07 March 2014

Elvis and the Funny Money: "Indigo Slam" by Robert Crais

Indigo Slam - Robert Crais

When your office is invaded by three kids in the middle of the day, you begin to suspect you have a problem. The oldest of the three, 15-year-old Teri Haines, contracted with Elvis Cole to find her father Clark. Daddy had disappeared eleven days earlier, and his children hadn't heard a peep out of him. Elvis Cole, World's Greatest Softy, quote a $200 price for the search. Teri peeled a couple of Benjamins off the fat roll in her purse and handed 'em over.

02 March 2014

Graeme Simsion's "The Rosie Project" -- When Opposites Attract

The Rosie Project - Graeme Simsion

There's a moment in the first chapter of The Rosie Project that pretty much tells you what it's all about. Don TIllman, professor of genetics, gets roped into giving a presentation on the autism spectrum to a support group. Forgetting the first rule of presentations, "know your audience," he prepares a highly technical discussion. The parents become restless at terminology that's over their heads, but the Asperger's kids in the room home in on him like one of their own… which he apparently is.

Don Tillman is handsome, fit, highly focused, intelligent, and has a good job; at age 39 a prime candidate for marriage. He's also obsessive and startlingly inept in any remotely social situation, which pretty much offsets those good attributes. When he decides he needs a wife, Don approaches the problem the same way he approaches any undertaking: he creates The Wife Project, complete with a questionnaire to screen out unlikely candidates.

27 February 2014

A New Leaphorn-Chee Novel from a New Hillerman: "Spider Woman's Daughter"


Spider Woman's Daughter - Anne Hillerman

The death, in 2008, of New Mexico author Tony Hillerman left fans of his Leaphorn-Chee mystery series bereft. The eighteen Hillerman novels featuring Navajo tribal policemen patrolling the vast, dusty emptiness of the Four Corners region sold millions of copies over more than thirty years, terminating with the publication of The Shape Shifter in 2006. Hillerman passed from pulmonary disease two years later.

After five years, Hillerman's daughter Anne picked up his pen - and his characters - with the release of Spider Woman's Daughter.  Fans will be glad to know the younger Hillerman continues the setting and the sensibilities of her father's story-telling, a gentle treatment of the native American elements. As one might expect, however, Tony's daughter chooses to emphasize a different character; Bernadette Manuelito.

For Navajo Tribal Policewoman Bernie Manuelito, there will always be "what-ifs": what if she'd been a few seconds earlier? What if she'd been a few steps faster? But she will never know: all she knows is that she saw a man she respected shot down in cold blood: the Legendary Lieutenant, Joe Leaphorn. All she saw was the shooter's hoodie and the escape vehicle

Although placed on leave while her husband, Jim Chee, leads the investigation, Bernie can't help picking at the case like a kid with a scab. While visiting Leaphorn in the hospital, she follows up on a consulting case the retired cop had undertaken for a museum in Santa Fe. Meanwhile, Chee and his team are tracking down leads related to the car used by the shooter; all dead ends.

These Navajo cops are a canny bunch, though, prone to contemplation and insights beyond those of city cops. They will get their man: count on it…

26 February 2014

Charlie Hood Reaches a Conclusion... Or Does He? T. Jefferson Parker's "The Famous and the Dead"


Charlie Hood is finally back on the border after mounting that harrowing rescue mission in the jungles of the Yucatan Peninsula, the LASD deputy still assigned to the ATF's Buenavista, California, office. The hostage he snatched free, Erin McKenna, is hugely pregnant and living at his adobe near the border. Erin's husband, super-dirty deputy Bradley Jones, makes the occasional visit Erin is righteously pissed at him after being kidnapped by a rival cartel. It's a complicated situation…

That's the home front: at work, Charlie's infiltrating a trio from Missouri (two of them dirty cops) who've arrived in town with a truck full of weapons they've diverted from a seize-and-destroy program; tipped off by the gutsy Mary Kate. On the opposite side of town, a mysterious "Dr. Strenn" has a sit-down with bipolar drifter Lonnie Rovanna, who's currently off his meds, apparently to return his confiscated firearms - or at the least to give Lonnie one of the infamous Love 32s. Lonnie, it's a safe bet, is about to make trouble for Hood, not to mention a passel of innocent bystanders; trouble that will reach not only into local hospitals but all the way to Congress. Mike Finnegan is in town, but this time Charlie may have an Angel on his side: I kid you not…

10 January 2014

Scarpetta Develops Clairvoyance for Patricia Cornwell's "Dust"

1½ Stars

Over almost a quarter of a century, Kay Scarpetta (MD, Attorney, would-be chef at a posh Ristorante Italiano) has seen her career steam merrily ahead, crash and burn, turn into a gun for hire, and - finally - culminate in her appointment as chief of a high-tech crime lab (associated with what? one wonders) in the middle of metropolitan Boston. Nice work if you can get it.

In the same twenty-four years, Scarpetta's relationship with Benton Wesley (or is it Wesley Benton? I always forget) has progressed from "the other woman" to lover to quasi-widow to a print version of Pam Ewing waking up to find Bobby in the shower to who's-his-face's happily-married spouse. She's dragged her anti-authoritarian lesbian paranoid genius niece, Lucy, and the brutish cop Marino every step of the way.

To all that, I say, "Give it a rest, Kay!"