This is very different murder mystery. A story of art dealers and ancient relics, of forgeries and academics. And above all, about people. Each new character is a work of art, described in the articulate detail of an art dealer’s catalogue. And each is an individual par excellence, including one that seems to be a…
Tag: murder mystery
REVIEW
“City Under Siege” by Michael Russell
by renaissanceadmin • • 0 Comments
Today I’m reviewing a book just because I liked it. It has few writing flaws, but it’s a fun read, nonetheless. I’m always interested in a murder mystery where the killer leaves “no clues.” The writer is laying down a challenge, to see how long he can hold the suspense without giving us any possibility…
REVIEW
“Murder on Brittany Shores” by Jean-Luc Bannalec
by renaissanceadmin • • 0 Comments
Once in a while I read a book for recreational purposes and enjoy it so much I review it. “Brittany Shores” is one of those. Having enjoyed travelling in that area several times probably influenced my reaction to the writing. More on the setting later. One of the nicely handled elements of this book is…
REVIEW
“Watch Her Vanish” by Ellery Kane
by renaissanceadmin • • 0 Comments
My sister-in-law, who taught high school for far too long, typified Country music as “People making poor life choices and then whining about the results.” A certain level of Police Procedural novel goes about the same way. The detective mystery takes a back seat to the soap opera. Personally, I don’t know why anyone would…
REVIEW
“The Coven Murders” by Brian O’Hare
by renaissanceadmin • • 0 Comments
This book starts out as a standard murder mystery, involving, as you might expect, the ritual slayings of members of a coven. The police team assigned to the task of solving the murders is a pretty standard bunch, complete with the usual fake antipathy leading to comedic banter between the chief detective and the pathologist.…
REVIEW
“Cold Earth” by Anne Cleeves
by renaissanceadmin • • 0 Comments
. I thought I’d loaded today’s review book on my iPad before we left home, but I hadn’t. So we’ll save that one for next week, and I’ll review a book I’ve been enjoying on my holiday. I follow a couple of Detective series where the interpersonal relationships often take precedence over the murder mystery.…
REVIEW
“The Flats” by Kate Birdsall
by renaissanceadmin • • 0 Comments
Despite the title, “The Flats” is not a story about a place. It’s a story about a person. Namely Detective Sergeant Liz Boyle, a wonderfully crafted, multi-dimensional character who develops and grows as the tale progresses. The plot starts off with a gut-wrenching murder – that of a 5-year-old – and revolves around Boyle’s inability…
REVIEW
“Sleep, Savannah, Sleep” by Alistair Cross
by renaissanceadmin • • 0 Comments
Long ago I discovered that most novels finish exactly the way they start. If a book seems like a certain type of story in the first three chapters, then it will probably end that way. Most novels. Once in a while, we find a book that starts out in one direction but somewhere in the…
REVIEW
“Devil in the Countryside” by Cory Barclay
by renaissanceadmin • • 0 Comments
At first glance, this story is a Murder Mystery under the guise of Historical Fiction. Fair enough, because the forces of history at that time were so strong as to completely overwhelm any supposed detective work being done, and throw logic and justice out the window. Which makes the book Historical Fiction after all.
The setting is Northern Europe at the time of Martin Luther and the Counter-Reformation. Society was torn apart by the schism between the two sides of Christianity. Add the population’s superstitious fear of the supernatural in general, and you get a milieu where the (historically accurate) Werewolf of Bedburg can thrive. Gory murder abounds.
The main hero, Investigator Heinrich Franz, seems to be trying to act like a modern detective, but social pressures sideline any logical progress he might make.
The result is a rather typical (for that era) working out of all the fears, hatreds, and political/religious strife of the region, a juggernaut that rolls over the populace with a crushing weight of torture, injustice and cruel execution.
The strength of the story is in the creation of likeable characters whose gradual extinction by the violence of the times rouses indignation and fear in the reader. Fans of horror will appreciate the details of the violence, graphically laid out. For those who enjoy more refined conflict, a high point of the story is the effect of Martin Luther’s “95 Theses” on a Catholic priest who is suffering a crisis of faith.
On the down side, for some of us there is just too much history. In one scene the writer uses the boredom of a character with nothing to do as an excuse to dump a history lesson on us. Rather ironic.
And this is where the preferences of readers are going to matter. I know it was a rough time in history, but except for a few notable exceptions, the characters in this novel are loud, crude, and emotional. They spend their time antagonizing each other and getting into screaming matches at the drop of a glove. If you like that kind of veracity, this book is for you. If you really enjoy historical detail, there is plenty.
A minor flaw that true historians might object to is the use of modern expressions such as “damage control,” “okay,” and “I guess you’ve come to the right place.” In fact, there is a faint modern thread running through the whole story. Several times I found myself saying, “Would they really have acted like that in those times?” and then I would be swept away again by the Renaissanceness of it all.
Recommended for Historical Fiction fans with strong stomachs.
(4 / 5)