Books of the Month – November 2011

Y.A. Erskine’s The Brotherhood was November’s best read for me. It is a debut novel from an Australian female author (the Y is for Yvette) about the shooting of a Tasmanian policeman and is a truly outstanding novel. It unfolds in a series of chapters each from the perspective of a different person involved in the events surrounding the shooting – the rookie policewoman who was with the policeman when he was shot, the Commissioner of the force, the policeman’s wife and so on. This structure works wonderfully and allows Erskine to explore a range of social themes without once preaching at readers. I loved this book and on reflection I think I was unfair only giving it 4.5 stars when I reviewed it first and have since upped it to a 5. I have found myself discussing it, recommending it and reflecting upon the ideas it raised on multiple occasions since finishing it. My only regret is that it is difficult enough to get your hands on a copy here in Oz, I imagine it’s impossible overseas.

I did quite a bit of reading for the month so have a fair few other recommended reads (anything rated 3 or more) too:

Megan Abbott’s The End of Everything is a book I am still mulling over. The writing is outstanding but I remain unconvinced about the credibility of the story and characters. For me the story lost punch towards the end but I am in the minority going by lots of other reviews. I never did end up giving this one a rating but it would be at least a 3.

Andrea Camilleri’s The Track of Sand sees Inspector Montalbano in his 12th adventure investigating the disappearance of a horse corpse and becoming involved with a sultry female jockey. The plot was a bit woolly in parts but the gorgeously translated humour and the further development of Montalbano’s myriad character traits make this a worthwhile, and delightfully short, read. My rating 3.5

I shoe-horned Jane Casey’s The Burning into my Irish reading challenge (because I don’t have the energy for Tana French’s 700+ page tomes) and thoroughly enjoyed the book. It starts out being about a serial killer but quickly (and thankfully) turns into something else entirely as Maeve Kerrigan gets pulled from her team’s investigation into a series of linked deaths to investigate a case that was thought to be part of the sequence but has enough differences to warrant individual attention. my rating 3.5

I mooched Kate Charles’ Evil Intent quite some time ago and couldn’t remember why when I plucked it from my TBR shelves for the What’s in a name Challenge. It’s a terrific book about a new female priest in the Anglican church who becomes embroiled in a murder investigation. Alongside a very engaging whodunnit there is a thoughtful exploration of issues impacting the modern Anglican church and a depiction of English ‘journalism’ that, if even vaguely accurate, makes me very glad to live somewhere else. My rating 4.5

Shamini Flint’s A Most Peculiar Malaysian Murder sees Singaporean Police Inspector Singh go to Malaysia to ensure that the rights of Singapore citizen Chelsea Liew are not trampled on after her arrest for the murder of her Malaysian ex husband. As with many of the books I read this month the social issues explored in the book are at least as interesting as the crime solving and I enjoyed reading about a culture with two legal systems operating and what can happen when these clash. My rating 4.

Australian author John M Green’s Born to Run is a political thriller set in the near future in which Isabel Diaz looks set to become America’s first female president until her campaign derails and her various supporters and opponents have a kind of battle of wills. It’s an old-fashioned romp which I enjoyed very much. My rating 3.5

The sixth instalment of Kerry Greenwood’s Corinna Chapman, Cooking the Books, series was a delight to read,  managing to be light and breezy without treating readers as if they are simpletons (something I find too frequently with cosy mysteries these days). Corinna has to take her baking skills to the set of a new TV drama where someone is playing mean practical jokes on the star of the show. Corinna’s boyfriend Daniel meanwhile is investigating the theft of some bonds from a young accounting intern who is being bullied by the firm she works for. My rating 3.5

Mari Jungstedt’s The Dead of Summer is a Swedish police procedural which follows the investigation into the shooting of a construction company owner while on his summer holidays. I’d not read any previous books in the series but found this one engaging and easy enough to pick up for someone new to the series. There’s a nice mixture of investigative narrative as well as the personal lives of the police and journalists working the case and a satisfying (if slightly obvious) resolution. My rating 3.5

Sofi Oksanen’s Purge tells the stories of Aliide, an elderly widow living in an isolated house in a half-deserted Estonian village in the early 1990′s. One day she finds a young girl collapsed outside her house and, against her better judgement (who might be watching and who will they tell?), she brings the “dishrag of a girl” into her home where she, warily and sparingly, provides nourishment and aid. Over the course of the novel we travel backwards and forwards in time to learn the histories of the women who have both had traumatic experiences which have left deep physical and psychological scars. I loved the structure of the book and the insight it provided into a part of world history I am fairly ignorant about. Aliide is not all likeable but she is a magnificent character. My rating 4.

I had a lot of listening hours for one reason or another this month and did some re-listening of Chris Grabenstein‘s John Ceepak novels. They are just as good again and I am looking forward to the release of number 6 next year (though wish I didn’t have to wait until May).

Other, non-review related posts this month

Next month?
Right now I’m reading Dregs by Jørn Lier Horst (very good it is too), and have a Polish book (Zygmunt Miloszewski’s Entaglement), an Irish one (Aifric Campbell’s The Loss Adjustor <– not crime fiction !!!), a Spanish one (Eugenio Fuentes’ At Close Quarters) and two Australian ones (Syliva Johnson’s Watch out For Me and Gary Corby’s The Ionia Sanction which actually takes place in Ancient Greece) I definitely want to read before the end of the year. Oh and this morning I noticed Deon Meyer’s Trackers was on special at audible and I have a voucher that would make it free so I might be making a virtual trip to South Africa as well.

What about you…was November 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: Evil Intent by Kate Charles

Callie Anson is a newly ordained Anglican Priest and has just received her first posting as Curate of All Saints’ Church in Paddington, London. Recovering from the breakup of a relationship and coming to terms with her demanding new job (which includes more than its fair share of abuse as some people do not take well to the idea of female priests) are enough to deal with but she is soon embroiled in a murder investigation too. A hardline conservative priest is strangled and one of Callie’s closest friends is the prime, indeed only, suspect.

As my memory resembles a sieve I have no clue what prompted me to mooch this book nearly three years ago but I am immensely pleased that I did. Even without the mystery element (which was perfectly entertaining in its own right) this book has a lot to offer. You might not think you’d be absorbed by a depiction of the modern Anglican church and its internal political issues (including the ordination of women and the acceptance of openly homosexual clergy) but Charles has made them utterly compelling reading. She manages to be respectful of an institution she clearly loves but does not fawn or fail to criticize elements of doctrine or collective behaviour that she finds outdated and/or offensive. Most importantly though she does all this as part of an intriguing story, not as some political diatribe on the various issues raised. I wish that all the authors I read who have something political to say were equally well-versed in the art of showing (not telling).

Another aspect of the novel I found fascinating was its depiction of the media and the relationship between the police and the media. There is a journalist character here who drives much of the plot development and she, or at least her actions, are at times horrific, being entirely devoid of journalistic ethics, fact checking and the like. At one point in particular she shreds someone’s career based solely on one person’s claims without, it appears, any attempt (or even need) to check the claims made or interview the person who was the subject of them. I don’t know enough about either English law or media to know if this is realistic but if it is then it is a very sad indictment on the English fourth estate. I know our media here in Australia isn’t perfect but they wouldn’t quite get away with that.

The mystery plot is almost a minor component then of what made this book interesting for me but that’s not to say it wasn’t interesting too. While police could only see one possible suspect readers were provided motivations for several more potential culprits in what was something of an old-fashioned whodunnit. Even (especially?) among the various clergy and their families there were plenty of secrets which might have warranted killing someone in order to keep. Charles teases these out adroitly and keeps readers guessing until the end.

In some ways this book is quite scathing of the institution that is the Anglican church but it is also reverential at times. Various characters describe what drew them to the church or what aspects keep them coming back, even when they don’t agree with everything going on from a political standpoint, and I liked the balance this provided. It made the book much more compelling than a one-sided polemic would have been. I really had no idea what to expect when I plucked this book from the depths of my TBR pile and was pleasantly surprised to find a thought-provoking and engaging book which I gobbled up in a single, late night sitting.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
My rating 4.5/5
Author website http://www.katecharles.com/
Publisher Poisoned Pen Press [2005]
ISBN 9781590582008
Length 339 pages
Format hardcover
Book Series #1 in the Callie Anson trilogy
Source I mooched it

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