Archive for April, 2024
HAS ANYONE SEEN CHARLOTTE SALTER? by Nicci French: Book Review
It’s a joy to read this book. Usually I don’t think mysteries need to be over 400 pages, and this one tips the scale at 530…but every page is necessary, with a tight plot and a beautifully portrayed cast of characters.
The novel opens with Alec Salter’s 50th birthday party. He’s Charlotte’s husband, the father of their four children, and a mean-spirited philanderer. He’s dismissive of his wife and their three sons, acting as a caring father should only to his teenage daughter.
Although the party begins at seven, Charlie (to use Charlotte’s nickname) hasn’t arrived, although it’s after that hour. Etty, their fifteen-year-old daughter, gets more and more concerned as first the minutes tick by and then the hours. Finally Etty goes home, hoping that her mother decided not to attend the celebration for some reason. But she isn’t there, and in fact she’s never seen again.
There’s a town-wide search for Charlie, of course, diligently conducted by her friends and neighbors and less so by the local police who seem to believe that she left of her own free will. To call their investigation lackadaisical or unprofessional would be polite; they apparently made up their minds early on that the missing woman would turn up in her own good time and didn’t want to spend any additional police time on it.
Then, two days after Charlie’s disappearance, Etty and Greg Ackerley, a neighbor, are continuing the search along the river that runs through the town. Walking along the track, Etty sees something in the water. It’s a body, but it’s not Charlie; it’s Greg’s father, Duncan Ackerley.
Again there is no in-depth investigation by the police. Were Charlie and Duncan romantically involved? Did she want to break it off and because of that he killed her? Did he commit suicide because she was gone? The local police keep changing their theories as to what happened, but there are no real answers.
When we meet the families again after 30 years, we learn how the disappearance of Charlotte Salter affected each of her children and her husband. As you might imagine, things have not gone well for them emotionally, although each one is trying his/her best to lead a meaningful life. But the weight of not knowing what happened to their mother, and their secret belief that perhaps she is not dead after all, has left an indelible scar on each one. And as for Alec, Charlie’s husband, perhaps the reader might be forgiven for thinking that his current situation is just punishment for his past behavior.
This husband and wife writing team consists of Sean French and Nicci Gerard, and after eight outstanding mysteries featuring Frieda Klein, a London-based psychotherapist, they have written more than a dozen stand-alone novels. I read and enjoyed the Klein novels but wasn’t familiar with their stand-alones until this one. Not surprisingly, their brilliant plotting and characterizations are evident in Has Anyone Seen Charlotte Salter?
You can read more about the authors at various sites on the web.
Check out the complete Marilyn’s Mystery Reads at her website. In addition to book review posts, there are sections featuring Golden Oldies, Past Masters and Mistresses, and an About Marilyn column that features her opinions about everything to do with mystery novels.
NOTHING BUT THE BONES by Brian Panowich: Book Review
You might think that describing a crime novel with words like “beautiful” and “compassionate” is a bit of a stretch. But after you read NOTHING BUT THE BONES, you will understand.
McFalls County, Georgia is a place you’d want to drive through and put in your rear view mirror as quickly as possible. It’s run by Gareth Burroughs and two of his sons, and they control almost everything in the county.
When the novel opens, a group of teenagers is standing by the town’s pond, with Nelson “Nails” McKenna being bullied by two other boys. In a moment the scene turns from the boys tormenting Nails, who is developmentally disabled, to one boy holding a girl in the group and threatening to cut her for defending Nails.
Suddenly all seven-foot-plus Nails is hurtling through the air, punching the other boy and breaking his nose. He continues the assault, pummeling the boy until he’s no longer moving. Finally his friends are able to pull him off, but that’s just the beginning of Nails’ troubles.
Gareth Burrough’s son Clayton was one of the group of friends who tried to stop Nails’ attack. In order to clean up the mess that Nails’ fists inflicted, Clayton feels he must call his father to deal with the situation. After Burroughs takes charge, forcing the town’s sheriff who arrives on the scene to ignore the boy lying bloodied on the ground, Burroughs recruits Nails to be one of his enforcers and has his henchmen remove the corpse.
That’s where the matter stands for nearly ten years until a fateful night in the Chute, the town’s toughest bar, when Nails is drinking his usual, a glass of apple juice. Along with everyone else in the county, The Chute’s owner pays tribute to Burroughs, and although he has an enforcer on hand to be alert for problems, that man is no match for the men who have come into the bar looking for trouble or action, depending on whom you ask.
So when three men take the girl who had been trying to talk to Nails at the bar into the men’s room, Nails is pretty certain they mean trouble. He pushes his way into the bathroom, deals with two of the men, and hears the girl pleading with the third man, the one who forced her into the stall, saying “I don’t want to do it.” A red rage comes over Nails, and then the man he attacks is dead on the barroom floor.
Nails’ uncontrollable temper has gotten him into trouble again. This time the word comes from Gareth that Nails has to leave McFalls County and never return. Nails given eight thousand dollars, the name of a man and a phone number in Jacksonville, Florida and told to get out of town, that this is beyond Gareth’s ability to cover up.
Confused by the way his life has been upended in just a few minutes, Nails goes to his car to begin the drive south. As he opens the driver’s side door, however, he hears a sound from the back seat. It’s the girl he rescued from the sexual attack in the bar’s rest room, and now she’s begging him to let her go with him. He thinks to himself that he’ll give her a ride to the nearest town and that whatever happens to her afterward is her problem. How wrong he is.
Nothing But The Bones is an absolutely spellbinding crime novel, brilliantly told. The characters are wonderfully drawn, the plot is truly suspenseful, and Nails is a masterful creation. Brian Panowich has written another winner.
You can read more about the author at this site.
Check out the complete Marilyn’s Mystery Reads at her website. In addition to book review posts, there are sections featuring Golden Oldies, Past Masters and Mistresses, and an About Marilyn column that features her opinions about everything to do with mystery novels.
THE MURDER OF MR. MA by John Shen Yen Nee and S. J. Rozan: Book Review
The Murder of Mr. Ma is an enchanting, magical trip (in more ways than one) that takes readers to London in 1924, as seen through the eyes of a young Chinese professor, Lao She.
As the novel opens, Lao is summoned to the home of the Honorable Bertrand Russell and through him meets the famous Judge Dee Ren Jie. During the Great War, Dee was brought to France to settle the differences between the British army and the Chinese Labour Corps, men who had been brought from China to work as non-military personnel, thus freeing British soldiers for battle.
Although the Chinese men were not allowed to live in England after the war, four of them somehow were brought to the country under the auspices of Inspector William Bard, now a member of the Metropolitan Police and formerly a captain with the British forces in France.
Then all the other Chinese laborers were returned home, even though some wished to remain in England. Some did stay, secretly, and the murder of one of these men is what has brought Dee to England and into the path, once again, of Inspector Bard, a man who harbors a grudge against the judge for his work in France.
When Dee and Lao start their inquiry into the fatal stabbing of Ma Ze Ren, one of the men in the Labour Corps, they hear some things that don’t quite add up. His widow, a Caucasian woman, tells them that the shop Ma owned wasn’t doing as well as he had hoped even though he spent all day there, and thus she decided to sell all the merchandise and return to her home in Norfolk.
However, when Dee and Lao talk to the shop’s assistant, they learn that the shop had been making a profit, that Ma spent very little time in the store and, in his opinion, the widow could have gotten a better offer for the goods if she hadn’t accepted the first one she received.
That offer was made by Colonel Livingstone Moore, so Lao and Dee go to the colonel’s home to see his purchase. Although Moore fancies himself as a man knowledgeable about Chinese art and antiques, it’s obvious to the two men that he’s not knowledgeable at all. Moore says that he bought the contents of the shop from Ma’s widow as a kindness, but the two Chinese men are disbelieving.
Then a second Chinese man, also from the Labour Corps, is killed by the same Chinese sword as Ma. Then a third.
Readers may be familiar with the fictional character of Judge Dee, a 7th-century jurist. He, in turn, was based on the real-life Di Renje, a diplomat and detective, in a brilliant series by Robert Van Gulik, a Dutch diplomat and Orientalist. Lao She, a name unfamiliar to me, was a 20th-century Chinese novelist and dramatist.
The collaboration of John Shen Yen Nee and S. J. Rozan is a brilliant one. The Murder of Mr. Ma is Mr. Nee’s first foray into detective fiction, although he was a senior vice president of D. C. and publisher of Marvel Comics. Ms. Rozan is the author of 16 novels featuring Lydia Chin and Bill Smith in New York City, and she is the recipient of two Edgar Awards and two Anthony awards, among many other honors.
You can read more about them at this site.
Check out the complete Marilyn’s Mystery Reads at her website. In addition to book review posts, there are sections featuring Golden Oldies, Past Masters and Mistresses, and an About Marilyn column that features her opinions about everything to do with mystery novels.
RESURRECTION WALK by Michael Connelly: Book Review
When you are in the hands of a master, you know it immediately. From the opening pages of Resurrection Walk, the reader is drawn into the world of defense attorney Mickey Haller and retired Los Angeles Police Detective Harry Bosch, now a private investigator.
The life sentence of Jorge Ochoa has been vacated after a court finding that he was innocent of the crime of murder for which he was imprisoned fourteen years earlier. Following the publicity that followed his release due to the efforts of Haller, the lawyer finds himself inundated with letters from prisoners asking for his help.
Most of them don’t convince him of their innocence, but Haller decides to take a closer look at one with the assistance of his friend and half-brother Bosch. Lucinda Sanz has been incarcerated at Chino Prison for five years for a crime she says she didn’t commit. She was accused of killing her ex-husband, shooting him twice in the back as he left her home after a brief argument.
Her original attorney, Frank Silver, had persuaded her, given the wealth of evidence that the prosecution had, to plead nolo contendere, guilty to manslaughter, accepting the conviction as though a guilty plea had been submitted to the court but not in fact admitting her guilt. She did as Silver advised, not being sophisticated in the way the justice system worked, but she has always maintained her innocence and is now reaching out to Haller for his help.
When Haller confronts Silver, the latter is unapologetic, saying he himself had been threatened and was given no choice but to advise his client to plead the way she did. He tells Haller, “I just told her (Sanz) to take the deal. That it was the only way.”
Lucinda’s former husband had been a deputy sheriff in a notoriously corrupt sheriff’s department, so Haller and Bosch begin their search there to prove their client’s innocence. In the process they uncover not only what actually happened the night of the shooting but the reason that the federal government is trying to stop their investigation.
Many of the characters Michael Connelly has created reappear, even if briefly, in a number of his novels including this one, and thus readers get the sense of an actual community of both friends and foes of the protagonist(s). His skill at making these characters come alive, as well as his brilliant plots, are the reasons he has received nearly every award in the crime fiction genre, including the Edgar, the Anthony, the Maltese Falcon Award (Japan), the Premio Cancarella Award (Italy), and the Cartier Diamond Award.
You can read more about Michael Connelly at this website.
Check out the complete Marilyn’s Mystery Reads at her website. In addition to book review posts, there are sections featuring Golden Oldies, Past Masters and Mistresses, and an About Marilyn column that features her opinions about everything to do with mystery novels.