The following new
books have been added this month to the Popular Reading Collection located
next to the circulation desk. These books and any other titles
currently checked out can be placed on hold.
See
a staff member at the circulation desk for assistance.
Bait,
by Karen Robards
Drive
Me Crazy, by Eric Jerome Dickey
Skinny
Dip, by Carl Hiaasen
Unlucky
in Law, by Perri O'Shaughnessy
Day
of the Dead, by J. A. Jance
Garden
of Beasts, by Jeffery Deaver
Lost
City, by Clive Cussler
The
Dangerous Hour, by Marcia Muller
Hark!,
by Ed McBain
McNally's
Bluff, by Vincent Lardo
Visions
in Death, by J. D. Robb
This
Month's Great Escapes
by Bill McCleary
The Narrows, by Michael Connelly
Harry Bosch, the former LA police detective now working on his own, gets
a call from Graciela McCaleb. Her husband, Terry, had worked with Harry
a few times before his early retirement from the FBI. Terry, a heart
transplant recipient, has just died and she wants Harry to look into his
death. The official cause of death was complications from his body
rejecting his new heart but Graciela wants a second opinion. Harry
quickly learns that Terry’s heart transplant medications had been tampered
with and his investigation is now looking into a likely murder. Meanwhile,
FBI agent Rachael Walling receives word that Robert Backus, the notorious
Poet, has sent her a message at headquarters. Backus is a former FBI
agent who went bad and became a serial killer. A huge embarrassment
for the Bureau, he has been presumed dead after a shootout several years
ago in L.A. Backus was the mentor for both Terry and Rachel at
the beginning of their careers. Could Terry’s death be tied to
the Poet? Harry thinks so and he joins forces with Rachel, who
is being used as bait by the FBI to lure the Poet out of hiding. This
was a terrific suspense read and it was interesting to have characters from
several previous Bosch novels make another appearance in this worthy addition
to a great series.
Hark!, by Ed McBain
Gloria Stanford has been found shot to death in her luxurious highrise condominium
in one of the wealthy neighborhoods of Isola, the fictional metropolis modeled
on New York City. Detectives Carella and Meyer of the 87th Precinct
get the call but they are making little headway on the case—until mysterious
notes begin arriving by courier at the precinct. The anonymous messages,
some in the form of palindromes, some passages from Shakespeare, seem to
be related to the Stanford murder. Soon, to Carella’s horror, it becomes
apparent that the Deaf Man is back in town. This crafty criminal, who
may or may not be deaf, shot and wounded Carella several years ago, eluded
the detectives, and then disappeared. Now, he seems to be back to once
again vex Carella and his fellow detectives, daring them to decipher the
clues he is sending them. Is he confessing to the murder of Stanford
or letting them know he is planning another caper in their precinct?
Will the detectives figure out the clues in time to finally capture him—while
at the same time dealing with some shakeups in their personal lives?
This was another winner from McBain, who makes writing seem so effortless.
Monday Mourning, by Kathy Reichs
Tempe Brennan, the forensic anthropologist who divides her time between Montreal
and Charlotte, is spending some time in Montreal before returning to Charlotte
for the Christmas holidays. She should be out holiday shopping with
her old friend, Anne, who has come for a visit but she finds herself in a
cold, dark, rat-infested basement digging up old bones. Once all the
bones are recovered Tempe is able to determine that they are from three teenage
girls. Found with the bones are three buttons from the late 19th century
and the police would dearly like the girls to be from that era, too, rather
than a current problem to investigate. Tempe senses that the bones
are more recent and she orders a test that determines the bones are from
the late 1980s and the 1990s. The bones are now clearly a police matter
and Tempe works with detective Andrew Ryan, her sometime lover, to try to
discover who the girls were and what happened to them. Her investigation
will put her and Anne in the crosshairs to be the next victims. This
is the seventh book in the series and an okay addition but I’d like to see
a little more suspense mixed in with the always interesting forensic science.
Garden of Beasts, by Jeffrey Deaver
It’s the summer of 1936. Paul Schumann, a German-American living in
New York City, has just been arrested. Paul, a former boxer and an
expert marksman, has been a very successful hitman for the mob but his luck
has just run out. However, being so successful, and being fluent in
German, he has caught the attention of a government spy agency and he is
given a choice. He can go to prison or he can go to Berlin and assassinate
a high government official. No, not Hitler—the agency views him as
a lightweight with no staying power. The person the agency fears and
wants to eliminate is Reinhardt Ernst, a brilliant, ruthless, and dangerous
man who is in charge of Germany’s military buildup. If Paul is successful
his record will be cleared and he will earn $10,000. Truth be told,
Paul is ready to get out of the hitman game and he wants to buy into his
brother’s printing business so he agrees to the mission. He sails to
Germany with America’s Olympic team and he has scarcely arrived in Berlin
when he gets into trouble and attracts the attention of Willi Kohl, an anti-Nazi
Colombo-like Berlin police detective. While Paul is trying to locate
and assassinate Ernst, Kohl is trying to discover Paul’s identity and what
he is up to. Both are relentless and determined and both have to cope
with the added danger of the Nazi government—which could just as easily arrest
either one of them. This suspenseful cat and mouse game is played out
with the Olympics as a backdrop in a Berlin of 1936 that is a garden of beasts,
and we don’t mean the Tiergarten.
Not long ago I skimmed a depressing article that came out I think around
the time of the annual convention of the American book publishing industry.
Basically, the article stated that more books than ever before were being
published in the United States but fewer people were reading than ever before,
too. It’s sad that we have more books than ever to choose from yet
fewer and fewer people have time to read them. Which is my long and
winding road to this. If you are one of the people with only enough
time to read one or two books a year and you like suspense, this is your
book for this year. Deaver has always written outstanding suspense
but he has truly outdone himself with this wonderful novel packed with fascinating
period detail, nail-biting twists and turns, and terrific cameos by all the
top Nazi bad guys. Absolutely the best suspense novel I’ve read
this year. Turn off the tv, turn off the computer, and get ready to
be really entertained.
Revised Aug 26, 2004Back to the Library Home Page
Comments to Bill McCleary