Wolf on a String Benjamin
Black
Novel about the court of Rudolf II in 1599 Prague, where a
young visiting scholar improbably gets tasked with solving the murder of
Rudolf’s mistress. Much court intrigue, and far too many prose flourishes,
Banville seems completely infatuated with his own style, found myself skipping
over-long descriptions of unnecessary things. Fairly interesting, follows the
same structure and method of his Quirk, mysteries. Not a waste of time, but not
great.
Thursday, July 27, 2017
Thursday, July 20, 2017
You Belong to Me Colin
Harrison
Beautifully written “thriller” about the American wife of an Iranian-American financier and the multi-layered connections to them both. Harrison is great at portraying the richness of the webs that bind people, families, and communities underneath their seemingly-normal lives. Really liked the protagonist, Paul. As usual with Harrison, the worst possibilities triumph, though there are, this time, some survivors. Another very good read.
Beautifully written “thriller” about the American wife of an Iranian-American financier and the multi-layered connections to them both. Harrison is great at portraying the richness of the webs that bind people, families, and communities underneath their seemingly-normal lives. Really liked the protagonist, Paul. As usual with Harrison, the worst possibilities triumph, though there are, this time, some survivors. Another very good read.
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
No Middle Name: The Complete Collected Jack Reacher Stories Lee Child
As the title indicates, a collection of all the Reacher stories Child has written, plus a new novella. Entertaining, like the novels, though it is easy to tell the older stories because the prose hasn’t yet gotten to the precise, clear style of the more resent work. Enjoyed reading them all very much, wish they hadn’t gone by so quickly.
As the title indicates, a collection of all the Reacher stories Child has written, plus a new novella. Entertaining, like the novels, though it is easy to tell the older stories because the prose hasn’t yet gotten to the precise, clear style of the more resent work. Enjoyed reading them all very much, wish they hadn’t gone by so quickly.
Friday, July 7, 2017
Prussian Blue Philip
Kerr
Most recent Bernie Gunther novel. More interesting than the previous few because he’s back in Nazi Germany, working for them against his will. He’s up at Berchtesgaden, Kerr’s pretentious homage to Der Zauberberg with Gunther as a jaded Castorp? Longer, with more detail, some unnecessary. Kerr eschewed any romantic involvement this time, probably a good thing, in the last few novels it was forced. Not as good as the first three, but enjoyable. Thanks to Charlie for giving it to me, glad I read it.
Most recent Bernie Gunther novel. More interesting than the previous few because he’s back in Nazi Germany, working for them against his will. He’s up at Berchtesgaden, Kerr’s pretentious homage to Der Zauberberg with Gunther as a jaded Castorp? Longer, with more detail, some unnecessary. Kerr eschewed any romantic involvement this time, probably a good thing, in the last few novels it was forced. Not as good as the first three, but enjoyable. Thanks to Charlie for giving it to me, glad I read it.
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