February didn’t make me shiver

One of my goals when starting this blog was to prompt me to write something about every book I read in the hope that I would remember them more clearly (I choose to believe my failing memory is due to the number of books I read rather than my advancing years). For the most part I’m pretty good about reviewing what I’ve read but this month I have well and truly dropped the ball. Partly this is due too real life getting in the way and partly due to the books not demanding me to write about them. I have hit a period of books that are neither very good nor very bad and am feeling a bit hard done by as a result (I know, I know it’s a first world problem).

Charles Todd’s THE CONFESSION is the 14th book in the Ian Rutledge historical series and has a strong opening in which a man walks into Rutledge’s Scotland Yard office and confesses to murdering his cousin several years earlier. When the confessor himself is killed a couple of weeks later Rutledge starts an investigation which takes him to a horrid little town (the name of which I have forgotten) where a swag of horrid people try to hide things from Rutledge the outsider. There follows a somewhat confusing story involving assumed identities and wartime criminal activity and if you paid me money I couldn’t tell you the outcome of the story and it’s only 3 weeks since I finished the book. I’ve really enjoyed the other books in this series but this one felt a little flat to me. Even that cover looks dull right?

I had high hopes for M.J. McGrath’s WHITE HEAT, a debut novel set in the Canadian Arctic written by an English woman who has spent a lot of time in the region. She has published a non-fiction book about Inuit families who were ‘incentivised’ to move to the barely habitable High Arctic by the government which wanted people living in the far northern territories during the Cold War years and who have been ignored and abandoned since the threat from the evil Russians has disappeared. McGrath uses her obviously extensive knowledge of the people and the area as a backdrop to a thriller in which part time teacher and part time hunting guide Edie Kiglatuk takes some tourists on a hunt where one of them is shot and dies. The local elders arrange for the incident to be dismissed as an accident but Edie is perturbed by some anomalies in the evidence she found at the scene. When a relative of hers dies in questionable circumstances she is spurred to investigate properly. This book didn’t engage me as much as it has other readers. I did enjoy the character of Edie but found the mystery element of the book somewhat rambling and for large chunks of the novel I felt a little too much like I was being lectured at.

Helene Tursten’s NIGHT ROUNDS centres on the investigation into the murder of a nurse in a small private hospital in Sweden. I was happy enough to listen to the audio book while it was meandering along but almost as soon as I had finished it the details started to seep from my brain. It is a perfectly serviceable police procedural, with a modicum of social commentary thrown in for good measure, but it didn’t fully engage me and in another few weeks I doubt I’ll be able to tell you a single thing about it.

My comfort reading for the month was another Dick Francis audio book narrated by Tony Britton who I adore as a reader (if I win the lottery I’m going to hire him to read all my books to me). The book, WILD HORSES, did exactly what you’d expect from a Dick Francis book so I can’t say this one disappointed me. The protagonist is a young-ish film director who is making a film based on a death that occurred in the racing fraternity some years earlier and someone will go to great lengths for the film not to be made. I did enjoy the depiction of the process of making a movie even (Francis has a knack for making things I have no interest in seem engaging) but I found the mystery a bit easy to solve (or perhaps I remember it from years ago when I must have read the book in print form).

To top it off there are some other half-finished books we will speak of no more and I am still plodding through the Sara Paretsky book I wrote about last week (good lord it gets more patronising by the paragraph).

So I am looking around for something to jolt my reading back into high gear. To that end I am re-reading Christos Tsiolkas’ THE SLAP at the moment because I heard an interview with the author which made me wonder if I’d been unfair to the book the first time I read it (when I hated it). And tomorrow I’m picking up Gail Jones’ FIVE BELLS from the library (astute observers will notice that neither of these is crime fiction).

What do you do when you hit a reading slump? What’s your ONE recommendation that will make me love reading again?

Review: A Lonely Death by Charles Todd

The thirteenth novel to feature Inspector Ian Rutledge of Scotland Yard, who returned from fighting in the first World War with more than his fair share of troubles, is a genuinely gripping and atmospheric historical mystery. Rutledge is sent to Eastfield in Sussex where three men have been killed. Local police are baffled by the case and the father of the third victim, a wealthy brewer, has enough clout to ensure Scotland Yard becomes involved. At the same time Rutledge’s boss and mentor retires and tells Rutledge about the one case of an unsolved murder that still haunts him. Pondering this case and its peculiarities occupies Rutledge’s mind and may turn out to help him solve the current case.

I’ve only read one of the earlier novels in this series but I was easily drawn back into the world that the mother and son team who write as Charles Todd have created. Rutledge is a truly compelling and sympathetic character who struggles with his own (quite real) demons as he doggedly investigates the crimes he encounters even when, as happens in A Lonely Death, he is berated by his colleagues who are willing to accept obvious solutions. The voice in his head belongs to Hamish McLeod, the man who Rutledge shot during the war for disobeying an order, and he is a very real, often highly irritating presence in Rutledge’s life. I’m normally not a big fan of ‘woo woo’ elements in a story but this aspect of the book is handled credibly and as Hamish doesn’t appear too often I can deal with the supernatural element of this particular book. Here Rutledge also has a hint of a personal life although, as seems to be his luck, there is a sadness to this relationship too.

The historical side to the story is outstanding. You quickly realise how easy modern-day investigators have it in some ways when you consider that Rutledge has to go all the way to the next village to be able to make an important phone call in privacy and it takes several days for even small snippets of information to be found and transmitted from one part of the country to another. As I remember from the other book in the series that I’ve read the time period is also well depicted in terms of the impacts that the war had on everyone including those who served and those who lost loved ones. It’s very clear from several key events in this book that those impacts carried on long after the official end of the conflict.

Solving the main case in A Lonely Death boils down to careful interviewing of all the players and a genuine understanding of human psychology which Rutledge demonstrates to perfection.  When he learns that the victims were all soldiers in the war but that the identity discs inserted into their mouths at their deaths are not their own, he knows he must identify what else links the men together and is the only policeman willing to contemplate that there is something deeper at work than the more accepted ‘crazy man’ theory. I could have done without the unrealistic coincidences of the secondary case but it’s a minor flaw in an otherwise evocative novel with a thoroughly engaging protagonist.

A Lonely Death is being published in the US (and UK?) on 4 January 2011

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A Lonely Death has also been reviewed at Journey of a Bookseller and Stargazerpuj’s Blog

My only review of another Charles Todd book is the third book in the series, Search the Dark

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My rating 4/5
Author website http://charlestodd.com/
Publisher Harper Collins [2011]
ISBN 9780061726194
Length 276 pages
Format uncorrected e-proof (ePub)
Book Series Number 13 in the Inspector Ian Rutledge series
Source from the publisher via Net Galley

Review: Search the Dark by Charles Todd

Title: A search in the dark

Author: Charles Todd

Publisher: Recorded Books [2008]

ISBN: n/a (digital download from audible.com)

Length: 11hrs 40 minutes

Narrator: Samuel Gillies

Following the end of the first World War Ian Rutledge has returned to his work as an Inspector with Scotland Yard after nearly dying on the battlefield. He is called to a case in Dorset where a man has been arrested for killing the woman he believed to be his wife, despite the fact his wife and two children had supposedly died during a bombing raid two years earlier. Rutledge is assigned as a trouble-shooter to coordinate with the jurisdictions involved to locate the children who were assumed to have been with the murdered woman when she was killed. His presence is not universally welcomed by the local coppers.

The slant to this book is that Rutledge has a partner of sorts: a voice in his head. The voice belongs to Hamish McLeod, a soldier that Rutledge was required to shoot during the war when McLeod refused to lead his men into a particular battle. Rutledge seems resigned to Hamish’s presence which is at times angry and taunting and at other times almost supportive of Rutledge’s ways. He copes remarkably well with the interruptions at any rate. This is the third book in a series of what is now 11 books and frankly I’m not sure where else this particular element can go as, after only a short while, the novelty value had worn off for me and I simply accepted Hamish as a normal, fairly minor character. In a way I suppose this is good as it means it’s less of a gimmicky element than it might otherwise be, but the downside is that there’s less to differentiate this book from similar books in the crowded police procedural genre.

As historical fiction goes the book is first rate. It captures the immediate aftermath of the war and its effect on both the people who fought in it and those who stayed behind. Although the book explores the psychological impact of the war in a way that a contemporary whodunnit might not have done, I don’t think that makes the exploration less legitimate and, for me, it was the most interesting aspect of the book. The depiction of the torment many people went through without the medical knowledge and social support systems that are available today is powerful and quite sobering to ponder. Of course this makes the book quite a sad one with an ending that should not have had to happen (but realistic nonetheless).

A combination of slower pacing than I like and Rutledge’s way of working things out in his mind (with Hamish’s help) led to each twist and turn of the plot being telegraphed to me slightly before it actually happened so that in the end there were few genuine surprises in the story. However the plot, though somewhat convoluted, is logical and does hang together well. The characters more than make up for the duller moments.

I’d definitely recommend this to fans of historical fiction (I have a friend who adores Foyles War and I think she’ll love this series) and those who like a solidly written police procedural with a touch of melancholy.

Audio book specific comments: A great narrator who manages the balance between performance and reading too perfection. I did find myself looking forward to getting back to this one and was quickly lost in the story each time I came back to it.

My rating 4/5

Other stuff

Reviewed by Kerrie at Mysteries in Paradise (in fact I have Kerrie to thank for the recommendation and I did enjoy the book although perhaps for different reasons than Kerrie as I wasn’t terribly taken with the whole notion of Hamish).

This is yet another book written by a pair of writers, this time mother and son (Caroline and Charles Todd). Who knew so many relatives could work productively together without killing each other? It wouldn’t happen in my crazy (but much loved) family.

There are 11 books so far in this series with another scheduled for release next year and, according to this Publishers Weekly article, the authors are starting a new seires of historical whodunnits also set around the time of WWI but this time featuring an army nurse as the investigator. The first book in this series is due for publication in September.