mistress. Later that night after Stroud has dropped her off at her apartment, Janoth murders her, and the next day Stroud is assigned to investigate, since a number of clues point to her having spent time with another man that night. Stroud, then, must not only find the real murderer but also sidetrack the investigation away from himself. 07/07 Jack Quick THE BIG SILENCE (#6) by Stuart Kaminsky: As usual with this series, Chicago Jewish policeman Abe Lieberman and his Irish partner, Bill Hanrahan, known to colleagues as "the Rabbi and the Priest," have to handle a combination of personal and professional challenges. Hanrahan, a former football lineman and recovering alcoholic, is nearly suicidal over a blown assignment that resulted in a kidnapping and murder. It’s the second time this kind of thing has happened to him. His partner, Lieberman, must take up the slack while dealing with on-going family matters. I think the key to this entire series is contained in this one line quote – “Crimes are not so much solved as resolved.” Whatever, it’s always a good read. 05/08 Jack Quick The Big Switch by Jack Bludis: Fun, sexy mystery set in the Hollywood noir of 1951. Private Investigator Brian Kane is hired by a star's wife to follow her husband and see if he's cheating, but someone else wants the incriminating pictures and has the gun to prove it. A starlet is murdered, then another, and the bodies start piling up. Everyone has a secret, and after Kane's call-girl-girl-friend gets involved, he takes it very personally. To make things even more interesting, the women find Kane irresistible, and so is this book. It was fun going back to the time before cell phones and all the high tech gizmos of today's PI's. The writing was clean and crisp and well suited to the time frame and story. This is good hard boiled crime fiction. And check out the sequel, The Deal Killer. BILLY BOYLE by James R. Benn: Benn is not yet on a par with Ken Follett but shows promise of getting there. Billy Boyle is a Boston cop, from a family of Boston cops, who reluctantly goes to war in Europe in 1942. His family calls on cousin Mamie to help find Boyle a cushy safe job, but Mamie’s husband, Boyle’s “Uncle Ike” needs a hotshot detective. Since Eisenhower has been told Boyle fills that description he sends him off spy chasing. Good plot and the action builds to a strong climax, but a bit over-clichéd. A sequel should be stronger and even more enjoyable. 10/06 Jack Quick BIRD OF PREY by Tom Grace: An enormous global corporation run by a ruthless woman willing to commit high-tech murder to stop her competitors is the basis for this techno-thriller than evokes Ian Fleming or Robert Ludlum. Astronaut Kelsey Newton, fiancé of former Navy SEAL Nolan Kilkenny, is in danger, so Nolan sets out to find the source of the black space ship carrying a high-powered laser that has been knocking out space shuttles and communications satellites. If it sounds like 007 in Moonraker, it does follow that same plot fairly closely. Overall a crisp, enjoyable read with lots of action and just enough love interest. 01/06 Jack Quick BIRDMAN by Mo Hayder: In 1999, Mo Hayder made her debut with this gruesome and gut wrenching novel. London detective, Jack Caffery, was unlucky enough to pull call duty the week that five bodies are discovered buried in a construction yard. Each of the bodies is that of a young woman and all but one show serious signs of drug abuse. Even worse, each woman is found with a finch sewn into her chest. A piece of trace evidence found on one of the women leads the police to believe that they may already have a suspect in hand. Jack Caffery is not so sure. Jack is allowed a short period of time in which to follow up on his own leads but his discoveries may come too late and at a price. Caffery is an interesting character. He is smart and apparently attractive as many of the women around him seem to lust after him without his knowledge. He is unable to maintain healthy relationships, though, thanks to his obsession with the death of his brother. Hayder has the ability - through characters, setting, and plot - to induce every imaginable emotion from her readers – horror, sympathy, and disgust, to name a few. Birdman is sick, twisted, and highly disturbing. It is also a riveting thriller that introduced readers to the force that is Mo Hayder. 01/08 Becky Lejeune BIRDMAN by Mo Hayder: Detective Inspector Jack Caffery has major problems. At work, he is dealing with a serial murderer who has killed at least five prostitutes, cut them open, and placed a live bird inside each brutally mangled corpse. At home, his girl friend, with whom he has decided there is no future, announces she is suffering a reoccurrence of her cancer. There’s a new DI from CID that’s trying to take over Caffery’s preferred position and lastly, Caffery remains obsessed about his next-door neighbor, a convicted pedophile who Caffery believes may have murdered Caffery's own long-missing brother. Hayder does a good job winding all these threads together while creating a book that’s part mystery, part police/procedural and part thriller while displaying a fairly wide knowledge of British police techniques and basis forensics. Be forewarned, she is not shy in her descriptions, so those with a weak stomach may wish to pass. 09/06 Jack Quick THE BITE by Michael Crow: After a major drug bust in Baltimore involving the Russian mob, Baltimore County Police Detective Luther Ewing and his partner “Ice Box” have been told to maintain a low profile. In his second outing, Ewing and Ice Box are sent up to the rural northern area of the county trying to get a handle on the crystal meth being cooked in that area. The Baltimore DEA Bureau chief is running a parallel operation and Ewing isn’t certain whether the two are in fact parallel or about to collide with a bang. Assorted villains and murders later, the entire structure comes tumbling down with Ewing frantically sorting the good guys from the bad guys. In the process he realizes he must break off his relationship with his girlfriend, Helen, who life has been put into danger by his actions. Ewing continues to be of the Dirty Harry, Jack Reacher mold and Crow’s writing is paced accordingly. Recommended. 07/05 ~This review contributed by Jack Quick. BITING THE BULLET by Jennifer Rardin: This third book in the fantastic Jaz Parks series has Jaz and her team pitted against one heinous necromancer. Jaz, Vayl, and all the others have been deployed to Tehran where a necromancer called the Wizard is said to be hiding out - the man has been a government target for some time now and it looks like this is the best chance they will have to finally bring him down. Surprisingly, Jaz and her team are assigned to be working with her own brother’s Spec Ops squad. The twins have not spoken since Jaz had to kill Dave’s fiancé after being turned into a vampire. Things are rocky at first, but Dave must rely on Jaz and her team’s specialties since it seems that one of the Spec Ops members may be a mole feeding info to the Wizard. Things are further complicated when Jaz learns that a reaver has put a bounty on her head and Tehran is now teeming with the soul suckers. Paranormal mysteries and urban fantasy are fun reading. The use of a very real setting combined with supernatural elements leaves authors like Rardin a lot of room to play, making it that much more interesting. More and more elements are added to Jaz’s story with each installment, and the cast of paranormal characters keeps growing. 03/08 Becky Lejeune BITSY'S BAIT & BBQ by Pamela Morsi: Emma Collins knows that only her impulsive sister, Katy Dodson, would buy a B&B sight unseen over the internet. She also knows her sister will honor her commitment when she discovers her “B&B” is a Bait & BBQ. Together, the two of them try to make a go of it in Warbler Lake, Missouri, a small town in the Ozarks. They need to make it succeed for the sake of Katy’s son, Josh, who falls in love with the town and the people. They weren’t counting on Josh’s wealthy grandmother deciding to fight for custody, or Katy’s ex-husband looking for happiness he only found with her. Morsi’s latest novel is a warm story of people finding their place in the world, even if it is in unexpected places. 02/07 Lesa Holstine BITTEN TO DEATH by Jennifer Rardin: The fourth book in the Jaz Parks series finds Jaz, Vayle, and David sent out on an op in Greece that should finally lead to the capture of Edward “The Raptor” Samos – readers will recall that the elite CIA team has been on Samos’s tail since the beginning of the series. Vayl and Jaz have received information that a family of vamps (called a Trust in vamp lingo) has been offered a unique deal by the evil Samos. Vayl and his team have cut a second deal with the leader of the Trust that will finally allow them access to their foe. Unfortunately, the team soon discovers that the Trust has recently been overthrown and the new leader has plans of her own - plans that involve manipulating Vayl in ways that seem to lead Jaz into a fiery fury. Always fun and entertaining, this unique urban fantasy series could be the start of a whole new sub-genre: Spy-Fi. I wish I had come up with the term first. Cool gadgets, creepy crawlies like you’ve never seen, action, romance, and a healthy mix of humor make this series one of my absolute favorites. 08/08 Becky Lejeune BITTER END by Christine Kling: Seychelle Sullivan is back in this third entry to one of my favorite series. Seychelle is a strong, self-sufficient woman running her own tugboat & salvage business in Fort Lauderdale. She's on her way to push out a sailboat when she sees a familiar yacht - it belongs to Nick Pontus, who ran off with her best friend Molly and caused the two of them to stop speaking to each other. Seychelle hears shots fired, then the yacht runs aground. She chases after it, finds Nick dead and tows the boat in for repairs before it can sink. It means a big commission from the insurance company for saving the boat, but then her old friend Molly is arrested for the murder. Seychelle knows something isn't adding up even if the cops don't and sets out to prove her friend's innocence. This is a well written tale of intrigue and a fine addition to the series. BITTER END by Christine Kling: Since kindergarten, Seychelle Sullivan and her best friend, Molly, had been as close as sisters, but it all ended suddenly when Nick Pontus, a slick, older, up-and-coming entrepreneur, came along. A smitten Molly quit school, married her new beau, and never spoke to Seychelle again. After thirteen years, it still stings but when her back-from-the-blue friend asks for help, Seychelle can’t just weigh anchor and cruise. Seychelle didn’t see the sniper who picked Nick off at the helm of his yacht, but she knows that there are plenty of people in South Florida who wanted to see the gambling-boat tycoon dead: the Russian mobsters looking for a piece of his casino action, the Indian gamers who resent his competition, and the ecological activists fighting his plans to develop Fort Lauderdale’s waterfront. Protecting Nick and Molly’s son, proving Molly’s innocence, and navigating between squalls of gunfire add up to a tall order as salvage jobs go, but Seychelle is equal to the task. Another good one. 04/06 Jack Quick BLACK by Christopher Whitcomb – The scariest part of Whitcomb’s first novel – a can’t put down techno-thriller involving terrorists, technology and today’s world – is the fact that Whitcomb spent 15 years with the FBI as a sniper, instructor and Director of Intelligence. You suspect that truth here may in fact be stranger than fiction. Special Agent Jeremy Waller is drawn into webs of intrigue when Jordan Mitchell, CEO of Borders Atlantic and one of the world’s richest men threatens to sell an encryption device to the Saudis. Accusations and bullets fly almost taking down a US Senator before it’s over. A good read, lots of action, beautiful women in peril and the good guys ultimately win. 08/05 ~This review contributed by Jack Quick. THE BLACK ANGEL by John Connelly: Parker, his new partner Rachel and their infant daughter Sam, are now in Maine away from the turmoil of New York City. However, at Sam’s christening the aunt of Louis (one of Sam’s two gay Godfathers) shows up, seeking help in finding her daughter Alice, a New York City prostitute. Parker is soon back in the game in New York City and the Czech Republic on the trail of the Black Angel, a statue sought be evildoers for centuries. As always, Connolly delivers a very intense blend of Parker's authentic soul searching in his own unique way. 11/05 ~This review contributed by Jack Quick.
THE BLACK ANGEL by John Connolly: The book opens with a
breathtaking description of the fall of the angels BLACK CROSS by Greg Iles: Iles is one of my favorite authors, and I've been going back and reading his older books that I had missed. I believe this was his second novel, and while it is very different from his more recent books, it is excellent and Iles considers it his best book, with good reason. The plot is basically built around a young doctor attending his physician grandfather's funeral. He meets a Rabbi at the cemetery, who asks for a ride back and proceeds to tell the young doctor a story about his grandfather that makes up most of the book. This is a Holocaust story, and a chilling one; Iles did a lot of research for this and it shows. The premise is that Dr. Mark McConnell, "Mac", a pacifist, was doing research in poisonous gas when he is manipulated into going on a dangerous mission with Jonas Stern, a Zionist terrorist, into Nazi Germany. The Nazis had developed Sarin, and Soman, deadly gases that the Allies had no protection against, other than this plan. With Winston Churchill's blessing, these men set off for training and their mission. This is a frightening story that is intensely riveting, and a terrific read. 04/08 Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch BLACK DEATH REPRISE by Don Pendleton: Don Pendelton’s Mack Bolan was a pulp staple of the 1970’s, waging war on the Mafia all across the world in a series of action packed bloody adventures. Now Bolan is back seeking a missing virologist with ties to an order of monks that legend proclaims was the mastermind of the Black Death. The order has sent forty couriers to major cities around the globe to unleash a new plaque on the world. Only Bolan can stop this diabolic assault on the modern world. Will he succeed? Let us hope so. After all, a sequel would be nice. 08/08 Jack Quick Black Dog by Stephen Booth: After hearing people rave about Stephen Booth for quite a while now, I have to say my expectations were so high I figured no book could possibly live up to them. But this one did - I loved this book. I've never been to the U.K. but Booth took me there, to the Peaks district in Northern England, and it was a vivid, exciting journey. Detective Constable Ben Cooper is struggling with family demons when the body of a teenage girl is found in the woods. He is paired up with the prickly Diane Fry, newcomer to the Peaks District, with her rather formidable reputation preceding her. But Ben also has a reputation – his father was a cop who was killed in the line of duty. Everyone in this small town knows Ben, and knows what happened, and they just love him, which really rubs Diane the wrong way. She has her own history though, and their stories and their burgeoning relationship are as interesting as the who-done-it. Happy note: this is the first of a series, and is followed by Dancing with the Virgins then Blood on the Tongue, with hopefully more to come. THE BLACK DOVE by Steve Hockensmith: There is a joke about a fellow from Minnesota who took as his bride, a lady from Palestine. To honor both their cultures, they named their firstborn son “Yassir Youbetcha”. Gustav “Old Red” Amlingmeyer and his brother Otto “Big Red” Amlingmeyer find themselves in Chinatown in San Francisco in 1893. Although cowpokes by training, the brothers fancy themselves experts as “deducifying” like their idol, the immortal Sherlock Holmes. The brothers face guns and hatchets while defying the San Francisco Police Department, brutal Barbary Coast hoodlums and the deadly Chinatown tongs. Their friend, Dr. Chan, is a victim of the hunt for the mysterious, exotic, and enigmatic hard to find “Black Dove.” All that’s missing is Jackie Chan as “Chon Wang” from Shanghai Noon. Definitely not your every day mystery but definitely amusing. 05/08 Jack Quick BLACK KNIGHT IN RED SQUARE by Stuart Kaminsky: Four dead, poisoned during the Moscow Film Festival. Chief Inspector Porifry Rostnikov must stop the female terrorist who seems determined and capable of making the Russian police look as stupid and vulnerable as those of five other countries in which she has worked. Written in 1984, Rostnikov is quite different from the brooding Arkady Renko of Martin Cruz Smith. More like a John Rebus in Russia. 12/05 ~This review contributed by Jack Quick. BLACK MAPS by Peter Spiegelman: Former up-state New York cop John Marsh is now working as a private investigator in New York City in this debut revival of the classic PI tale. Marsh is engaged through an attorney friend to track down a blackmailer and extortionist who is threatening an investment banker. Marsh knows a bit about that life, as he walked away from the investment-banking firm controlled by his family to become a rural sheriff’s deputy. Marsh had enjoyed his stint upstate until the death of his wife drove him back into the city. You sense Marsh could become very good at this or else fall into the bottomless pit that had claimed many others. Intense, well written, and full of action, makes you look forward to his next adventure. Well-deserved winner of the 2004 Shamus Award for Best First Novel. 08/05 ~This review contributed by Jack Quick. BLACK MONDAY by R. Scott Reiss: Wow. What a thriller. The world has finally come under attack by a deadly microbe, but its not attacking humans directly. Instead it has contaminated almost all the world oil supply, effectively shutting down all cars, planes and machines—anything driven by oil. Food supplies and electricity run out. Police have no way to patrol the streets. Gangs and marauders seize control in the world capitals. In the middle of this, Dr. Greg Gillette, a Georgia Tech graduate and epidemiologist for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, must figure out how to stop the epidemic and restore order. The action ranges from rural Massachusetts to the Nevada desert as Gillette tries to remain focused on the problem and not his attractive boss whose presence threatens his marriage like nothing before. Not surprising that this one is already in production as a movie produced by Tom Jacobson. 04/07 Jack Quick BLACK MONDAY by R. Scott Reiss: When a microbe infects the world’s oil supply, one analyst predicts that we will have just 50 days to discover the cause and rectify the situation or there will be no turning back. Greg Gillette finds himself racing against time to discover the source of the microbe and, if possible, a way to reverse the effects. The U.S. quickly degenerates as food supplies and other resources become scarce and people turn against one another in an attempt to save themselves. Neighbors begin looting and even killing as they fight to survive. Martial law becomes the norm and death is the punishment for even crimes such as looting. As a doctor with the CDC, Greg believes the “outbreak” should be treated the same as any other. His superiors do not agree and Greg is forced to try and solve this thing on his own. This timely and creepy debut is guaranteed to keep you up all night - a definite must-read for any thriller fan. 03/07 Becky Lejeune
BLACK ORDER BLACK OUT by Lisa Unger: This is a startling and complex stand alone thriller from the author of a couple of excellent thrillers (Sliver of Truth and Beautiful Lies) and mysteries (written under her maiden name, Lisa Miscione). Annie is a complex woman with a hell of a past, and all her tragedy is played out as a story within a story within a story - three stories merging together in one psychological thriller. She's the fiercely protective mother of a young daughter, the loving yet dependent wife of a mysterious man, and is in therapy for her vastly abusive childhood; she's also the daughter of a fervently religious woman who spent her life subservient to men to the point of marrying a convicted serial rapist and murderer while he was in prison. Annie has issues, as they say, and is trying to work them out with the help of her husband, her therapist, and her in-laws in this tense, multi-layered and very compelling story. She's on shaky ground, and then her past starts to haunt her in ways that could shatter her new life. A very thoughtful, thought-provoking book and one that I couldn't put down. 06/08 Stacy Alesi, AKA The BookBitch THE BLACK PATH by Asa Larson: The story is relatively simple but the delivery is complex. Inna Wattrang’s frozen body is found on a frozen lake, in an ark, a small cabin used for ice fishing. Inspector Anna-Maria Mella and her longtime partner, Sven-Erik Stålnacke are assigned to the case, for which there are few clues. New prosecutor Rebecka Martinsson is added to the team, although she is recovering from mental problems that have sidelined her. Together the team focuses on the business of Kallis Mining, the company for which Inna worked. More of a psychological thriller than a mystery, the book is delightfully dark and twisty and conveys the sense of life in a society different from say, mainstream America. Great read. 08/08 Jack Quick THE BLACK TOWER by Louis Bayard: Eugène François Vidocq was a soldier and criminal who lived in France at the time of the revolution. He later went on to become the founder and first director of the Sûreté National, France’s plain-clothes detectives division. Vidocq and his legacy provide the backdrop of Bayard’s latest literary mystery in which a Dr. Carpentier recounts his experience with the legendary detective and a case that traces back to a lost prince of the French monarchy. Twenty-six year old medical student Hector Carpentier is visited by Vidocq one afternoon after a body is discovered carrying the as-yet-graduated doctor’s hidden on his person. What Hector and Vidocq don’t know is that the man was not searching for Hector at all, but instead his father, a glass grinder and retired doctor who died eighteen months prior to the event in question. Hector is wrangled into acting as Vidocq’s unofficial partner in the investigation and ends up right in the middle of a state conspiracy that has been years in the making. Bayard’s combination of historical fact and creative license breathes new life into one of the most interesting players in all of criminal justice history. I can imagine that Vidocq himself would be pleased to be given the chance for one last adventure of this caliber. 08/08 Becky Lejeune Black Water by T. Jefferson Parker: This is the third installment in the Merci Rayburn series but it was my first foray into Parker's work. This is a series that should probably be read in order, and I can't wait to read The Blue Hour, and then Red Light, which was an Edgar nominee. It took me most of the book to figure out some of Merci's background, but it was well worth the trouble. She's a single mom and a smart, dedicated homicide detective in Southern California. When she is sent to a crime scene that overwhelmingly points to a murder-suicide of a cop and his wife, she remains unconvinced and sets out to find the truth. Good, tight story and wonderful characters make Black Water a winner. BLACK WATER by T. Jefferson Parker: Merci Rayborn is about the only one who thinks deputy Archie Wildcraft didn't kill his beautiful young wife and then turn his service weapon on himself. The evidence against Wildcraft--now hospitalized with a bullet lodged in his head--seems overwhelming, but Merci (from The Blue Hour) is resisting pressure from her boss and a headline-hunting D.A. to arrest Wildcraft and charge him with murder. Then the deputy, who's lost his memory and maybe his mind as a result of his injury, goes missing from his hospital room, intent on tracking down the real killers and managing to stay a step ahead of Merci. It’s a page-turner all the way. 03/06 Jack Quick BLACK WIDOW by Randy Wayne White: Doc Ford is never boring and this 15th outing is packed full of action as Ford answers a desperate appeal for help from an old friend. Shay Money is the 26-year old daughter of an old Florida swamper. Her pending marriage is in jeopardy after a girls night out on St. Joan of Arc led to the production of a video revealing her and her friends in sexually compromising positions. Ford is asked to get the tape back and protect her. The trail leads him into a sophisticated blackmail racket with a long list of victims. Tomlinson is Tomlinson, there are women after Ford, and Ford continues to resent authority. Hang on tight as the ride is bumpy in parts. 07/08 Jack Quick THE BLACK WIDOW AGENCY by Felicia Donovan: Computer forensics, surveillance technology and feminine intuition – a powerful combination dedicated to bringing justice to wronged women. The four Black Widows are ex-cop Katie Mahoney; Margot Norton, mistress of disguise; office manager; Jane Landers, equally adept at dealing with numbers and hot flashes; and cybergoddess Alexandria Axelrod, keeper of her own tarantula. These are the ladies at the Black Widow Agency and when they hear Amber Gordon's heartbreaking story of sexual harassment, ending in a ruined career and lost custody of her daughter, they vow to spin a trap for the sexist automotive company run by Amber's former father-in-law. Ladies rejoice, for men, it’s the Sisterhood from Hell. They celebrate their triumphs with something called chocolate genoise cake, an airy sponge cake sliced in half and layered with a chocolate mousse filling, then a white chocolate mousse filling made of marscapone cheese, all chilled and then covered with a silky fudge frosting, topped with fresh whipped cream, fresh strawberries and a melted dark chocolate drizzle.” Then it’s back to the grindstone. Definitely different, with lots of funny lines, i.e., his girlfriend is a doorknob – everyone gets a turn. 11/07 Jack Quick BLACKBIRD, FAREWELL by Robert Greer: Damion Madrid chose a different path than that of his best friend, Shandell “Blackbird” Bird. The two were all-stars on their college basketball team and Shandell has been drafted for the NBA. Damion turned that life down in lieu of medical school. When Shandell is gunned down just days before his new career is to begin, though, Damion vows to unmask his killer at any cost. What Damion uncovers about his friend’s hidden life is something he never expected. Shandell is being accused of everything from point shaving and possible mob links to selling performance-enhancing drugs on the side. Damion enlists the help of a friend and ex-marine bailbonds-woman, Flora Jean Benson, in the investigation. Blackbird is a traditional whodunit wrapped up in the dirty side of professional sports. Although this is technically being considered the 7th title in Greer’s CJ Floyd series, Floyd is actually only a peripheral character. As such, Blackbird can be read as a stand-alone or as the latest in the series. 11/08 Becky Lejeune Blackbird House by Alice Hoffman: Alice, if you are reading this I loved your book! I spent a college summer on the Cape. As I rode my bike around looking at all the wonderful old houses, walking in the cemeteries there were so many stories to be told. You told them! The people, the smells, the tastes, the light-- all unique to the Cape. This book is a wonderful gift to anyone of us who has stood in front of an old house and imagined what it was like to live there. Knowing that the life of a house is in the people, the trees, the plants, the animals, the birds, the water and our relationship to them. Thanks for taking me there Alice! ~This review contributed by Ann Nappa. THE BLACKJACK CONSPIRACY by David Kent: This is the third story of Department Thirty -- a secret government agency that erases the identities of top-level criminals in exchange for the kind of information people would kill for. Alex Bridge, a young, pregnant widow has been accused of embezzling mi |