Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Tome: The Brief Wondrous Life Of Oscar Wao

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz


My review


rating: 1 of 5 stars
Relentlessly depressing saga of overweight Dominican lad who's into sci-fi and women and achieves success in neither. Oscar starts the book a loser and ends it dead. With frequent digressions into his mothers's and sister's equally sad-sack lives, large chunks of untranslated Spanish and a whopper of a cheat coda, Junot Diaz' book is a turgid slog through Misery Land. Avoid.


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Tome: Sweet Heart

Sweetheart Sweetheart by Chelsea Cain


My review


rating: 2 of 5 stars
Proof positive that the most beguilling of serial killers need to remain on the outer fringes of a plot, not at it's centre. The beautiful and evil Gretchen Lowell's dalliance with super-messed up Detective Archie Sheridan is the main thrust here in this follow up to Cain's debut Heart Sick, and not just a tantalising side note, and is all the poorer for it. Only if you have nothing else to reach for for a quick read.


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Tome: Chasing Darkness

Chasing Darkness (Elvis Cole, #11) Chasing Darkness by Robert Crais


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
Latest Elvis Cole is a gripper after the so-so The Watchman. Pacy narrative, twisty plot and for once after a long time Elvis just gets on with the job without the encumbrance of whiny (ex) girlfriend Lucy hovering nearby to put a damper on things. Bring on the next one, Mr. Crais!


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Tome: The Messenger

The Messenger (Gabriel Allon, #6) The Messenger by Daniel Silva


My review


rating: 2 of 5 stars
Silva's 6th Gabriel Allon book continues the Master Terrorist plot riff from the previous Prince Of Fire while cribbing another from the first Allon book The Kill Artist: That of using a beautiful woman to trap a terrorist master-mind. Considerable time is taken on the set-up and "prepping the bait". And some effective tension is generated when Allen's undercover operation is blown and neccesitates a race against time to rescue a beautiful Jewish woman before her death at the hands of evil murderous Arabs. If the tone of this review sounds racist, then it's merely echoing Silva's surprisingly Arabo-phobic tone in this book. Granted when one makes a series' hero a top spy for the Israeli Secret Service, you announce where your allegiance in this conflict lies from the get go. But Silva who has so far managed a balanced tone in his previous spy thrillers with the Arab-Israel conflict providing the background, leans heavily on the Zionist angle here, which makes it the lesser entry in the series for me. And having not one, but TWO assassination attempts in the heart of the Vatican over the course of a single book is stretching incredulity.

And those expecting some much-deserved come-uppance for the Chief Baddie will be sorely disappointed in the perfunctory way he's dispatched off (not the first time Silva's had this problem, by the way).


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Tome: The Ritual

Ritual Ritual by Mo Hayder


My review


rating: 3 of 5 stars
Mo Hayder's return to the Jack Caffery series is a mixed bag. Definitely not on par with the hyper-gory Birdman or the disturbing The Treatment, it relocates Caffery to Bristol where along with a new soon-to-be recurring series character, police diver Flea Marley, he investigates the discovery of a severed human hand in the harbour.

The key problem is, the plot which is interesting though hardly outstanding hardly needs Caffery, who could have been substituted by any Detective. Marley's own baggage with regards to the drowning death of her parents and Caffery's encounter with a peripatetic vagabond known as the Walking Man, hardly adds anything to the story

The biggest cheat for fans of Birdman and The Treatment will be Hayder's jettisoning of a key sub-plot running through the first 2 Caffery books: that of the fate of Ewan Caffery, Jack's younger brother, kidnapped by paedophilic neighbour Pendericki.

Writing's still first-rate, and it's an ok enough time-pass, but hardly vintage Hayder. That honour still belongs to the masterful Tokyo.


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Graphic Tome: The Watchmen

Watchmen Watchmen by Alan Moore


My review


rating: 5 of 5 stars
If James Ellroy ever linked his dark, nihilistic prose to pictures, Watchmen may well be the birthed hybrid. A deconstruction of the Superhero mythos, a dark noirish murder mystery, a meditation on Time and Life, a Global Conspiracy shot through with Cold War paranoia (the only aspect of the book that has dated somewhat), Watchmen is quite simply put....Magnificent. Read it. Again and Again.


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Graphic Tome: Persepolis

The Complete Persepolis The Complete Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi


My review


rating: 3 of 5 stars
One woman's escape and return to a brutally patriarchal society. The Kite Runner, if set in Iran, if it's narrator's gender were switched, and told in pictures. A good read though hardly spectacular.


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Tome: A Short History Of Nearly Everything

A Short History of Nearly Everything A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
A fascinating science primer that crash-courses Astronomy, Chemistry, Geology and various other scientific branches into a riveting narrative of life and how so much of it and our existence is scarily linked to random chance. Fascinating.


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Tome: The Broken Window

The Broken Window (Lincoln Rhyme, #8) The Broken Window by Jeffery Deaver


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
Deaver injects some sorely needed menace into the In-Danger-Of Becoming-Rote Lincoln Rhyme series. The 8th Rhyme book sees the quadriplegic forensic Einstein and red-haired partner and lover Amelia Sachs go against a master manipulator of online data. Solid procedural, and as is always the case with Deaver, a crash course on the dangers of the easy availability of personal info just a mouse-click away in today's digital society.


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Tome: The Brass Verdict

The Brass Verdict (Mickey Haller, #2) (Harry Bosch, #14) The Brass Verdict by Michael Connelly


My review


rating: 3 of 5 stars
Connelly's second attempt to tag-team his series' heroes once again has his more compelling creation get the short end of the stick. Harry Bosch is reduced to a series of extended cameos in what is basically the second Mickey Haller book (after his terrific debut in The Lincoln Lawyer). Haller inherits the case load and a heck of a lot of trouble from a murdered colleague. Bosch proves more of a hindrance than help. Solid plotting from Connelly as usual, but why drag Bosch into this?


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Tome: Bad Luck And Trouble

Bad Luck and Trouble (Jack Reacher Series, #11) Bad Luck and Trouble by Lee Child


My review


rating: 3 of 5 stars
Marked improvement over Reacher No.10, Reacher 11 has our peripatetic wanderer join forces with his ex-Army cohorts to get to the bottom of the deaths of certain members of their ex-Elite team, and deal out some righteous vengeance. The action is fast, furious and ultimately satisfying.


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Tome: The Overlook

The Overlook (Harry Bosch, #13) The Overlook by Michael Connelly


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
The 13th Harry Bosch novel greatly benefits from its truncated length (it was originally serialised in a newspaper). Investigating a murder which quickly escalates into a terrorist threat, Harry re-teams with FBI agent Rachel Walling. Bosch remains compelling, Walling equal parts fascinating and irritating.


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Tome: The Hard Way

The Hard Way (Jack Reacher Series, #10) The Hard Way by Lee Child


My review


rating: 2 of 5 stars
The tenth Jack Reacher novel drags you across 300 pages before delivering upon its much promised action finale. Slow burning and ponderous, this tale of Reacher hired by a wealthy mercenary to find his kidnapped wife and daughter is not one of Child's better efforts.


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Tome: King Of Swords

The King of Swords The King of Swords by Nick Stone


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
Superb follow up to Mr.Clarinet is actually a prequel, chronicling Max Mingus' tenure as a Miami cop and his run in with arch-enemy, the shape-shifting,fork-tongued and drug-dealing boogeyman Solomon Boukman. Violent, exciting and compelling. Read it!


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Tome: Phantom Prey

Phantom Prey (Lucas Davenport, #18) Phantom Prey by John Sandford


My review


rating: 2 of 5 stars
Even more tedious follow up to Invisible Prey sees Lucas Davenport investigate the murder of a wealthy socialite's daughter who ran with the Goth crowd. Only die hard fand will be compelled to stick with this to the end.


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Tome: Mr. Clarinet

Mr. Clarinet Mr. Clarinet by Nick Stone


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
Solid entry into the over-crowded arena of thrillers. This first book by Nick Stone sees ex-con, ex-PI Max Mingus hired to find the kidnapped son of a wealthy family in Haiti. With it's depiction of a country torn apart by civil war, reeking of crime, poverty and squalor, this isn't likely to win raves from the Haitian Tourism Board. Dark and compelling. A Must Read.


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Tome: Invisible Prey

Invisible Prey (Lucas Davenport, #17) Invisible Prey by John Sandford


My review


rating: 2 of 5 stars
Ho-Hum 17th Prey novel that see Minneapolis cop Lucas Davenport investigate a series of burglaries from wealthy homes. By the numbers and a let-down after the previous blistering entry into the series, Broken Prey. Strictly for fans.


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Tome:The Gargoyle

The Gargoyle The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
Lusciously written and gorgeously romantic, Andrew Davidson's debut novel is part treatise on the recuperation of a burn victim, part medieval epic and part Arabian Night's style short story vignette but it's all about the redemptive power of love. Not to be approached with even a dollop of cynicism, The Gargoyle is a must read for die hard romantics.


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Tome:The Power Of The Dog

The Power of the Dog The Power of the Dog by Don Winslow


My review


rating: 5 of 5 stars
Epic crime saga spanning 30 years that recounts the quest of driven DEA Agent Art Keller to bring down the powerful Mexican Drug Cartel headed by Aden Bererra. Thunderously violent with copious lashings of graphic sex, Don Winslow's blood-drenched novel is James Ellroy-esque in it's examination of America's sordid psyche but stops just short of the latter's all-out nihilism. An absolute scorcher of a read.


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Sunday, June 14, 2009

Tome: Map Of The Invisible World


Sometimes, it's nice to have your expectations dashed. I started Tash Aw's second book after the Costa Award winning "Harmony Silk Factory" with the same trepidation I approach most tomes that come with the stamp of "literary work by an award winning author". The niggling anxiety that instead of a coherent plot I"m going to be bombarded instead with wordy digressions into philosophical ruminations, that instead of pace you get garrulous asides on 5 different ways to describe "sunlight slicing through tree leaves" or numerous variants on circumlocutory prose that fill up pages but don't advance the story one iota.
The anxiety in this case was heightened because Aw's debut novel, frankly speaking, bored me shitless.
Map Of The Invisible World though, surprised me with a pacy narrative, structured storyline and shockingly engaging plot that to put it bluntly, has me worried that it may not earn the plaudits reserved for books you DON'T take on an 8 hour flight.
After all it resolutely avoids an overtly depressing tone, has the audacity to bring it's myriad plot threads to a fitting conclusion, the gall to wrap up (most) of it's loose ends, and in an act of almost suicidal bravery, dares to end on a happy note. If this isn't Aw's symbolic "Fuck You" to the Booker, Orange, Whitbread or Costa Committee, I don't know what is.
Set amidst a turbulent Indonesia of the '60s, fueled by President Sukarno's purges of Western influences, communist unrest and the country's infamous Confrontation with neighbouring Malaysia, Map tells the tale of orphan Adam, who leaves his small island of Nusa Perdo for Jakarta when his Dutch step-father, painter Karl de Willigen, is taken away by the Army for possible forced repatriation back to Holland. Guided only by a photo taken of his step-father and an American lady, Adam goes in search of her to help locate Karl.
The lady in question, Margaret Bates, Indonesian born with an uncanny knack of blending in and understanding the local mindset, has a past with Karl, and takes an immediate liking and attachment to Adam. So, unfortunately does ultra-radical Din, Margaret's teaching assistant who sees in Adam's naivete and innocence, the perfect tool to execute a dangerous plot to topple the Government.....
And all the while, in Kuala Lumpur, Johan, an Indonesian boy adopted into a wealthy and connected Malaysian family, wrestles with guilt at what he perceives to be an abandonment of his younger sibling many years ago in an orphanage.....
Aw's resort to that hoariest of cliches by now, the Chronological Juggling of sub-plots, thankfully doesn't detract from the pleasure of reading this breezily executed tale of love, loss and guilt.
And Aw's occassional concession to the "I read for the writing" crowd via descriptions of a windowpane shattering over a boy's head as " it had exploded into a million tiny shards that refracted the sunlight-balls of brilliant colour that exploded into existence for a second, like those magical bursts of fireworks that light up for a moment before suddenly disappearing, leaving you staring at nothingness" and the closing of shutters as "light framing the window in thin strips" are brief enough to not trigger my usual gag reflex at such prose-wanking shit.
Map's biggest casualty are it's characters who function as mere plot-drivers and rarely break out of their pre-fab specs: The feisty White Woman, the gutsy and beautiful Indonesian Lass, the shifty CIA spook, the good if weak Gay Journalist, the spineless orphan and evil radical. Even Sukarno, who briefly cameos, comes across as a decadent Autocrat who despises all things Western while seemingly unable to live without it's trappings, which however, I concede, could very well be a spot-on observation of this fascinating Despot.
If anything, Map's most interesting character, guilt-wracked Johan has the misfortune to occupy the book's most superfluous and throw away chapters. The entire KL bound narrative could have been safely excised without interrupting the story and could have actually resulted in an even more taut and disciplined narrative.
But these minor gripes aside, Map is an engaging read you could breeze through in a hazy weekend better spent indoors.
Hell, I'd take it on an 8 hour flight.