Tuesday, 30 July 2024

 

Knife, by Salman Rushdie.                       Memoir

 

        


    In 1989, acclaimed author Salman Rushdie was sentenced to a Fatwa by Iranian Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini –a  death sentence executed by any pious Muslim, for writing a novel called ‘The  Satanic Verses’, deemed to be contemptuous and scornful of Islam.  For the next several years, Rushdie was kept under 24 hour surveillance and reluctantly lived the life of a recluse, a fugitive who never knew when and where death would strike – until, finally, he became tired of living his life in the shadows;  he needed to feel the sun again, travel as he pleased, and socialise with his friends and loved ones:  to hell with Fatwas – he’d take the risk and live his life as he wanted to, in freedom.

            Until August, 2022, Salman Rushdie did just that.  Life was good;  he’d fallen in love (and it was reciprocal!); his new novel was about to be published, and he’d agreed to give a lecture at Lake Chautauqua, upstate New York on the importance of keeping overseas writers from harm, those in danger from fanatics from their places of origin.  What an irony for, as he was introduced on stage a black-clad figure rushed towards him brandishing a knife – a knife that inflicted numerous serious wounds before his assailant was overpowered and prevented from continuing.  Rushdie was taken by helicopter to hospital, and not expected to survive.

            ‘Knife’ is Rushdie’s personal account of his ordeal;  his grievous injuries – he has lost the sight of his right eye, and his left hand which he lifted in defence as the assailant rushed towards him has permanent damage to the tendons, not to mention numerous cuts and scarring on his body – are testament to an iron determination not to be a soon-to-be- forgotten  victim of religious bigotry and fanaticism, but to survive and still live his best life.  He pays grateful tribute to his family, friends and loving wife, all of whom never left his side – once they’d got there;  one of his sons had the misfortune to have a fear of flying, so had to come by sea from the UK, much to his chagrin, but he did it!  Meantime, the would-be assassin had pleaded not guilty to all charges, despite a packed auditorium of witnesses.

            Which prompts the victim to imagine several conversations with his would-be killer, none of which persuades a change of heart or mind:  Rushdie is evil and must be removed from the earth.  Okay then!

            But not yet.  Salman Rushdie has produced from awful personal experience  a darkly humorous, irrefutable treatise on religious tolerance, his own atheism and his unshakeable conviction that though knives are lethal, the Pen is always Mightier than the Sword.  FIVE STARS.           

             

                

 

        

Sunday, 21 July 2024

 

James, by Percival Everett.

 

            Percival Everett is a distinguished Black professor of English and a prize-winning novelist:  he is also a Pulitzer finalist, and eminently qualified to write a ‘What If’ story about the fates of two of American literature’s most beloved characters, Huckleberry Finn and the slave Jim, Mark Twain’s timeless, runaway heroes, and the various good, bad, strong and weak people they meet in their attempts to reach a place of safety.

            Jim finds out that his owner Ms Watson is planning to sell him down South;  that would be perfectly fine – if he were by himself, but he has a wife and little daughter that he loves above all else:  he can’t leave them – he won’t leave them:  without them he is nothing.  He will run and hide for a time until they stop searching for him, then he will return and take his family with him to safety.  Wherever safety may be.  Jim has heard that going North (he is in Missouri) is the best destination – if he remains uncaught:  if they find him he will either be beaten to death, or lynched.  Or tracked down by dogs who will not wag their tails when they see him.  But Jim knows a safe place, a little island in the nearby Mississippi river where he can hide out for a while; he can swim there and plan his next move.

            All well and good.  But someone else knows about the island, too – Jim is joined whether he likes it or not, by young Huckleberry Finn, who has staged his own death so that he doesn’t have to live any more with his Pappy ‘who shore does hate him!’ – Huck reckons it’s better to live in hiding with all the risks it involves than to be beaten bloody every night.  And that’s very true, except that Jim has a terrible sinking feeling when he hears that, for he knows that white folks will add two and two, and decide that runaway Jim has probably killed young Huck Finn:  how will he ever get back to his family with an extra imaginary crime hanging over him?

            Jim and Huck’s adventures in their attempts to avoid discovery are terrible, suspenseful and simultaneously uproariously funny:  the characters they meet travelling on the mighty Mississip are fitting heirs to Mark Twain’s genius for characterisation, and a tribute to Mr Everett’s formidable power as a writer – and a terrible indictment against the enslavement of one people by another.  Even though the story ends with the start of the American Civil War, the hatred hasn’t gone away.  SIX STARS.   

 

 

Sunday, 14 July 2024

 

Everyone in my Family has Killed Someone, by Benjamin Stephenson.

           

       
    
Classic murder mysteries follow strict rules:  a set number of people are gathered (or thrown) together at a place that is difficult to escape from;  one by one, they are picked off in various clever ways, thus building suspense and horror in the reader;  the denouement always, always reveals a murderer that no-one would ever suspect, and the remainder of the novel deals with the satisfying punishment and demise of the guilty party.  The great Agatha Christie was, as we all know, the unparalleled mistress of the genre and her shoes will never be filled;  however, there have been plenty less famous – and less talented upstarts ready to try their luck, with varying success.

            Australian writer Benjamin Stephenson does the opposite:  he has written an enormously entertaining 21st century parody of that disparate group of people with grudges and grievances, in this case narrated by Ernie, disgraced within his family because he testified against his brother Michael at Michael’s murder trial – families stick together no matter what, and the Cunningham family has had more of its share of trouble with the law than it could possibly need or want.  He is the pariah in the family group organised to welcome Michael home after his mysteriously reduced prison sentence.  Everyone has gathered at a luxury ski lodge in the Snowy mountains, and Michael’s ex-wife Lucy is there hoping for a reconciliation;  unfortunately, Ernie’s ex (whom he still loves) shows up as Michael’s new lovebird and, true to form, the weather turns nasty:  what was meant to be a skiing weekend with lots of hot toddies and flash food is transformed into a violent storm that traps everyone, starting with a complete stranger killed in a most ancient and unusual way.  Victim One!

            The body count rises as the weather worsens;  Michael dies the same dreadful death as Victim One and when Ernie (he is the narrator, after all!) eventually gathers everyone together in the ski lodge library – a classic setting for so many Big Reveals – I feel I can say with confidence that no reader had guessed WhoDunnit, and  What Happened Next, because I certainly didn’t and I’m really good at that.

            Benjamin Stephenson has followed all the rules, in fact he has helpfully provided a copy of them at the beginning of the book – and he has given readers a laugh-out-loud, enormously entertaining variation of the genre with characters so good that I wish I could meet them in future works by him – but he’s killed them all off!  FIVE STARS.

                 

 

 

 

Sunday, 7 July 2024

 

Listen for the Lie, by Amy Tintera.

 

     


       Lucy Chase is sent an airline ticket by her Grandmother to return to Plumpton, Texas, for Gran’s 80th birthday celebrations and, though she loves her Grandmother more than anybody, she really doesn’t want to return to a place where she may have murdered Savannah, her very best friend five years before, and where she had to leave because the lack of evidence to convict her did not lessen the gossip and speculation.

            A new life in Los Angeles has earned only temporary respite, for a new Podcast series ‘Listen for the Lie’ has started, and one of the cold cases it wishes to explore is Lucy’s very own and, despite her continued rebuffs of Podcaster Ben Owens, he has generated so much advance publicity raking over all the old coals that she loses her job – and her boyfriend, whose loss isn’t so bad, except that she will have to find another place to live and another job.  So!  Might as well bite the bullet and go back to help Gran celebrate.

            Except that Ben Owens has turned up in that small Texas town too, and everyone is happy to talk to him – except Lucy:  why should she help him make money out of an event of which she can remember nothing?  For Lucy was found wandering along a road, semi-conscious, concussed and covered with her friend’s blood:  despite various mysterious and damning circumstances, she can remember nothing and, despite her longing to know what really happened, the thought that she may have killed her dearest friend is too horrifying to think about.  So she won’t, so there!  It’s a shame that no-one else feels like that, though – even her parents don’t believe that she could be innocent, and her ex-husband (another big Lucy mistake) has completely different memories of Savannah’s last night of life.  What really happened when Lucy and Savannah left the wedding celebrations to which they were invited?  Lucy can’t face it.  But if she didn’t kill Savannah, who did?

            Amy Tintera has previously written for Young Adults;  this is her first adult novel, and she has given us unforgettable, cranky, smart-mouth Lucy as narrator – the first big plus.  The second is a clever plot that unfolds logically and credibly, and the third:  a cover blurb by Stephen King and Liane Moriarty!  Those two really know what’s good, and they are absolutely right:  this is a FIVE STAR read.   

Thursday, 27 June 2024

 

City in Ruins, by Don Winslow.

 

       


     The great Don Winslow, crime-writer extraordinaire, has announced that the above title, the last book in his contemporary trilogy based on Homer’s epic Iliad and Virgil’s Aeneid, will be his last.  In the immortal words of John Macinroe – (and millions of fans) HE CAN’T BE SERIOUS!!

            But he is, and the reading public is the poorer for it, because ‘City In Ruins’ has all the excitement, suspense and heartbreak of the preceding novels, set in Rhode Island, and involving a gang war between the Italian Mafia (Greece) and uppity Irish crims (Troy) getting too big for their boots.

            Danny Ryan (Aeneas) is the main protagonist, and he is forced to leave his dying wife behind as he flees with his loyal gang to California, intent on straightening himself out and leaving all the criminality behind for he has a baby son to look after, and nothing can be more important than that:  he wants his son to grow up to be proud of him, and to that end transforms himself into a legitimate businessman.  Now, after various Hollywood misadventures he has transformed himself into a respected Casino owner, one of the richest movers and shakers in Las Vegas.

            But Danny has never been a favourite of the Gods;  every now and then they remind him that they can change his life in an instant, especially  when he makes a rash and impulsive decision to buy an old hotel at a very strategic site – nothing wrong with that, except that the hotel in question had already been sold to someone else, who takes Danny’s absurdly huge impossible-to-refuse offer very personally:  eventually, the loser brings in a Mafia hitman so twisted that said hitman actually disgusts the others of his ilk:  Danny, in his attempts to be an honourable and legitimate businessman of whom his son can be proud, has hit a major snag:  it’s Killing and Maiming time again, and this time, his friends and loved ones are about to be sacrificed:  whether he wants to or not, he has to become a ruthless and deadly killer again to protect everyone he loves.

            No-one can ratchet up suspense more efficiently than Don Winslow as any late-night reader with a speeding heart will attest, and his contemporary retelling of the great epics of Homer and Virgil is masterly.  I still hope his announcement that this is his last novel is a whim of the Gods – and if it’s his whim, please can he be less whimsical?  SIX STARS.

Monday, 17 June 2024

 

The Unwanted Dead, by Chris Lloyd (Book One)

Paris Requiem, by Chris Lloyd (Book Two)








    
     

          I have just read these books back-to-back and, amazingly, in the right sequence:  I am very proud of myself!  And happy to report that Crime Writer Chris Lloyd has produced a new, different burnt-out Detective.  Different because the First World War was the reason for his burn-out and, instead of returning to the French city of Perpignan to manage and inherit his parents’ book shop, Eddie Giral feels more of use battling – and sometimes winning – against ordinary criminals instead of the monstrous warmongers who ordered young men to legally murder each other.

            It is June, 1940, and the German Occupation has begun. Paris, the City of Light, is swathed in smoke and ashes and the only mobile traffic belongs to the German troops;  they are also the only patrons of the many Jazz clubs of Paris, and the local criminals are rubbing grubby hands together at the thought of relieving these young boys of their francs and anything else they can get:  times are hard – we’re all in this together, mates!  And Eddie agrees – up to a point, which is tested when he is called to the main railway yard to investigate the discovery of four bodies in a wagon who have been suffocated to death by the very nerve gas that killed so many of his friends:  who would do such a thing and why, especially as it is revealed that the men were Polish refugees hoping to flee the city before the Germans marched in.  They paid someone money to help them escape, but who?  And the more Eddie digs, the more is revealed about crimes of mass murder in Poland of innocent villagers buried in mass graves.  Who is going to bring this horror to the world’s attention, hopefully bringing the USA into the World fray, not to mention rumours of Jewish persecution beginning to surface?

            Paris Requiem starts a few months later;  the great city is full of thin grey ghosts, for rationing and coupons have started and no-one is getting enough to eat – except the German Occupiers.  Needless to say, they don’t have to queue for hours for a piece of bacon rind or a baguette, nor do they have to eke out for days whatever they were lucky enough to purchase.  Eddie is particularly irked by the delicious food left lying in his presence by his current nemesis, Major Hochstetter of the Abwehr, German Intelligence.  Major Hochstetter is particularly intrigued – as is Eddie – by the fact that a murder victim found in a closed nightclub was serving a two-year jail sentence:  Eddie remembers the case well, for he put him there!  Now he has to investigate his particularly grisly end.

            As a writer, Chris Lloyd is a bit rough around the edges;  he uses contemporary expressions which are out of keeping with the time, but he has created a very fine hero in Eddie, one who is weighed down by all the sorrow of what might have been, the estrangement from his family, the terrible randomness of one’s fate, but still he battles on with a suicidal fearlessness to right wrongs as he sees them, Hochstetter be damned!  FIVE STARS.  

Thursday, 6 June 2024

 

Fox Creek, by William Kent Krueger.


 

            Yet again, I have driven myself mad by starting at the latest book in a series, instead of at the beginning – I have to say that I didn’t realise that I had picked up the newest book in the Cork O’Connor series, BUT!

            I am so glad I did.  William Kent Krueger has signposted clearly and concisely for new readers major events that have gone before in his series, and he is such a fine writer that ‘Fox Creek’ reads almost like a stand-alone novel, but for his obvious affection for his characters – and what characters they are:  in the main First Nations people who live in various small reservations or towns in Minnesota, a State that borders Canada and in this story, the scene of the disappearance of a successful First Nations lawyer, and the pursuit of his frantic and worried wife by unknown mercenaries.  They have already approached Cork O’Connor for information as to her whereabouts, for Cork now operates as a Private Detective – when he’s not flipping burgers. 

            And he’s astute and experienced enough as an investigator to know that nothing about these men is likely to benefit the woman if they find her, and when he discovers that she has visited ancient tribal Healer Henry Meloux for information and guidance and that Rainy, his own precious Healer wife is ‘assisting with enquiries’, he knows that this will be a life and death pursuit,  for the mercenaries have a brilliant tracker guiding them, a man almost as clever as Henry himself.  Can Cork track down these mystery pursuers and find his loved ones before innocent blood is spilled in Minnesota’s pristine forests, or will the mercenaries find and eliminate them first:  for Cork it hardly bears thinking about, and the reader is right with him, every hard step of the way – and just as horrified and repulsed when the mercenaries’ real reason for the pursuit is revealed.

            William Kent Krueger is a masterly writer:  a master of suspense, and a master wordsmith for the still-pristine environment of North America – and its underdogs, those who are still ready to lay down their lives for the Land.  SIX STARS