Books of the Month – September 2011

After a bit of a slump during August I seemed to find my reading mojo again in September, getting through a reasonable number of books and, more importantly, finding many of them to be outstanding.

In the end I gave my book of the month award to a haunting African tale that I read at the start of September because I simply cannot get its story of the evil motivation for the death of a young girl out of my mind. Unity Dow‘s The Screaming of the Innocent  is set in the author’s native Botswana and tells a harrowing tale about a young girl who goes missing, the men who are responsible and the ease with which they engineer a cover up of their actions. It is emotionally harrowing (the ending particularly so) but not gratuitously so and it has flashes of beauty, bravery and humour amongst the sadness.

Other recommended reads from the month are:

Gianrico Carofiglio‘s A Walk in the Dark which tells the tale of an Italian lawyer who takes on the case of a battered woman who no one else will help because her ex-boyfriend is the son of a judge is a marvellous read. It makes me happy to think that my delay in finding this wonderful author means there are already several more books by him ready and waiting just for me. 4.5 stars

Detective Inspector Huss by Helen Tursten was one of the great Swedish novels I read in the month. Göteburg police investigate the death of a wealthy businessman in a superb example of the socially aware police procedural. Some of the story tangents and dead ends were as interesting as the main event and the characters are excellent. 4.5 stars.

Fool’s Republic by Gordon W. Dale tells the story of a man incarcerated and tortured as part of the ‘war on terror’. I was impressed with the understated way the author tackled this difficult subject, eschewing the temptation for overt preaching or simplification of the issues. I didn’t think the first person narrative was quite as successful but overall an entertaining and thought-provoking novel. 3 stars.

Misterioso by Arne Dahl is one of 3 books set in Sweden I read this month and while I found it a bit awkward to get into I did enjoy it overall. Having read them so close together I couldn’t help but compare this debut police procedural with Tursten’s (above) and I did not think this one quite as well plotted but still a very engaging story about a series of murders of high-profile business men. 3.5 stars

Sister by Rosamund Lupton would probably have been better off if it hadn’t been shoe-horned into the whodunnit genre as the parts of the book that work superbly are the depictions of two fragile familial relationships (two sisters and a mother and daughter) and a delicately painted portrait of grief. Frankly the crime-y bits of the story were clunky. 3.5 stars.

The Donor by Helen Fitzgerald tackles the hideous premise of a father with twin daughters both needing life-saving kidney transplants with deliciously dark humour to ensure the book doesn’t fall into the misery-lit category that one-line synopsis could otherwise suggest. 4 stars.

The Invisible Ones by Stef Penney is a novel about a gypsy family and the man hired to find out what happened to one of their members. One of two narrators is a 14 year old gypsy lad known as JJ and he the star of this thoughtful novel (though mainstream reviews would suggest I am in the minority as someone who liked the book). 4 stars.

The News Where You Are by Catherine O’Flynn wasn’t quite as good as O’Flynn’s first novel which I fell in love with earlier this year but only because that book was something extra special. I still thoroughly enjoyed this tale of a melancholic English newsreader who starts to worry about the death of an old friend. A treatise on the downside of valuing looks over substance if ever there was one. 4.5 stars.

The Ottoman Hotel is a debut novel by Christopher Currie and is set in a small Australian town. It tells the story of a young boy whose parents disappear while they are all on holidays and its evocative writing style made for a quick, engaging and nicely unpredictable read. 3.5 stars.

Until Thy Wrath Be Past is the latest instalment of the Rebecka Martinsson series by Asa Larsson. Rebecka becomes involved in the investigation of the death of a young girl whose body is found a long way from where she died and the case turns out to be connected to events from many years earlier. 4.5 stars.

Whispering Death by Garry Disher is one of the most cleverly constructed novels I’ve read in a very long time and has well developed characters and a gentle undertone of social commentary to book. There are far too many story threads to them justice in a brief summary; you’ll just have to read the book. 4.5 stars.

The meh reads for this month were:

Ian Rankin‘s The Complaints (I know, I know I’m the only one who doesn’t ‘get’ Rankin) and Nigel McCrery‘s Scream (gratuitous gore).

I also listened to Dick FrancisSecond Wind narrated by the always brilliant Tony Britton and while not a meh book in the sense I usually mean it, I do find it hard to come up with something new to say about the 40+ Francis novels which are all, essentially, the same.

Other happenings at the blog

I celebrated a year of eBook reading which has been a mostly positive experience aside from the appalling customer service received from the Sony corporation and the fact that the ever-present geographic restrictions are more of a problem in the eBook world than with physical books. I am however still hopeful of having virtually no physical books at all to read (and worry about finding homes for afterwards) within four years.

I continued to celebrate women crime writers for #SinC25, this time focusing on those who write historical crime fiction which features strong female characters. I propose it’s easy to understand the temptation to write such books given that in much factual history the role of women is often ignored.

a last word…

I’m going to pick up a couple of physical books next week, both new titles by Australian authors. One is the sixth novel in Kerry Greenwood’s fun Corrina Chapman series and the other is the debut novel by Y A Erskine. Australian publishers generally charge the same for eBooks as they do for the equivalent physical books which in one of these cases is $33...an amount I simply refuse to pay for something I don’t really own. I do wish these people would wake up but until they do I’ll borrow most of my Aussie reads from the library (think of the lost sales) and pick up a handful on special or using vouchers.

What about you…was September a good reading month? Did you have a favourite book? Or did you acquire anything you’re itching to read? Any issue you need to get off your chest?

Review: Misterioso by Arne Dahl

Misterioso opens with an odd prologue featuring a darts-playing bank employee engaging in his daily ritual of opening the bank for which he works. We then jump to a completely unrelated event in which a Kosovar refugee who has recently been told he will be deported has taken several hostages in a Stockholm Immigration Office. Choosing not to wait for backup policeman Paul Hjelm involves himself in the situation and, because no one dies, is treated as a hero by the newspapers. Within the police though he is investigated because his approach broke several rules and just as he fears he will lose his job he is approached to join a new elite team being formed within the National Criminal Police. The team will be temporarily known as the A-Unit (cause for much frivolity throughout the book) and its first job is to investigate a series of high-profile murders of prominent businessmen.

With three rapid changes of story focus and more than a dozen characters introduced in its first 40 or so pages I found Misterioso a bit awkward to get into, and the first half was really a bit of a direction-less slog. There are seven members in the elite new team and while Paul Hjelm is clearly meant to be the main character Dahl does try to give all of the rest an equally significant introduction. The positive view of this is that it means the book (and the series for which it is the debut) does not have to be carried by a single man but the downside is it’s a lot of people to meet all at once. For most of the novel I thought of them all by the first quirk they were introduced with which is probably doing everyone a disservice but I couldn’t help it. I’m not sure that the contrivance of creating this new team of supposed independent thinkers worked all that well as a plot device really because it meant they were all getting to know each other along with us readers getting to know them and at times this felt a bit forced. Hjelm is fleshed out to be a lonely man (though he is married with children) harbouring some strange thoughts and an obsession with a newly acquired blemish on his cheek. Towards the end of the novel there are flashes of real people behind the quirks of his team mates and I’m sure these would continue to be explored more in future novels. The one attempt at a female character did leave me grimacing though as the combination of personal history and behaviour depicted was neither credible nor particularly sensitive.

Dahl did a good job depicting the grunt work of such a case where there is little evidence to go on. The team were shown looking at every aspect of the victim’s lives to see where there might be connections and possible links to killers. There were several threads followed that turned out to be harmless dead ends and I’m sure this is a very realistic occurrence in most real-world investigations. The way that various team members got it into their heads that their angle was the one that would break the case wide open also felt quite credible to me. Though when this led to one of them flitting off to another country and getting himself (non-fatally) crucified I did roll my eyes. That’s what you get for having a team of independent thinkers I suppose :)

The second half of the book was, for me, much more coherent and tightly written as the team narrowed down an increasingly likely suspect and were able to focus their efforts a bit more. Here Dahl also started to provide some social commentary on issues such as the problems with the Swedish economy (not the recent world financial collapse as this book was first published in 1999) and the eagerness with which people looked to blame foreigners for crimes being committed in their country.

On balance I liked the book enough to look for more by this author and am prepared, as always, to be a little forgiving of a debut. There’s certainly plenty here that shows promise and I do hope that more of the 11 book series in translated into English (hopefully in order).

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Misterioso has been reviewed by several people who all seemed to enjoy the book more than I did (I didn’t hate it but did not love it either) including at International Noir Fiction (where Glenn displays the disparity of the book’s worldwide covers, like Glenn I’ve no clue what the Spanish cover is trying to represent), Nordic Bookblog and Yet Another Crime Fiction Blog (I definitely agree with Keishon about the silliness of this prologue).

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
My rating 3/5
Translator Tiina Nunnally
Publisher Pantheon Books [this translation 2011, original edition 1999]
ISBN 9780375425356
Length 340 pages
Format hardcover
Book Series #1 in the A-Unit series
Source borrowed from the library