Monday, November 24, 2014

Deadline by John Sandford

Deadline (Virgil Flowers, #8)Deadline by John Sandford

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Better than the previous outing in the Virgil Flowers series. Funnier and more believable.


Virgil is trying to get an assistant DA onside, and the DA says: "If we go to court, we like to have things pretty well wrapped up." Virgil replies "Dave, I've been doing this for quite a while. You don't want them wrapped up, you want a gold-plated guarantee, because otherwise you're afraid you'll screw up your conviction stats."


Plus ça change... In Canada, it's completely different, but the results are the same... US DAs might prosecute a losing case because it's politically necessary, but here the Crown attorney has no need to bolster conviction stats because they're not elected, but they still refuse to prosecute if they think they won't win.


Sandfor has a way with a simile. ‘The woman with a minimal flesh wound “screamed, "I'm dying, I'm dying, where's the goddamn ambulance." She sounded like a blackboard being run through a table saw.”’

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Mandarin Gate by Eliot Pattison

Mandarin Gate (Inspector Shan, #7)Mandarin Gate by Eliot Pattison

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Another solid entry in Pattison's Inspector Chan series.

In this case, I read more for the fascinating descriptions of Tibet than for the mysteries, but the mysteries hold their own.


I read this immediately following Bone Rattler, which Pattison sets in his own country's history, and I find I prefer his take on Tibet than the history with which he is probably more familiar.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Bone Rattler: A Mystery of Colonial America by Eliot Pattison

Bone Rattler: A Mystery of Colonial America (Duncan McCallum, #1)Bone Rattler: A Mystery of Colonial America by Eliot Pattison

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


I had a lot of trouble with this, and nearly gave up on it.

In short, there's a lot of racism, and I'm not entirely convinced it's all the racism of the characters.  The protagonist, Duncan McCallum, is a convict transported from Britain to the New York colony in 1759, and he has the prejudices one might expect of someone completely unfamiliar with the American natives. But, as his vision is expanded and he learns how little he originally knew, there's too much of the "noble savage" in the natives he later meets (and for that matter in the only black character) for me to be comfortable.

Also, Pattison seems to know a lot about Tibetan culture and as much as one might expect of an American about American history and culture, but I have a really hard time believing his English characters...

Monday, November 10, 2014

The Republic of Thieves by Scott Lynch

The Republic of ThievesThe Republic of Thieves by Scott Lynch

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This is not your usual crime caper. Locke Lamora and his partner Jean are the last remnants of an organized crime ring—in a fantasy world with a medieval setting. But, hey, I love crime novels and fantasy, so why not...

I've been waiting through two books for this, and it was worth the wait. We know from the very beginning of The Lies of Locke Lamora that his lost love, Sabetha, is central to ... well, everything. So finally, we meet her, and she is everything we expected.

Naturally, when they do finally meet, they're maneuvered into being on opposite sides...

The story takes place in three disjoint periods. We see the earliest days of Locke Lamora's memory, when he first meets (and loses) Sabetha.  Then there's the framing plot, in which Locke and the Gentleman Bastards (including the found-again Sabetha) are performing the play which give the novel its name, The Republic of Thieves, during which Locke and Sabetha become lovers. Finally, we have the latest installment of Locke's, and his sidekick Jean's, lives in which they're coerced into an odd political contest where they have to rig an election. Even though it would cost him his life, Locke might still have refused until told that Sabetha is working to rig the election the other way.

So far, the series isn't losing any steam.