Reviews by Richard (24)

A complex cunning conundrum. A bit like Agatha Christie on speed.

Case Histories

Another case(s) in the Jackson Brodie series. This time our world weary detective turned private investigator solves a very cold case whilst avoiding a potential killer, dealing with a pair of slightly deranged sisters, a nun, an unforgiving ‘ex’, his young daughter, his encroaching twi-light years, an overweight solicitor, a lecherous teacher, a street living runaway, a bonkers elderly lady with a houseful of cats, and a whole host of other characters. Kate Atkinson handles the enormous cast list well but I would have liked a list so that I could work out who was who

Hold onto your hat and your hankie

Deacon King Kong

Set in New York in the 1960’s this is a roaring and insightful account of life and death in a dockside housing development. The central character is a permanently drunken church deacon and the story follows his antics and their effect on the church attending inhabitants, drug dealers and users, the mob, and the police. The author, James McBride, brilliantly channels authors like JP Donleavy, Tom Wolf, and Charles Dickens as he portrays the harsh conditions of slum life with remarkable insights and shafts of lacerating humour. Definitely not a read for the faint-hearted but essential literature, nonetheless.

Magical? Mystery? Cure for insomnia?

The devil and the dark water

I finished it, mainly because I kept hoping that it would get better: it never did. Mainly set on a ship attempting to return from the Dutch East Indies to Amsterdam in 1634, it lurches from unbelievable to incredible and back, ad infinitum. It is a sort of detective story mashed up with horror, gore, love, deprivation, murder, magic, and mayhem. I think the heroes ended up heroes but I am not sure.

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