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Ms. Wordopolis Reads
Mostly fiction reviews, with an emphasis on crime fiction
Monday, March 26, 2012
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Nights of Awe by Harri Nykänen
Nights of Awe by Harri Nykänen, translated by Kristian London
Originally published as Ariel in Finland, 2004
Bitter Lemon Press
Publication date: April 2012
Source: Publisher
Other reviews appear in Crime Segments and Crime Scraps.
Originally published as Ariel in Finland, 2004
Bitter Lemon Press
Publication date: April 2012
Source: Publisher
Nights of Awe introduces Detective Ariel Kafka of the
Violent Crimes Unit in the Helsinki police department. After a quick background chapter introducing
the main character and his Jewish heritage (he hasn’t really practiced in
years), we are immediately in the investigation of multiple murders. It’s a bit disorienting, in part because
Finnish names aren’t familiar to me, and in part because there’s a quite high
body count in the first third of the book.
While Ari is a police inspector, this isn’t a typical police
procedural: it’s also a conspiracy
thriller, involving the peeling away of the many layers of the conspiracyI don’t typically read conspiracy thrillers, so I don’t have any
comparisons to draw. It’s not a case
that simply unravels: there are crosses
and double-crosses and hidden motives galore.
The protagonist Kafka is interesting. Nykänen spends more time talking about his
family members and how his family’s life affected him than he spends talking
about his Jewish background, even though the title of the novel refers to the
days between Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, and Yom Kippur, the Day of
Atonement. Kafka is interesting in that
he doesn’t seem too grizzled, cynical, or burnt out, as so many police
inspectors can be. One negative note
about Kafka is that his objectification of women gets to be a bit much during
the story.
Finally, the book has an interesting take on the
relationship between Finland and Israelis and Palestinians, something I hadn’t
really pondered before. It’s a messy
history, and I learned something I didn’t know.
If you’re interested in a police procedural with a
conspiracy story, some interesting political history thrown in, and some dark
twists you'll like this book.
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
A Partial History of Lost Causes by Jennifer duBois
A Partial History of Lost Causes by Jennifer duBois
The Dial Press
Publication date:
March 20, 2012
Source: Publisher via NetGalley
Irina Ellison, one of the main characters in A Partial History of Lost Causes, sees her father decline from Huntington’s disease when she’s a teenager, and, when she’s a college student, she’s diagnosed with the affliction as well. The actions of this book are put in motion by Irina’s knowledge that she will start to decline most likely by the time she’s 32. Irina’s father loved chess, first realized he was unwell when his young daughter beat him at chess, and wrote a letter to chess world champion Aleksandr Bezetov asking him how to cope with certain doom. After her father dies and as she nears her thirty-second birthday, Irina travels to Russia to meet her dad’s chess hero and find out the answer to her father’s question.
Irina finds Bezetov running as an opposition party candidate
for president. The chapters alternate
between Irina and Aleksandr, capturing both of their histories as young
people: Irina in college and graduate
school, Aleksandr moving from eastern Russia to Leningrad to enroll in a chess
academy and becoming world champion.
Aleksandr’s life is more overtly political than Irina’s: he was a dissident during Soviet times and
he’s highly critical of Putin’s regime.
She is a college lecturer during her twenties.
The book works because duBois’s writing is quite vivid: Aleksandr’s train journey to Leningrad, his
small room in a kommunalka, his lonely life in Leningrad are all memorable
scenes and settings. DuBois is also
good at capturing the emotional life of Irina, who was diagnosed at such a
young age and watched her father being robbed of his motor skills and the rest
of his brain during his decline from Huntington’s. I cut her slack with her wild, self-absorbed reactions to her
life because Huntington’s is such a horrible disease. Facing mortality when your college-aged, never mind facing a
disease as debilitating as Huntington’s, is a horrible situation.
The stakes are high for both characters in this book: Irina knows she will decline soon and will
not be able to live as she had before.
Aleksandr is in danger because he’s running for president for the
opposition party. He keeps a box full
of death threats he’s received. His
life becomes more and more managed in order to avoid assassination. Their lives intersect as Irina travels to
Russia, and they recognize themselves in each other. She asks him how he lives with doom, which is the question her
father asked him in his letter to him.
The book deals with messy characters with messy lives living in quite difficult circumstances. It's about the game of chess and being a world chess champion. It's about political life in Russia in the last half-century. It's a book about figuring out what sort of life to live. It's a book about big ideas.
Highly recommended.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
The Thief by Fuminori Nakamura
Translated by Satoko Izumo and Stephen Coates
Originally published in Japanese as Suri
Soho Press
Publication date: March 20, 2012
Source: Publisher via NetGalley
The Thief is a brief tale told by an unnamed thief,
who primarily is a pickpocket in the crowded subways and streets of Tokyo but
who also has done work for various gangs.
The story begins in mid-crime, and Nakamura gets into the thoughts and
sensations of this unnamed man who, he admits, does not have a place in
society. He currently works alone, but
in the past he had a partner who he fears is dead. During the course of our following the thief, he becomes a mentor
to a young boy who is not such a successful shoplifter. He comes to care for him, especially as he
fears his days are numbered after he’s enlisted by a criminal gang that
threatens to kill him if he doesn’t complete his assigned tasks.
This is book is a crime confessional. It’s a story that humanizes the man whose
entire livelihood depends on being unnoticeable and unnoticed. This is also a story about fear of the
yakuza. I really get a feel for the
insanely crowded subways in Tokyo in this story. The fact that the main female characters are a prostitute and the
thief’s unstable ex-mistress is a bit grating since the characters are pretty
clichéd. In any case, it’s a quick read
into the mind of a pickpocket.
This book was also reviewed by International Noir Fiction.
I read this as part of the 2012 Global Reading Challenge.
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
The Cruelest Month by Louise Penny
The Cruelest Month by Louise Penny
Book 3 in the Inspector Gamache series
St. Martin's Minotaur, 2007
Source: library
I adored the first Inspector Gamache book, Still Life, and I’ve liked the subsequent books, including this one. I’m not usually a fan of cozy, small village mysteries, but Penny is very good at creating characters with interesting psychological lives, which makes her books stand out over other cozies with an assortment of eccentric village residents. Also, she is very good at weaving in the backstory of Gamache’s fall from grace within the Surete because he exposed his superior Arnot’s misdeeds within the department, leading to a trial. I preferred the Arnot plot to the murder mystery in this particular book.
This particular book involves Gamache’s third murder
investigation in the village of Three Pines.
Someone died during a séance in an abandoned home on Easter Sunday. The woman leading the séance is a Wiccan,
and the book is a bit heavy on the background of paganism and the whole
spooky-house-where-bad-things-have-happened story. Spooky ghost stories are not my favorite thing, but the first
section of the book wasn’t bad: it was
good to see recurring characters from the earlier books, particularly the
artists Clara and Peter Morrow.
While investigating the murder, Gamache deals with his
police colleagues who are against him after he exposed Arnot’s misdeeds. This story line will be satisfying to
readers of the series from the beginning because the story of the case and its
ramifications are clearly spelled out after being only hinted at in earlier
books. It is a bit jarring to move
between the village and the politics at Surete headquarters (it feels like two
very different books), but I’m grateful to have more of Gamache’s professional
backstory.
I did enjoy this book, but I think it works best if you read
it in order instead of joining the series here with book three.
This book has also been reviewed at Today I Read and Mysteries in Paradise.
I read this book as part of the Criminal Plots II Reading Challenge: book
whose protagonist is the opposite gender of the author.
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Lucia's Eyes by Marina Sonkina
Lucia’s Eyes by Marina Sonkina
Guernica Editions
Publication Date: April 25, 2011
Source: Publisher via NetGalley
Lucia’s Eyes features characters young and old living in a number of
countries. My favorite stories are
“Tractorina’s Travels,” which is the story of an old woman looking back at her
life growing up in Russia as she prepares to move out
of her lifelong home in Moscow to be with her stepson, and “Runic Alphabet”, a
briefer story about a man remembering a long-dead mistress as he buys and plants
a Japanese snowbell tree that reminds him of her.
These stories feel like they could all be expanded to full
length novels: “Carmelita” about an
older man’s love affair with a younger woman painter he meets while visiting an
oceanside Mexican village, as well as “Christmas Tango,” told by an unemployed
Canadian man becomes obsessed with tango.
They feel like they could be expanded into novels because the characters
are quite richly developed, which is quite a trick for a short story.
It’s a bit difficult to say much more about these stories without giving away the pleasures of reading them, that is, without giving away the details of the characters lives that they reveal as they look back at key scenes in their lives. It’s a melancholy collection of stories, but somehow still hopeful.
It’s a bit difficult to say much more about these stories without giving away the pleasures of reading them, that is, without giving away the details of the characters lives that they reveal as they look back at key scenes in their lives. It’s a melancholy collection of stories, but somehow still hopeful.
Friday, March 9, 2012
An Available Man by Hilma Wolitzer
An Available Man is my favorite kind of novel, and it’s my favorite novel I’ve read this year so far as well: it’s a comedy of manners, it’s very astute about its characters and their interior lives, and it’s beautifully written.
The titular available man is Edward Schuyler, a recently
widowed biology teacher in his early sixties.
His stepchildren and step-daughter-in-law place a personal ad for him in
the New York Review of Books, and this book follows his adventures and
misadventures in the dating world of a sixty-something man. The story moves between suburban New Jersey and New York City (his home and work bases), and it
covers the first three years of life without his beloved wife Bea.
The story draws you in from the beginning because it begins
with Edward alone and remembering Bea’s struggle with pancreatic cancer as well
as their relationship. You also feel sorry
for him because he was left at the altar by his first serious partner, Laurel. Wolitzer also draws you in
with the details that make the characters feel very vivid: Edward buries the letters responding to the
personal ad in the kitchen’s crazy drawer, which is just how this character
would describe what I would call a junk drawer. He’s too buttoned-up to call it a junk drawer.
There are several delicious set pieces in the story as
well: Edward at his first dinner party
as a widower and Edward’s
semi-disastrous dates with women who responded to his personal ad. Wolitzer has a sense of humor. None of the characters, including the women
he meets along the way, are caricatures or flat: Wolitzer clearly has affection for all of her characters,
including his needy stepdaughter Julie, Edward’s mother-in-law Gladys, and even
the dogwalker Mildred who’s interested in the occult. The family life feels real, and the places Edward inhabits feel
real.
This is a story about grief, this is a story about the
dating lives of widows and widowers, and this is a portrait of marriage. Nothing is easy for these set of characters,
but they are interesting and are striving to become more alive, which makes for
an interesting read.
An Available Man by Hilma Wolitzer
BallantinePublication date: January 24, 2012
Source: Publisher via NetGalley
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