Wednesday, August 30, 2017

The Fourth Monkey


The Gruesome Killer

The Chicago police have their work cut out as a bizarre serial killer has been at work for five years, leaving no trace behind.  JD Barker’s The Fourth Monkey is gory in the extreme, and not for the faint of heart.

He kidnaps young female victims, to torture and chop up; following the Hear No Evil, See No Evil, Speak No Evil principle, he sends the victims’ families their ears, eyes and tongues, which he cuts when they are still alive and adding a fourth rule of Do No Evil, leaves their mutilated bodies for the police to find. It turns out that a member of the victims’ family had committed a crime, and the killer has taken it on himself to punish them by killing their child. The cops have named him the four monkey killer or 4MK.

Detective Sam Porter is woken up one morning by his partner Brian Nash, because a man has been run over by a bus, and he was carrying an ear in a white box tied with a black sting, just like the one 4MK uses. The dead man just might be the killer they have been hunting for. His latest victim, Emory, might still be alive and they have to find her before she dies. She is the hidden illegitimate daughter of a rich, powerful and unscrupulous businessman, Arthur Talbot, which makes her 4MK’s target.

Porter finds a diary in the dead man’s pocket, in which he has written about his own childhood and his psychopathic parents. The chapters of the book then intersperse the search for the killer with Emory’s struggles in a dark, rat-infested room, and the diary of the killer which is truly stomach-churning, the way his parents torture and kill a man; in the midst of it all, Porter’s wife is killed in a store burglary gone wrong.

For a tiny bit of humour, there’s a rookie CSI man called Watson, whom Porter calls Doctor and he protests that he isn’t one. Porter sighs about people not reading any more (or Watson would have got the Sherlock Holmes reference).

The book is a perverse take on the vigilante theme, the killer believes he is fighting evil, but his methods are horrific. Since the next book The Fifth To Die has been announced at the end of this book, it would be no spoiler to say that 4MK isn’t done yet.  

The Fourth Monkey
By JD Barker
Publisher:
Pages:416

Chaos


When Evil Strikes

Patricia Cornwell’s creation, Dr Kay Scarpetta, a forensic pathologist, was such a fascinating woman that she starred in twenty-three bestselling novels—Chaosis the twenty-fourth, and perhaps the weakest of the lot.

Cambridge, Massachusetts–based Kay Scarpetta has moved up the ladder by sheer dint of hard work, and is as popular among her team of forensic experts, as she is hated by criminals, since her meticulous work gets many caught and convicted. Her husband Benton Wesley is with the FBI, and that causes a few clashes in their otherwise happy marriage.  Kay’s favourite person is her niece Lucy, a computer wizard, who lives with Janet and their adopted son Desi. As much as loves Lucy, her relationship with her sister Dorothy has always been abrasive. Her nemesis is a psychopath, Carrie Grethen, an evil genius, who always escapes capture and keeps targeting Kay and her family.

The weather is stultifyingly hot when Chaos begins and Kay Scarpetta is forced to walk sweatily through Harvard Yard, carrying shopping bags. Dororthy is due to visit, which is causing Kay some unease. Her frenemy, the cop, Pete Marino has just informed her of an anonymous complaint against her, about a public spat she had with her chief of staff Bryce Clark, which could be her persistent online stalker Tailend Charlie at work. Just as she is sitting down to dinner with Benton, both get urgent phone calls, and her one relaxed evening in the week is ruined.

The body of a young woman is found in the John F. Kennedy Park, and from initial descriptions, she seems to be someone Kay ran into earlier in the day. Two mentally challenged twin girls found the body, and may have tampered with evidence. Kay does not want the crime scene to become crowded with the Harvard University campus and a busy street nearby, so demands a tent to be put up around the body.

It takes an inordinate amount of time for the tent to be erected, and while Kay twiddles her thumbs, a lot of things are going wrong around her. Lucy turns up in an enigmatic mood, and Benton comes by to give news of Kay’s mentor Colonel Brigg’s sudden death, a day before he was to address Harvard students with her. Kay is shocked and irritable, talking to Marino in an annoyingly pedantic manner. There is something eerily similar about the two cases, but it’s almost 300 pages by the time the sluggish plot starts moving, even if what unfolds is totally convoluted.

Before that there is the forensic procedure described in excruciating detail, and ultimately the reader is as fed-up as several characters in the book. After the build-up suggesting high-tech gizmos and rare chemicals at work, the climax is surprisingly tame.

Cornwell really must find another adversary for Kay, Benton and Lucy to fight against. Chaos might disappoint all but Cornwell’s most ardent fans.

Chaos
By Patricia Cornwell
Publisher: Harper Collins
Pages: 421

Two By Steel


The Good Mother

Danielle Steel’s books—which she brings out at an alarming rate—are somewhat like mainstream movies; you know just what to expect, the may have some mild surprises along the way, and then, to please the fan, they end exactly as on would expect them to.  She is a bestselling author because she knows her readers, who are not looking for literary writing, but for charaters (strong women, mostly) they can relate too.  

Against All Odds is about Kate Madison and her four children. Kate was widowed young and raised her kids by setting up a vintage clothing store that made her famous in fashion circles. Her mother, Louise, an outspoken and adventurous woman has been a constant source of support. She is around for Kate, but also spends her free time travelling to different places and collecting experiences.  Compared to her, Kate comes across as a boring drudge.

The children grew up and moved away and now each has a problem of their own. Eldest daughter Izzie, a career-oriented lawyer falls in love with a spoilt, rich, junkie Zach; her gay son Justin and his partner Richard want to have a baby through surrogacy when they aren’t financially or emotionally secure to start a family. Justin’s twin Julie, falls In love with a nice guy, Peter, who turns out to be a nightmare. The youngest son William, has never settled down and dates a succession of women, till he decides that a much older woman  is the one for him.

Dutiful Kate never married again and devoted all her time to her children; she also supported their choices, even if she disapproved.  She realizes with wisdom that her own mother passed on to her, that they have to solve their own problems; all she can offer is a patient ear and a home always open for them.  Apart from her mother, the one who stands by Kate is an old friend, Liam, whose wife does not stand in the way of their platonic friendship.

As can be expected from Steel’s books, the problems arise rapidly and are solved easily to the extent that people die obligingly at the right time.  She doesn’t waste too much time over exposition or character development, but expends the words she saves for the sake of pace in repetition. Of the characters she creates in this book, Loiuse is the most fascinating—when authors start writing more books about people in thee autumn of their lives, and refrain from making them whiny, then maybe a woman like Loiuse would get a book about her life and her travels.

Against All Odds
By Danielle Steel
Published by Pan Macmillan
Pages: 336


******************
Fighting Spirit

In her latest book titled The Duchess, Danielle Steel, creates a young woman who jumps over the hurdles placed in her path and experiences a lifetime of sorrow and joys before she is even out of her twenties.

In her foreword, Steel explains the archaic British law by which the eldest son (or nearest male relative in the line of succession) of a nobleman inherits the property, title and the family home. He can, if he so wishes, throw his sisters (and even mother in many cases) out of their home. At a time (in the nineteenth century), when no careers were open to unmarried women of noble birth, except as governess to wealthy children, the fate of girls was in the hands of their brothers or male relatives. (Primogeniture was abolished as late as 1925.)

Angelique is one such unfortunate woman. The daughter of the second wife of the Duke of Westerfield, who died in childbirth, she was brought up in luxury at Belgrave Castle and pampered by her father. Her two brothers, Tristan and Edward, hate her with an intensity she has done nothing to deserve.

She is barely eighteen, when her father dies, and she is evicted from her home by Tristan, his harsh wife and two nasty daughters. Worse, her brother sends her to work as a nanny in the home of a rich couple with four children. Overnight, from being the lady of a castle, she is dumped below stairs as a servant. Anticipating just this, her father, surreptitiously gave her a large sum of money, to tide her over any crisis, before he died.

Even with no experience with kids, she manages her duties with diligence, never letting her poise and aristocratic manner falter. When she turns down the advances of a friend of her employer, she is summarily sacked without a character reference, so she cannot get a job anywhere in England.  She goes to Paris, hoping to find employment, but the lack of that crucial bit of paper shuts all doors there too.

A chance meeting with a hooker Fabienne, whom she picks up from the street in wounded state and treats with kindness, gives her the idea of getting into what is called the world’s oldest profession. She sets up the finest bordello in all of Paris, patronized by the rich and powerful, but does not “go upstairs” with any one the men who are bewitched by the beautiful, intelligent and stylish woman. Steel’s portrayal of prostitution is rather strange and morally ambiguous. She writes about the girls with sympathy and a bit of admiration, but makes sure her heroine remains untouched. However, she does expose the hypocrisy of a society, in which men could do as they pleased, as long as they kept away from public scandal.

There are political upheavals going on in England and France, that Steel hints at, only to the extent that they affect Angelique and her girls. Though there is needless death, how the story ends is predictable—if it weren’t Steel’s fans would be disappointed.

The Duchess
By Danielle Steel
Publisher: Pan Macmillan
Pages: 400

Sunday, August 6, 2017

Behold The Dreamers


No Melting Pot

In Imbolo Mbue’s debut novel Behold The Dreamers, a migrant from Cameroon extols the beauty of his native town of Limbe to his New York employer, who simply asks, “Why are you here?”

It is difficult to explain to a man who has everything what it or like to live in a country where there are no opportunities for a poor man with no connections. But America hold out infinite possibilities even to those who work at menial jobs.

Jende Jonga struggled for years to come to America and then bring his wife Neni and son Liomi to New York. While he hopes for the elusive green card , he works long hours as a chauffeur for Lehman Brothers honcho Clark Edwards and his family. Neni works at low-paid jobs, looks after the home and dreams of becoming a pharmacist. Cindy Edwards lives a life of luxury, full of parties and shopping, but can’t prevent everything slipping out of her grasp.

Mbue builds a contrast-- cliched though it may be-- between the happy life of the immigrant, and the family of his employer falling apart. His wife is an alcoholic, his older son, Vince, is a rebel who wants to chuck up his privileged life and go to India, the younger Mighty finds Jende’s family more loving that his own.

She does not go into details about the 2008 Wall Street crash, but the fallout of the crisis impacts both families in different but devastating ways. Still, in a strange way, the ending is not tragic. There are always new dreams when the old ones crash.

It's a moving story told with empathy and relatable at many levels.

Behold The Dreamers
By Imbolo Mbue
Publisher: Harper Collins
Pages: 400

Camino Island


To Catch A Thief


Fans of John Grisham’s legal thrillers, would be surprised to pick up Camino Island, that has cops and criminals in plenty but not a lawyer in sight (at least not any important to the plot).

It is, instead a breezy crime-cum-romantic caper set on the fictitious Camino Island, where the Gatsby-esque Bruce Cable runs a book store and the town’s watering hole of choice.  He wears colourful seersucker suits with bowties and lords it over the island’s community of writers and visiting authors conducting signing at his Bay Books store. He has also acquired a mansion, where some of the socializing and many seductions takes place.

His romance and co-habitation with antiques dealer Noelle is quickly established to come down to the business at hand.  Five precious F. Scott Fitzgerald manuscripts are stolen from the well-guarded Princeton College’s Firestone Library.  Two of the five thieves are immediately caught,  but the rare manuscripts have disappeared.

An impoverished, out-of-work writer Mercer Mann is approached by the stylish Elaine from a shadowy security company hired by the insurers to trace the manuscripts. They believe Bruce might have acquired them—he is not all that scrupulous and is known to have dealt in stolen rare first editions. Mercer, who co-owns a cottage on Camino Island and spent her summers there in her childhood with her grandmother, has the perfect cover to worm herself into Bruce’s inner circle and try to find out if he has them.

If in the process she gets the inspiration to write the second novel she has been struggling with, as well as a touch of romance, so much the better for her.

The crime is not the Grisham’s main concern here, it’s creating a character like Bruce Cable and having fun with anecdotes about books and writers, at a time when so many book stores are closing down and there is a crisis in the world of publishing. Maybe some of Bruce Cable’s tactics to run a successful bookstore could be imitated?

Camino Island is a light read, perfect for curling up on a rainy day and finishing in one go.

Camino Island
By John Grisham
Publisher: Doubleday
Pages: 290

Tuesday, August 1, 2017

House Of Spies


The Terror Trail


Daniel Silva’s unique creation Gabriel Allon—an Israeli spy, skilled assassin and expert art restorer-- returns in House Of Spies, the seventeenth book in the series. As he goes about tracking and killing terrorists across the world, the reader feels safe for a while with Allon looking out for them.

Silva is also eerily prescient—in his last book The Black Widow, he wrote about attacks in Paris, and they really happened; in House Of Spies, there is a terror attack in London’s West End, that bring to mind the Manchester carnage. He writes with authority on the goings on in the Middle East, and does not mince words when writing about Islamic fundamentalism.

The man who leads the Islamic State and orchestrates terror attacks all over the West is the mysterious Saladin. In The Black Widow,Allon had managed to get Natalie Mizrahi undercover into Saladin’s lair. Being a doctor, she could not bring herself to kill a wounded man, even a monster like Saladin. However, she got vital information about the attacks planned in Washington, but Allon was unable to prevent them. Now he is seething and obsessed with tracking Saladin.

For those who haven’t encountered Allon yet, he is a most unusual assassin—he was plucked out of art school by his mentor and father figure, Ari Shamron to join a crack team and avenge the murder of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics. When he returned, he had aged much beyond his years and also become almost indestructible, although he came close to death several times. He becomes Shamron’s best intelligence officer in the field and also the world’s best restorer of art treasures. During the course of the series, he lost his infant son in a bomb blast that left his first wife, Leah, in an almost vegetative state. He met and fell in love with fellow intelligence operative Chiara and married her. She gave birth to twins and is temporarily out of action.
In House Of Spies, he takes over as the chief of Israel’s intelligence services, but refuses to oust his predecessor Uri Navot, moving him to an office across the aisle. When the London attacks take place, Allon does not want to sit behind a desk; he is out there with his crack team, pulling that one loose thread—the Moroccan gun supplier-- that could lead to Saladin.
The trail leads them to the glamorous French seaside town of Saint-Tropez, where they prepare an elaborate façade to trap wealthy and ruthless businessman Jean-Luc Martel and his British girlfriend Olivia Watson into helping them to reach Saladin, who is hiding out in Morocco.
Martel is so well-connected that he thinks nobody will dare to expose the fact that behind his chain of legitimate businesses is his connection to the drug mafia that funds Saladin and his terrorist groups. His old foe-turned friend, Christopher Keller, whom he had brought back from the dead and placed in Britain’s intelligence service MI6, gets a starting part in this book, as does his former employer the Corsican Don Orsati; Natalie Mizrahi is crucial to the plot, since she is the only one who has seen Saladin properly. A massive operation is launched by the American, British, French intelligence services, led by Allon’s Israeli team.
Patience is Allon’s greatest virtue as he and his team slowly connect all the dots and go after Saladin, battling suicide bombers and jinns. The book is, maybe, not as nail-biting as The Black Widow, where the female undercover agent was in constant danger, but it is thrilling nonetheless. The Saint-Tropez portion is also enjoyable as the bait is thrown to Martel and Watson and they have no choice but to bite.
There is no scope for Allon to do any art restoration in this novel, so the reader will miss Silva’s insights into the work of the Old Masters. Maybe in the next book. Meanwhile, this one is a must-read.

House Of SpiesBy Daniel Silva
Publisher: Harper Collins
Pages: 544
 

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