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Book Review (Courtesy of BookLoons)

Posted on June 20th, 2010


A Visible Darkness
by Michael Gregorio
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Minotaur, 2009 (2009)
Hardcover, e-Book

* * * Reviewed by Tim Davis

Michael G.

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Book Review (Courtesy of BookLoons)

Posted on June 6th, 2010


Critique of Criminal Reason
by Michael Gregorio
Amazon.com order for Critique of Criminal Reason by Michael Gregorio

Minotaur, 2006 (2006)
Hardcover
* * * Reviewed by Tim Davis

As a police magistrate in the service of King Frederick Wilhelm III of Prussia in the early 19th century, Hanno Stiffeniis has been posted to duties in the tranquil and uneventful town of Lotingen for the past several years, but now his life is about to change dramatically.

Summoned to the big city of Königsberg, Stiffeniis must investigate and solve a mysterious series of murders that have occurred at intervals during the past year.

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Book Review (Courtesy of BookLoons)

Posted on May 3rd, 2010


Liars All:
A Brodie Farrell Mystery

by Jo Bannister
Amazon.com order for Liars All by Jo Bannister

Minotaur, 2010 (2010)
Hardcover, Audio, CD

Jo Bannister’s highly recommended ninth novel opens with a powerful, gut-wrenching scene in which robbery and murder are the centerpieces, and for another 300 pages, the pace and power continue to build in intensity, making Liars All one of Bannister’s very best.

Here are a few tidbits in the form of story previews that should further convince you that you ought to include Liars All on your must read list for this spring:

Nine months after the robbery and murder, Brodie Farrell – owner of Looking For Something, something like a lost and found private investigation business – is not bothered by business but is instead engaged in a life-or-death struggle on behalf of her sixteen-month-old son whose future is threatened by an inoperable brain tumor.

At the same time, Brodie’s business assistant, Daniel Hood, a principled man with complicated emotional ties to his boss, has been sought out by the mother of the convicted robber and murderer.

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Review – THE DEMON OF DAKAR by Kjell Eriksson

Posted on March 20th, 2010

The Demon of Dakar by Kjell Eriksson

Thomas Dunne Books / St. Martin’s Minotaur

ISBN 978-0-312-36669-8

Hardcover

In The Demon of Dakar, Kjell Eriksson’s highly recommended third novel—which follows The Princess of Burundi and The Cruel Stars of the Night—indefatigable homicide investigator Ann Lindell once again must contend with a baffling case overflowing with red herrings, dead ends, perplexing clues, and difficult personalities.

Translated into English from the Swedish by Ebbe Segerberg, The Demon of Dakar is one of those exemplary Scandinavian mysteries that lends itself to hyperbolic praise, which would be more than justifiable in this review. As a change of pace, however, and to avoid giving too much of the story away, let me entice you as a prospective reader with something different:

Among the various characters in The Demon of Dakar, there are more than a few who are not uncomplicated:

Manuel Alavez, a Latin American coffee grower who travels to Uppsala, Sweden, in hopes of finding out what really happened to his brothers, Patricio (in a Swedish prison on drug charges) and Angel (dead because of his involvement in drug trafficking), is not without considerable resourcefulness in settling scores on behalf of his family.

Slobodan Anderson, ostensibly a restaurateur and owner of Dakar, a tacky little bistro in Uppsala, is not without plentiful sources of supplemental income, and is certainly not reluctant to engage in loads of illegal activities and surround himself with unsavory personalities (some of whom are perhaps even more disagreeable than Slobodan himself could even imagine or accept).

Konrad Rosenberg, a suddenly solvent criminal with a long prison record and a short inventory of scruples, is not without good reason more than a little concerned about his latest financial opportunities and business connections.

Eva Williams, a newly hired waitress at Dakar and a divorced mother of two boys, is not unjustified in worrying about her one son’s involvement in problematic activities; moreover, when she becomes personally involved in an unlikely friendship, Eva’s not inconsiderable passions and compassion will be sorely tested.

As the lives of these and more than a few other colorful characters intersect in The Demon of Dakar, and as intrepid homicide investigator Ann Lindell and her not very normal crew of police department colleagues keep busy (investigating homicides with few clues, of course!), more than a few people—on both sides of the law—will ultimately learn important lessons about the ineffable limits of crimes and punishments, not the least of which is “the dead return, the dead return,” an enigmatic warning which is brought to bear rather stunningly in the more than a little surprising ending of Kjell Eriksson’s highly recommended mystery.

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Review – A Safe Place for Dying

Posted on January 27th, 2010

A Safe Place for Dying by Jack Fredrickson

St. Martin’s Minotaur

ISBN 0-312-35168-2

Hardcover

Vlodek Elstrom, otherwise known simply as Dek, lived for a while in the exclusive gated community of Crystal Waters, one of the nicest, upscale little neighborhoods in Chicago’s suburbs.

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