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[personal profile] brainwane
A Rising Man by Abir Mukherjee is a mystery written by a Scot of Bengali descent, taking place in 1919 Calcutta: "Desperate for a fresh start, Captain Sam Wyndham arrives to take up an important post in Calcutta’s police force." I agree with this book's politics but it really shows that the author had never written a novel before, in particular in the dialogue. Characters speak their subtext or otherwise exposit in that "unrealistically monologue coherently about national politics for six paragraphs" kind of way. I am a little interested in reading the next books in the series, because maybe the writing will improve.
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[personal profile] snowynight
Book 7
Title: 蟲と眼球とテディベア| Bug, Eyeball, Teddybear
Author: 日日日
Author Nationality and race: Japanese
Language: Japanese
Genre: Fiction
Length: novel
Subject: Fantasy
Summary: The ordinary life of a teacher and his student lover is abruptly interrupted by a girl who uses a spoon as a weapon. Then three of them are involved in an incident surrounding "The apple of God"
Review: As the beginning of a fantasy series, this novel captures my attention with its fast rhythm and intriguing mystery. I'll follow the series.
Link to Amazon.co.jp

Book 8
Title: ジョニー・ザ・ラビット|Johnny Love Rabbit
Author: 東山彰良
Author Nationality and race: Japanese
Language: Japanese
Genre: Fiction
Length: novel
Subject: Fantasy Noir
Summary: "You should aim to be sahara if you are a flower; you should aim to be Johnny if you are a man."

  “Love is playing Italian folk song while holding a gun."
  "Love,the petrol to let me to be Johnny Rabbit,LOVE,my middle name that I 'll never regret.”

  Go! Johnny! Go! Go!
  What's love? What's pride? What's life?

Review:
Rabbit and hardboiled fiction seem to be two path that should never meet, but the author successfully creates Johnny Rabbit, who's a totally a hardboiled PI, a knight who walks on a mean street and a complete rabbit. It makes the story insightful. It has a bitter sense of humour, and a story that's among the good of noir.
Link to Amazon.co.jp


ext_20269: (studious - reading books)
[identity profile] annwfyn.livejournal.com
Apparently this was originally published years ago, when Tess Gerritsen was still a romance writer (which is something I had not known about her), and is the novel she considers to be her ‘bridge’ between romantic suspense and crime writing. I have to say, it’s a really good bridge. It’s got more romance than is normal in her crime novels, but not enough to be overly dominant and whilst it is a good romance, there’s a really decent plot in there as well, and quite enough to keep you pulled along even if you’re not so into the love story (which I was).

The plot is fairly basic – Kat Novak is a Medical Examiner, who is also female, beautiful, and has clawed her way out of a low income neighbourhood to get where she is today, although it’s never really explained how she did this. I kinda presumed by doing really well at school and getting scholarships and a lot of part time jobs (plus debt) to get through medical school, but it must have been tough and there’s no back story which explains it. Still, there’s no reason why you need a back story for being smart and determined, which I guess she was. Oh, and Novak is her married name. Her maiden name was Ortiz, and I think she was meant to be half Irish, half Hispanic, as a vague point of interest.

Anyway, Kat is working the night shift when a body comes into the morgue; a young woman who has been found dead of an overdose from some mysterious drug. She has no ID and only a matchbook with a phone number scrawled on it. From there, conspiracy, murder, and romance with a very hot millionaire ensue.

I enjoyed it. The hero wasn’t nearly as alpha male as most romance novel heroes and I thought he and Kat had some good chemistry. The mystery aspect was well handled and plausible and I never felt like Tess Gerritsen was cheating or resorting to crazy coincidence.

Definitely recommended, and I’d make a special mention to romance fans who aren’t normally sure about thrillers and thriller readers who don’t do romance. It offers the best of both worlds quite nicely.
[identity profile] veleda-k.livejournal.com
I swore I wouldn't get behind this year, and look at this. I'm already lagging. I suck at New Years resolutions.

#2: The Devotion of Suspect X by Keigo Higashino (translated by Alexander O. Smith with Elye J. Alexander)

The Devotion of Suspect X )


#3: Villain by Shuichi Yoshida (translated by Philip Gabriel)

Villain )


#4: The Other Side of Paradise: a Memoir by Staceyann Chin

The Other Side of Paradise )
[identity profile] wordsofastory.livejournal.com
10. Vikram Chandra, Sacred Games

If you ever wanted to know the Mumbai slang terms for 'motherfucker', 'ass-fucker' 'sister-fucker', or just plain old 'fucker', well, this is the book for you!

More seriously, this enormous novel is the story of two men: Sartaj Singh, a world-weary, slightly corrupt, recently divorced, low-level policeman; and Ganesh Gaitonde, the head of an organized crime syndicate, and probably one of the most powerful and wealthy men in India. The novel opens with Singh receiving a phone call from an unknown source, who tells him that Gaitonde is in Mumbai and gives an address. When Singh arrives, he finds a strange building, a sort of concrete bunker; a short conversation between the two men via intercom later, the police break down the door and inside find Gaitonde, dead by his own hand.

The rest of the novel follows two threads. The first is (mostly) Singh's, who is given the assignment to figure out why Gaitonde was in Mumbai and what he was doing in that building. This half of the novel is a crime thriller, particularly as it picks up speed near the end as consequences and meanings start to come clear and events take on an urgency (I admit, I didn't figure out the mystery at all, and once the truth comes out, it's genuinely scary and exciting). Despite that, other characters occasionally speak, ones usually related to the plot, but who fill out the world of the book. I found a chapter from Singh's mother, remembering her childhood during Partition, particularly moving. Partition and the violence then show up repeatedly throughout the novel as a recurring theme. The second half of the story is Gaitonde's; he speaks in first person, directly to Singh, though it's never clear if this is meant to be a ghost, the proverbial "life flashing before your eyes as you die", or what. He retells the story of his life, beginning as a child without a name or past, up through his struggles to get his first few followers, the growth of his mob, gang-wars with rival organizations, several stints in jail, advancing to become an international figure, his dabbles with Bollywood, his struggle with faith, and finally the explanation of how he ended up in a small building in Mumbai and why he killed himself. I liked the Gaitonde sections better than the Singh ones, if just because Gaitonde appealed to me more as a character; he has a incredibly engrossing voice and point of view. And his story is just more exciting, at least until the discoveries Singh makes at the end. The tone of the novel ranges from melodramatic gun shoot-outs or spy adventures to high-minded discussions of religion and the meaning of good and evil. There's lot of sex and violence, but just as many epiphanies and golden moments, and some seriously beautiful turns of phrase.

Highly, highly recommended, though be warned: this is seriously a massive tome of a book (my copy had nearly a thousand pages), so don't start it if you're on a deadline for something.
[identity profile] veleda-k.livejournal.com
What we have today is a selection of not very good reviews. Why? Because I'm moving into an apartment that's half the size of my current place. That means that some stuff has got to go. So I'd thought I'd do these reviews before I got rid of the books.

Shadow Family by Miyuki Miyabe )


Waiting for Rain by Sirshendu Mukhopadhyay )


All I Asking for is My Body by Milton Murayama )


Say You're One of Them by Uwem Akpan )
ext_20269: (Mood - alarmed)
[identity profile] annwfyn.livejournal.com
Two quite quick reviews.

First of all, 'Twisted Tales' by Brandon Massey. Massey is a horror writer in the vein of Dean Koontz and Stephen King. I'd not come across him before, but then I'm not a big horror reader, and was a little suspicious when my housemate brought this book home from the library. I still don't think I'm a horror reader - I enjoyed 'Twisted Tales', but I think that was because the format (a collection of short stories) meant that I could dip in and out of it, and also kept some of the things that tend to put me off horror (mostly excess gore) in check.

'Twisted Tales' is well written, and has a wonderful range of tales. Massey is a very talented writer, who writes strong PoC characters, who are very clearly and unapologetically coded as such, which I liked. I loved the variety as well; although some of the stories didn't work for me (I cringed rather at the Succubus story), others were wonderful (with the werewolf story being my favourite).

I'm not sure if it's sold me on Massey as a writer - I suspect I'd struggle through a full novel, in much the same way as I struggle with most horror novels - but for someone who just wants to 'taste test' the genre, it was a really good read.

Secondly, 'The Mephisto Club' by Tess Gerritson. I don't think it matters what I say in this review, really. The fact of the matter is that I walked home from work whilst reading this book, and spent ten minutes standing on the side of the road, not wanting to take my nose out of it to check for traffic, despite the freezing temperative in London today. So, I think we can safely say it grabbed me.

It isn't high literature, I must admit. To me, it felt like a far more intelligent Dan Brown. It is another of Gerritsen's Rizzoli and Isles series, but this novel took an odd and occult turn, with the pair getting involved with a series of killings linked to a strange group called 'The Mephisto Society'. There is conspiracy, suggestions of the supernatural, ancient and hidden 'histories', and a twist in the tale that I actually wasn't expecting. I suspect that a proper theologian, or anthropologist, may well weep bitter tears at this, but I really enjoyed it.

As ever, I also loved Jane Rizzoli. I love her messy, complicated, unglamourous life - her parents are divorcing, she's trying to cope with a new baby, and she's still a kick ass cop.

Overall, a very fun read. But then it's Tess Gerritsen. She's always good.
[identity profile] wordsofastory.livejournal.com
42. Diana Abu-Jaber, Origin

Abu-Jaber is totally my new favorite author. She has an amazing, vivid way of describing things, particularly places, which I adore. In this book, the setting is Syracuse, New York in the middle of winter, and everything about that is so exactly described: the particular blues and white of winter light, early twilights, lead-colored skies, too much wind, the look of snow falling in the early morning, black ice on the streets, the feelings of isolation, claustrophobia, and loneliness that winter often inspires, cold air in your lungs.

The plot is about Lena, who works as a fingerprint examiner in a police office. There's a case involving a dead baby that the medical examiner ruled to be SIDS, but which the mother swears was a murder, saying that she heard footsteps in her empty house just before finding that her baby had died. Meanwhile, Lena has been doing research into her own past: she was adopted at three, and has only strange, vague memories of the time before that- rain forests, monkeys, a plane crash- and no one seems to know if these memories are real, metaphorical, or just a three-year-old's daydreams.

Everything eventually turns out to be connected, of course, but the revelations still surprised me. This novel is completely different in voice from everything else Abu-Jaber has written; it's almost a thriller, with a tense, brooding tone that fits perfectly with the mysteries and the cold winter. Highly recommended.
[identity profile] whereweather.livejournal.com
 #30. Luba: The Book of Ofelia (Vol. 2 in the Luba trilogy; Vol. 21 in the Complete Love & Rockets)

2005 (material originally published 1998-2005), Fantagraphics Books


Warning: Long and obsessive plot details ahead!  This is a crazy long book -- 240 pages -- and incredibly dense, for a graphic novel.  Also, the storytelling modalities are highly refined and self-referential, full of interweaving, flashback and allusion; and also it's Part 2 of a three-part series-within-a-series.  So I take these reviews as an opportunity to parse the plot, to assure myself that I've actually followed what the hell is going on.
 

So!  This is the second part of Gilbert ("Beto") Hernandez's trilogy about the latest adventures of Luba, his protagonist, in America.  (For basics about Luba, you can see my earlier post about the previous book in this series.)

At this point in time, Luba and her children are in the United States, but her husband Khamo is stuck in immigration limbo.  Luba continues her quest to figure out what she must -- or can -- do in order to untangle his shady past, police record, and hazy criminal associations, so that she can bring him to join them.  (Like most of Luba's accomplishments, this is not really hindered -- and is perhaps made more impressive -- by that fact that, like some of the other main characters living in the United States, she still can't speak a word of English.)

 

Much of this section's narrative mechanics is fueled by the announcement that Ofelia, Luba's long-suffering older cousin, has decided to finally try being the writer she has always wanted to be.  This in-progress "book of Ofelia" gives, perhaps, the collection its title, although the phrasing also seems to imply (in its Biblical cadence) that she is instead the main subject of the book.  (Except that she isn't, really; she's not present throughout.  I keep thinking about the way that, in Spanish -- as I think I understand it, anyway -- this phrase, "el libro de Ofelia," does not make a distinction between the book *by* Ofelia and the book *about* her.  So this book, perhaps, is both.)

 

(On that note: one other thing I like is how much of the book's dialogue and internal thought-monologues are in Spanish.  The switches back and forth are frequent but consistent: the Latin American-born children tend to speak in fluent English to each other, but use Spanish with their parents, and to think in it when introspection is called for; the American-born children and adults think in English, although they frequently and fluently use Spanish with their relations.  Hernandez indicates the switches with the widely used comics convention of putting the "second-language" dialogue within brackets (and, in this book, some double-bracketing for other languages, like French).  When Hernandez' stories were set entirely in the Central American village from which many of the characters hail, he used to just put a note at the bottom of the first page that everything was in Spanish unless otherwise indicated -- a convention that Jaime has also sometimes used, e.g. in stories set among recent immigrants and jornalero workers -- but now that they've migrated to America, there's a lot more use of both tongues.)

 

So.  What's happening in the Book of Ofelia?

 

 

Obsessive plot details! Avoid if you fear spoilers! )

 


[Tags I'd like to add: a: hernandez gilbert, i: hernandez gilbert, california, children [*not* "children's"], magic realism, disability, meta-literature]


[identity profile] kethlenda.livejournal.com
Mystery/thriller is one of those genres that I don't read often, but that I do read occasionally when I need a change of pace. I've been reading a lot of fantasy lately, and needed a break. I saw this at a friend's house, saw that it was a thriller with a mythological aspect, and thought it sounded like just the thing, so I borrowed it.

What I didn't realize is that it's a later book in an ongoing series, featuring detective Jane Rizzoli and medical examiner Maura Isles. However, Gerritsen brought me up to speed pretty quickly on Jane's and Maura's histories, without getting info-dumpy. I never felt like I was lost.

The two women are investigating the murder of a young woman. Their investigations lead them to other murders, and to a strange group of scholars fascinated by the concept of evil. These scholars believe that the killer is not exactly human, but instead is one of the Nephilim, who are said to be the offspring of angels and mortal women. It's an interesting use of the mythology. Gerritsen doesn't give a definitive answer to the question of whether the Nephilim actually exist in her "universe," or whether it's just a myth that attempts to explain why some people lack empathy for their peers.

The plot of The Mephisto Club is exciting and often scary. It's "beach read" type stuff, but it was just what I needed; it had just enough mythological material to suck me in, but was different from my usual fantasy fare and gave me a "break."
ext_48823: 42, the answer to life, the universe and everything (Default)
[identity profile] sumofparts.livejournal.com

"Mystery writer Walter Mosley explains how his latest novel, "The Long Fall," reflects the way issues of race and class intersect in 21st-century America." (video via Slate)



[identity profile] wordsofastory.livejournal.com
11. Henry Chang, Chinatown Beat

Jack was born and grew up in New York City's Chinatown, and now that he's an adult, he's back in the neighborhood working as a cop; Johnny is a new Chinese immigrant with little to no English, working as a hired driver; Mona is also a recent Chinese immigrant, brought to NYC by Uncle Four, an older man involved with powerful gangs, to be his mistress. This novel switches between these three characters' narrations, and is about what happens when they interact. It's not much of a mystery (since the reader always knows who did what), though it's definitely noir. The language is very chilly and the world is very bleak; I know these are pretty much the defining traits of noir, but they very much didn't work for me in this book. In fact, I was so uninvolved in it that I put it down and read several other books before finishing it, coming back to it only because I figured there were only 50 pages left, so I may as well finish it.

The other thing I disliked in this book is that every female character is portrayed, to one degree or another, as a pushy, grasping bitch (or, in few scenes, as a damsel in distress). It was quite grating by the third or fourth character (that's an understatement).

On the good side, I thought this book did do a very good job of describing the look and feel of NYC's Chinatown, and I really enjoyed reading about the way the different racial groups (particularly Chinese, black, and Hispanic) uneasily interacted with one another.


12. Sherman Alexie, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian

I know everyone has already said this, but: So! Good!

This book is about Junior, a Native American teenager living on a Spokane reservation, who decides to go to an all-white high school in a nearby town. He draws cartoons, and the text of the book is accompanied by drawings (done by Ellen Forney). The story deals with Junior's choice to leave the reservation, how the other Indians react to that choice, particularly his best friend, Rowdy, and the way he is treated by the white students, teachers, and other adults at the school. Everything is complicated, and done with such detail and honesty. It's funny, really funny, but what I was most surprised by was how tragic the book was also. There's a lot of death, and bad choices, and tough realities in here. Very highly recommended.
[identity profile] jinian.livejournal.com
Another amazing book in my continuing series (yes! I made it to two!) of posts on books new to the comm.

Origin is a mystery, or several mysteries. The main character, Lena, has an unknown past about which her not-quite-adopted parents have told her little, and in her job as a fingerprint specialist she is also drawn into investigating a series of crib deaths in her city. Lena is logical and detached, overwhelmingly drawn to the details of her work, but also highly intuitive and constantly worrying at her lost memories -- what she does remember seems impossible. Abu-Jaber's writing is evocative and possibly addictive, though in a very different style from her other work. Summer would be a great time to read this book since the miserable freezing cold of a northeastern winter is awfully well described!

Race in this book was largely invisible. There's one moment where Lena's foster parents reveal how important it was to them to get a white baby, but other than that I didn't see it addressed. Abu-Jaber is a fabulous writer, though, so I still recommend Origin on grounds of sheer literary greatness. I also read Crescent, which is set among Arab-American immigrants and their wonderful food; it wasn't as memorable as Origin, but I recommend it as well.

[Abu-Jaber's The Language of Baklava, a memoir of the author's mixed-race, mixed-location childhood, was previously reviewed by [livejournal.com profile] littlebutfierce.]
ext_2858: Meilin from Cardcaptor Sakura (books are love)
[identity profile] meril.livejournal.com
The Mao Case is the 6th in a crime fiction series about Inspector Chen Cao of the Shanghai police. The series is set during the 1990s and most of the books have mysteries involving the conflicted past of the previous three decades in China. This book is no exception. Chen is called to investigate a young woman who is the granddaughter of one of Mao's rumored mistresses; she may be in possession of personal materials involving Mao and the government wishes to have it in their hands before she sells it.

This isn't the best of the Inspector Chen books and it would really serve as a poor introduction to the series. It's too short and there's not enough character development. The side characters from previous books don't get enough screentime compared to their past appearances. I haven't read the first two yet; I started with the third. The best of them I've read so far is A Case of Two Cities because Qiu seems to have a far better grasp of St. Louis at this point than Shanghai.

(1/50 in my personal challenge list)
[identity profile] sweet-adelheid.livejournal.com
A Red Death by Walter Mosley (Audio Renaissance, 2002) read by Stanley Bennett Clay

A long time ago I decided never again to read crime fiction written by a man. I was so disappointed by the James Patterson "Women's Murder Club" book that I read (I actually felt it was worse than Patricia Cornwall!), that I decided that was it. No more male writers.

But there came a day when I needed a heck of a lot of mental distraction on my (hour-long) drive home from work, and when I went to the library I discovered that they had four Mosley audio books and another four or five *books* of his. And as it was the only thing that looked vaguely interesting in the audio book section - and because it would count for 50books_poc - I decided to give Mosley a chance.

Mosley's writing, and his character Easy Rawlins, remind me of Sara Paretsky and VI Warshawski, a favourite writer/character duo that I've been sorely missing of late. They've got the rough edges, the gritty cities, the edge to their stories that other writers don't quite match.

Read more... )
ext_20269: (studious - reading books)
[identity profile] annwfyn.livejournal.com
Have you ever wondered what 'Murder She Wrote' would look like if Jessica Fletcher was a PoC with a fairly good dose of political consciouness? OK, so I never really did either, but having read 'Blanche and the Talented Tenth' I now know!

'Blanche and the Talented Tenth' is a fairly cozy murder mystery novel, featuring Blanche White who originally appeared in 'Blanche on the Lam' which has been reviewed here before. This time the cleaning woman detective Blanche is off on holiday, at an exclusive all Black resort in Maine. The novel is really as much about the issues thrown up by this resort - colorism, classism and the divisions people put up between each other - as it is about the mysterious deaths that occur whilst Blanche is visiting.

Honestly, the mystery isn't that exciting. It's all solid and reliable enough, but the plot isn't really that complicated and most of the twists felt as if they were being very clearly sign posted from a long way away. What is interesting are Blanche's observations on the world around her - race, colour and class - and how sharply she dissects the issues that the average cozy murder tends to ignore.

The other interesting thing that this novel brought up for me was how shamefully few dark skinned Black actresses there are. One of my habits whilst reading a novel is to mentally 'cast' the book - for example, in this book I imagined that Mattie, the dignified academic, would look like Nichelle Nichols - but when it came to Blanche I actually had a mental blank. I couldn't think of any full figured, dark skinned Black actresses, and that makes me sad.

I've now ordered a couple more books in this series - I'm interested to see some more of Blanche, and found Barbara Neely's work really quite thought provoking.

Definitely recommended.

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