A Review of a kind: If the Dead Rise Not by Philip Kerr

The first two-thirds of If the Dead Rise Not is set in Berlin in 1934. Hitler’s National Socialist Party has been in power for 18 months which made Bernie Gunther’s life as a homicide detective untenable because he is a supporter of the previous regime. So he is now a house detective for an up-market hotel. In that role he becomes embroiled in several investigations including gangster involvement in the bidding for building contracts for the upcoming Olympiad. In the second book last third of the book we jump to Cuba in 1954 where Bernie is playing with model trains and having sex with a selection of prostitutes when some of the people from 1934 reprise their roles bit-players in Bernie’s life in a sequence of events that had, to my ears, less to do with crime fiction and more to do with Bernie proving some more how witty and sarcastic he can be.

If I had read the excellent review at Crime Scraps before embarking on this book I wouldn’t have. Embarked on the book that is. Because 30′s hardboiled detectives in the style of Chandler, Hammett et al is just not my cup of tea. Where Uriah Robinson in his review sees a sharp first person narrative and clever lines I see a bunch of blokes who exhibit a blasé attitude to violence and a leering, lecherous quality that I find tiresome.

So my first problem is the style of the book which, it turns out, I still don’t  like even though it was conceivable that my tastes might have changed in the 20 or so years since I read a hardboiled PI novel.

Then we come to the fact it felt like two separate books rather than a single entity. The audio version of the book is 16 hours long. A little more than the last 6 hours takes place in Cuba after the rather abrupt ending to the first part. A handful of the same characters are present, including the woman he fell in love with and an American gangster who nearly killed him, but I’ve seen separate books in a series have more connection with each other than the two parts of this book. Also, the Cuba portion of the book incorporated even more real characters from history in a way that I find trite. As soon as we jumped to Cuba I was waiting for Ernest Hemingway to make an appearance. Which of course he did. Ho hum.

What I did like about the book was Kerr’s ability to create a sense of time and place. His early period Nazi Germany is oppressive and sinister and there is a tangible quality to the sense that no one comprehending how bad things will get. It really is quite chilling. I found the Cuba portion a little more ‘hokey’ but I admit that’s at least partly because I was, by then, over it. And to be fair, when he wasn’t belting people or describing every woman he encountered in terms of how much he would like to have sex with her Bernie was quite witty and had random moments of moral clarity. I have to say too that Jeff Harding’s narration was a perfect match for the tone and style of the book.

To be abundantly clear I am in the minority in my feelings towards this book. Reviews at Crime Scraps and Reviewing the Evidence are indicative of the majority view and even though she has some misgivings Kerrie at Mysteries in Paradise feels far less negatively than I do. And if there was any doubt that mine is a minority view If the Dead Rise Not won the 2009 CWA Ellis Peters Award for historical fiction.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

My rating 2/5

Narrator: Jeff Harding; Publisher: ISIS Audio Books [2010, original edition 2009]; ISBN: N/A (downloaded from audible); Length 15 hours 58 minutes; Setting: Germany 1934, Cuba 1954

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

Review: The Fourth Watcher by Timothy Hallinan

Title: The Fourth Watcher (the 2nd Poke Rafferty novel)

Author: Timothy Hallinan

Publisher: William Morrow [2008]

ISBN: 978-0-06-125725-4

Length: 320 pages

Setting: Bangkok, Thailand, present-day

Genre: Thriller?

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

My rating: 4.5/5

One-liner: A fast-paced story with characters to fall in love with. And jokes.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

Poke Rafferty is an American travel writer living in Bangkok and about to settle down with his girlfriend Rose, if she’ll marry him, and his adopted daughter Miaow when things in his life start to go terribly wrong. His father, whom he hasn’t seen in 20 years, arrives in town with Poke’s half-sister and a load of trouble which all lands on Poke’s doorstep and threatens the survival of his new family. To save his family and friends Poke has to bring down a North Korean counterfeit scheme and stop the merciless Chinese Colonel whose retirement savings Poke’s father stole before leaving China.

Going by the book blurb The Fourth Watcher is not really the sort of thing I would expect to like, being more hard-boiled and gangster-y than my usual reading. Which is why I try my hardest not to judge a book by its blurb. Because I thoroughly enjoyed this novel.

Hallinan captures the weather and the noise and the people of Bangkok perfectly with his simple but wonderfully descriptive writing so you really do feel transported to this exotic location. On top of that there are terrific characters who, though far from perfect, are the sort of people you can’t wait to learn more about and when you do you spend the rest of the book wishing fervently for their survival against the odds. At the centre of things Poke Rafferty is credibly complex as the gruff ex-pat writer who has fallen in love with a country, a woman and a child and watching him realise just how important these people are to him and the lengths he’ll go to in order to ensure their safety is an exercise in satisfying character development. I also adored his relationship with policeman Arthit which is full of sarcastic humour and deep respect in equal parts. Rose, a chain-smoking ex-prostitute who now runs a domestic agency, is a delight being neither too saccharine nor too sharp and Miaow manages to be fragile and strong at exactly the same time and if she doesn’t tug at your heart-strings then it’s unlikely you have a heart at all.

The storyline could have tended towards the sleazy or cheesy but did neither because Hallinan really is a terrific writer. He throws in humour and excitement and sadness at all the right moments and avoids all the clichés nicely. I did struggle a teensy bit to keep track of the final complicated swirl of events that enabled Poke to be reunited with all his loved ones but this is a minor criticism of an otherwise excellent book that will appeal to lovers of edge-of-your-seat thrillers and those who like characters with depth and warmth in abundance.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

The Fourth Watcher is the second book to feature Poke Rafferty. The first was A Nail Through the Heart and the third, Breathing Water, was published earlier this year. I shall be tracking them both down.

The Fourth Watcher has also been reviewed at Cheryl’s Book Nook