Sunday, 11 August 2013

Martin Walker

The Devil's Cave

Detective: Bruno Courreges
Location: "St Denis" in the Perigord, France
Time:       1990?
Genre

This is the fifth in Walker's Bruno Courreges series set in the fictional town of St Denis in the Perigord region of France. While Bruno may be styled the Chief of police, he is the police for the small town. The series in general reflects Walker's fondness for the area and for the relative simplicity of life in rural France.

The crime to be investigated is the death, possibly murder, of an unidentified woman, found floating in a punt towards the town naked and possibly the victim of a black mass. Simultaneously the town council is being persuaded to invest in a holiday village scheme despite the fact that a similar investment by the same developers went pear shaped in a previous town. As Couureges investigates both siutations he finds himself under pressure from government level to drop the matter.

The threads come together effectively, but this is as much a book to enjoy the location, the cast of characters and their continuing development as it is a hard nosed police procedural.

A-

Martin Walker's  Bruno, Chief of Police blog

Previously read
Bruno, Chief of Police
The Dark Vinyard
Black  Diamond
The Crowded Grave

Wednesday, 7 August 2013

Anne Holt

Death of the Demon

Detective: Hanne Wilhelmsen
Setting:      Oslo
Time:        Mid 1990's
Genre       Scandi Noir

This is the third of the Hanne Wilhelmsen series, set just after Wilhelmsen has been appointed aDetective Inspector.

The crime involves the murder, one evening, at her workplace of the manager of a children's home. the possible suspects include a lover who has been defrauding her bank account, a colleague who has been fiddling the books, a husband who could benefit from a change in her will and a 12 year old boy with an  ADHD problem (defined as MBD in the book) who has gone missing from the home.

The investigation is paralleled by a developing account, set in italics, of the mother's experience with her son and the attempts to get the social services agencies to support her rather than place him in the home.

It seems a dead end case but the pieces come together  with a twist to reveal the murderer and with a final twist in the mother's story about a key piece of evidence.

The back story concerns the challenges facing Wilhelmsen in managing a case after her promotion and her continuing nervousness about colleagues knowing about her long standing lesbian  partnership.

A+

Wikipedia background to Ann Holt

Previously read
Blind Goddess (1)
Blessed are thos who thirst (2)
1222 (8)

Sunday, 4 August 2013

Elly Griffiths

Dying Fall

Detective:                   DI Harry Nelson
Forensic Archeologist:   Ruth Galloway
Setting:                        :Preston/Pendle/Blackpool
Genre
Time                            :Current (Set in 2010)

This is the fifth of Elly Griffiths novels featuring Forensic Archeologist, Ruth Galloway and Detective Inspector Harry Nelson  together with a New Age Druid, Cathbad whose empathy with various strands fortunately never crosses into the paranormal.

In this story Galloway learns of the suspicious death of an undergraduate contemporary, dan golding the day before she receives a letter from him asking her to investigate the probity of some bones he has found. The letter indicates there was something frightening him and almost immediately Galloway starts getting threatening texts. Galloway however, together with Cathbad and her daughter (by Nelson) does elect to go to Pendle University.

At the same time Nelson and his wife take a holiday in Blackpool, his home town, part from nostalgia and part to renew his acquaintance with former colleagues in the Blackpool Police and discover information about the death of Golding.

The murder relates to  Golding's discovery of a sarcophagus at Ribchester which may or  may not contain the bones  of King Arthuir. It would appear that a neo nazi organisation might be concerned that the bonesmay reveal something about Arthur they consider unpalatable. But which, if any, of Golding's colleagues may be implicated.

There's a bit of hokum to this one but enjoyable non the less.

The back story of course involves Nelson's sense of responsibility for the daughter he has fathered on Kate, while he maintains his marriage to a wife who has reluctantly learned to live with her husband's one night of infidelity.

B+

Elly Griffiths' website

Previously read
The Crossing Places
The Janus Stone
The House at Seas End
A Room Full of Bones




Wednesday, 31 July 2013

Liza Marklund

Vanished

Journalist: Annika Bengtzon
Location:  Stockholm, Sweden
Time:       Present (Recent Past: Pub 2002)
Genre:      Scandi Noir

This is one of the earlier novels in the Annika Bengtzon chronology.

The story opens with the murder in a transshipment area of two Balkan immigrants and the dramatic escape of a woman from the assassin. Bengtzon's paper carries the story.

Bengtzon herself is contacted by a woman who want coverage of her organisation which, she alleges can can help people, particularly battered wives,, to disappear completely from Government records.

When Bengtzon takes a phone call from and meets the escaped woman, helping her to avoid the gunman a second time, she decides to help her by putting her in touch with the woman running the organistation.

However Bengtzon is not completely sure that the organisation is completely above board and she starts investigating its probity assisted by a local government finance officer who has challenged his superiors about paying it large sums of money.

At the same time the gunman, clearly involved in Balkan mafia smuggling is still on the loose loking for a lorry load of stolen fake cigarettes.

The themes weave together well. 

The backround story arc involves
a) Bengtzon meeting the man who is to feature as her partner/husband in later novels (the local government officer)
b) The politics of the editorial battle at the Evening Post as an editor with vision begins to position himself to achieve dominance in an attempt to improve the quality and integrity of the paper,

A


Previously read
Prime Time
The Bomber
Red Wolf


Tuesday, 30 July 2013

Aline Templeton

Dead in the Water

Detective: Marjorie Fleming
Setting:     Galloway
Time:        Present
Genre:      Police Procedural

This, the sixth n the Fleming series, is another cleverly plotted novel by Aline Templeton intertwining a cold case investigation of an unsolved murder from the mid 1980's, the attempted murder  of a TV actor with local roots location shooting a police procedural series in the area and feuding among Polish building workers, not to mention unreasonable pressure on Marjorie Fleming by the acting Procurator Fiscal.

The cold case review, demanded by the Fiscal, is a testing one for Fleming as the original investigation was not as thorough as it might have been and involved her immediate superior and her father, then a Detective Sergeant.  The TV actor could have been involved, the victims mother thinks he did it,  but he had not been interviewed at the time, which necessity draws him into the cold case review. The attack on him could be by the victim's brother seeking revenge, or the result of arguments he has had with an old acquaintance or  the confrontation he had had with one of the Polish workmen.

The false leads are all plausible as is the final denouement when the murderer confesses all in a sort of parody of the way a Poirot might force a killer to confess to a room full of the suspects, although with unfortunate implications for Fleming.

A

Aline Templeton's Website

Previously Read
Cold in the Earth
The Darkness and the Deep
Lying Dead
Lamb to the Slaughter
Evil for Evil
Cradle to Grave

Sunday, 28 July 2013

Helene Tursten

The Glass Devil

Detective: Irene  Huss
Setting    ; Gothenburg, Sweden
Time       ; Current
Genre:       Scandi Noir

This opens with the murder of a Swedish Pastor and his wife and also  their son at a nearby cottage. Their are suggestions that the murder may have been committed by Satanists whom the Pastor has been trying to identify through the internet following an arson attack which  destroyed a local church. The only surviving member of the family, a computer expert living in London is too traumatised to offer useful information. 

Irene Huss and her colleagues pursue the possibility of Satanic links but eventually another, less esoteric but sinister motive emerges.

A

Helen Turtsten Website

Previously read
Detective Inspector Huss
The Torso

Thursday, 25 July 2013

Karin Fossum

Bad Intentions

Detective: Konrad Sejer
Setting:     Norway
Time:        Current
Genre:      Scandi Noir

Once again, a different tone in a Karin Fossum novel. There is no gruesome killing. There is no race to find the killer before there are too many bodies. For a detective story, one might actually say it was gentle.

A young man staying with two friends by a lake on a weekend's outing from the hospital where he was being treated for depression, falls out of a rowing boat they are all in at night and disappears into the muddy waters. No attempt is made to save him. His friends choose to invent a fiction that he has disappeared from the cabin overnight and may have committed suicide and this is what they report to the police. There are allusions to some nefarious deed the three of them have been involved in.

When the body is fond, the story of the possible suicide does not ring true to Konrad Sejer, but he has no proof otherwise.

Later another body is found in another lake, that of a young man missing for some months. Is this death accidental. How are the three friends connected to it?

The story is well written and the plot unfurls nicely.

Rating A

Web site referring to Karin Fossum  although this book is not listed

Previously Read
Dont Look Back
What the Devil Holds