Book Review

Once Were Cops, Ken Bruen

14/07/2009 - 3:19pm

Where Do I Begin?

Ken Bruen writes in his own form of poetry.

The words pull no punches.

His characters make no apologies.

They will do as they damn well please and sometimes there are simply not enough good guys to go around.

You think.

It's hard to tell who is a good guy and who isn't.

ONCE WERE COPS isn't going to be a novel for everyone.

It's hard, bad, dark, violent, unapologetic, difficult and complex.

There are no winners and there are lots of losers. ... Read Review

Death Wore White, Jim Kelly

14/07/2009 - 3:06pm

There's nothing better than a well-executed version of one of the good old staples of crime fiction - a twist on the locked room scenario.

DEATH WORE WHITE is the first in a new series from CWA Dagger Winner Jim Kelly, an author well known for his ongoing Philip Dryden books.  DI Peter Shaw and DS George Valentine are a good pairing - Valentine the older cop, ex-partner of Shaw's father, his career has seen higher points.  Shaw, on the other hand, is a rising star, keen to prove himself and to clear his father's, and consequently Valentine's, reputations over the last ... Read Review

Deadly Desire, Keri Arthur

08/07/2009 - 1:09pm

Australian author Keri Arthur is a dab hand at striking that balance between action and seduction and has won herself a whole swag of romance and fantasy readers for it. Her creation Riley Jensen is just enough of the girl we all know and also just enough of the girl we'd like to be or know, set in an alternate urban landscape that literally seethes danger and the promise of deadly deeds. Riley and her fantastical compadres stalk the night and struggle to keep the monsters, which are really not so different from themselves, away from unsuspecting Melbourne urbanites.

... Read Review

Salvation, Vikki Petraitis

04/07/2009 - 4:37pm

With the publication of SALVATION Vikki Petraitis has written 9 true crime books, but in her notes at the back of SALVATION, she particularly mentions a book that was released in 1999 - Rockspider. The author wrote that book, with Inspector Chris O'Connor of the Victoria Police Child Exploitation Squad, to give the public an insight into how paedophile's operate. The suffering of the victims struck a chord when Rod Braybon first contacted her.

SALVATION is the story of Rod's life as a ward of the state. He was 6 years old in 1950, when his father died, leaving his mother ... Read Review

Rick Dunlop Cases, the Maclay Murder and Other Mysteries, R.M. Dunlop

04/07/2009 - 11:27am

RICK DUNLOP CASES, the Maclay Murder and Other Mysteries is a collection of 5 short stories, the majority of which are variations on the "locked room mystery" scenario.  This is the first publication from new Australian author R.M. Davey.

The Locked Room scenario's nothing new in fiction (let alone crime fiction) going back to Alexandre Dumas and Edgar Allan Poe.  In what's commonly referred to as the "Golden Age of Detective Fiction", locked room mysteries by authors such as Chesterton, Wells, Dickson Carr, Christie, Ellery Queen, Boileau, Gaston Boca and Steeman ... Read Review

Dining with Devils, Gordon Aalborg

19/06/2009 - 1:32pm

After spending a fair amount of time in Tasmania in the 1970's, Canadian Gordon Aalborg did what all red blooded Canadian-Australian men do, he turned to writing romance novels.  20 or more of those novels later, he's now turned to crime fiction as well, and DINING WITH DEVILS is the second of those.

Set in Tasmania, DINING WITH DEVILS combines crime and caving - not a combination that you'd immediately think of (unless you're inclined towards the belief that activities in the dark are best when that dark is rocky, hard, damp, and far underground!)

Sergeant ... Read Review

No Lovelier Death, Graham Hurley

18/06/2009 - 2:27pm

NO LOVELIER death is the ninth and latest entrant in the DI Faraday series of novels from Portsmouth based author Graham Hurley.  If you're a fan of British Police Procedurals, then chances are you already know about these books - if not, you're in for a treat.

NO LOVELIER DEATH starts out with an issue that many urban dwellers are all too aware of these days.  A teenage party, advertised on a social networking site, is overrun and quickly gets out of control.  This party is being held by the daughter of a tough local judge, in the leafy and exclusive location of ... Read Review

Bleeding Heart Square, Andrew Taylor

11/06/2009 - 1:29pm

Storytelling or Storyweaving?  BLEEDING HEART SQUARE is a classic example of a carefully woven psychological suspense story written by one of the English masters.  Mind you, this isn't going to be a book for everyone.  It's one of those stories that starts out with central threads that slowly are interwoven towards the conclusion. 

Something has happened in connection to 7 Bleeding Heart Square.  In 1934, Lydia Langstone seeks refuge there from her violent husband.  It's a decaying London cul-de-sac, in a time that is feeling the threat of war.  It's a seedy part of the ... Read Review

Once Were Cops, Ken Bruen (review by sunniefromoz)

11/06/2009 - 1:18pm

WOW!! A wow book. What is a wow book? A wow book is a book that has you glued to the pages, resenting every interruption. A wow book sees your hubby putting his head around the bedroom door saying, “aren’t you getting up today?” A wow book finds you lying in the bathtub and realising with a jolt you’ve been in there so long reading this book that the water has nearly gone cold.

ONCE WERE COPS by Ken Bruen is a WOW book.  

No one could ever in their wildest dreams describe Bruen’s writing as cozy. Bruen is contemporary noir. Midnight noir.. His writing is to ... Read Review

A Deadly Trade, Michael Stanley

09/06/2009 - 3:31pm

There's something in the water (or maybe it's in the dust) in Africa at the moment.  Whilst there has been a slowly increasing number of crime or mystery books set in Africa, there's now an increasing number written by African authors appearing for our enjoyment.  Michael Stanley (the South African duo of long-time friends Michael Sears and Stanley Trollip), have now released their second book - A DEADLY TRADE (aka The Second Death of Goodluck Tinubu), follow up to the very well received debut book - A CARRION DEATH.

Wrapped up in the well devised plot of a solid police ... Read Review

Dark Mirror, Barry Maitland

09/06/2009 - 11:55am

Fans of Barry Maitland's Brock & Kolla series have had a wait on their hands.  The last book - Spider Trap - was released in 2006, with a standalone book Bright Air in 2007.  Leaving aside the eagerness with which we fans wait for the next book in a favourite series, there's also the slight nagging doubt always - has the wait been worth it?

In DARK MIRROR Kathy's been promoted and Brock seems to being forced away from front-line policing, more into administration.  They are called into the investigation of the death of a beautiful young woman who dies horribly in the ... Read Review

Curse of the Pogo Stick, Colin Cotterill

02/06/2009 - 4:54pm

Anybody who hasn't indulged in the Dr Siri series by Colin Cotterill could be forgiven for wondering what on earth is going on with CURSE OF THE POGO STICK.  Booby-trapped corpses and reluctant coroners might be reasonably expected in crime fiction, but Hmong villagers needing exorcism by a thousand-year-old shaman who shares the aforementioned coroner's body?  Understandably a "What the" moment.

Whilst the spiritual (supernatural) component of CURSE OF THE POGO STICK is considerably stronger than the earlier books,  the series has been building the unlikely scenario of ... Read Review

Splinter, Michael MacConnell

02/06/2009 - 3:07pm

One of the best things about a good thriller is when they present a scenario that could just possibly happen.  The reader of SPLINTER has no trouble at all believing in the possibility of the kidnapping of the child of Hollywood celebrities; they can join in the initial rush of sympathy for parents who have been put in an impossible situation, and as the fictional public sympathy starts to splinter into suspicion, the reader will be there along for the ride.

The problem with this kidnapping is that Milo is found dead within his parents own home - in the basement, ... Read Review

Storm Peak, John A. Flanagan

25/05/2009 - 2:51pm

There are never enough new crime fiction writers and/or novels in Australia every year (okay so I'm greedy!), but there are certainly never enough quite as good as STORM PEAK which is John A Flanagan's first crime fiction novel, and I'm certainly cheering for more.

STORM PEAK is set in Colorado in the US, and I hope a reader would be hard-pressed to pick that the setting isn't the author's own, except perhaps for the use of the much beloved u (in spelling).  Setting away from the author's home base can sometimes not work - little inaccuracies in dialect and/or terminology ... Read Review

A Decent Ransom, Ivana Hruba

21/05/2009 - 1:03pm

A DECENT RANSOM is a story of a kidnapping gone right (according to the tag on the book).  More than that it's a story about a bit of a misfit that somehow ends up okay, despite all the odds being stacked against him.

The storyline is pretty simple to start off with - two young (as is revealed) half-brothers, each a misfit in his own right, coming from a totally dysfunctional background, live in the dire circumstances that their mother deserted them in.  The elder comes up with a classic get-rich quick scheme, the younger brother Phoebus is the one who deals with the ... Read Review

A Year to Learn a Woman, Paddy Richardson

20/05/2009 - 3:12pm

A YEAR TO LEARN A WOMAN is the second novel and first crime fiction offering from New Zealand writer Paddy Richardson.  Travis Crill is a serial rapist - convicted and jailed for a series of bizarre attacks.  Claire Wright is a freelance journalist, living alone with her young daughter after the sudden death of her older husband.  When Claire is first contacted to see if she would be interested in writing the story of Crill for a very much needed large sum of money, she finds she can quickly overcome her initial reluctance to look closely at a man like him.  But understanding Crill's ... Read Review

African Psycho, Alain Mabanckou

19/05/2009 - 12:57pm

When AFRICAN PSYCHO by Alain Mabanckou arrived in my book stack, I really wasn't sure what to expect.  I've finished it now and I'm still not sure what I got.  But I do remember it!

Gregoire is a neglected child - an ugly child - an anonymous child - abandoned by his parents - he's raised in an increasingly haphazard manner really by himself mostly.  He vows he will be different.  He will be remembered.  He vows to escape his humdrum reality and commit a spectacular murder.  Just like his idol - the serial killer Angoualima.  Angoualima is Gregoire's guide, his mentor, ... Read Review

Borderlands, Brian McGilloway (review by Sunnie Gill)

14/05/2009 - 12:35pm

A well written police procedural is one of the reasons I'm so addicted to crime fiction. A good police procedural will introduce you to the police,take you by the land and lead you through their investigation as they unearth clues by interviewing people, sifting the evidence and following leads. There will be a careful balance of detecting and learning about the lives of the detectives. If the author has done the job properly s/he doesn't deliberately hold back clues or have the the detectives catch the culprit in the act, just two pages before the end.

In his first novel ... Read Review

The Seduction of Power, Sergio Scasioli

06/05/2009 - 2:20pm

THE SEDUCTION OF POWER is Melbourne based author Sergio Scasioli's first book.  According to an article in his local newspaper, it was inspired by a passion to write, spurred on by a chance meeting with an inspirational character.

The book is the first in a planned trilogy, described as an "epic tale of the Calabrian Mafia in Australia".  Given that it is a debut book, and the first in this trilogy it became important to keep that in mind when reading this opening instalment.

THE SEDUCTION OF POWER is best described as the story of one man - Paolo Valente - ... Read Review

Beautiful Death, Fiona McIntosh

29/04/2009 - 3:17pm

Now a little housekeeping before we go too far.  Beautiful Death is the second DCI Jack Hawksworth book, published under the author's real name of Fiona McIntosh.  The first, Bye Bye Baby, was published under the pseudonym Lauren Crow.  Fiona is a well known Fantasy writer in Australia, and these two books are her first foray into crime fiction.

DCI Jack Hawksworth has a good working relationship with his team - they are a close group who have worked together on dreadful cases before.  The team, and his superiors are more than used to Jack getting the personal and the ... Read Review

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