Are they changing into their Superman clobber?
No, they are swapping books!
Villagers from Westbury-sub-Mendip in Somerset can use the library around the clock, selecting books, DVDs and CDs.
Users simply stock it with a book they have read, swapping it for one they have not.
And here is what it looks like inside.
The Westbury-sub-Mendip library is open 24 hours a day and has a light inside for midnight browsing. The selection of 100 books, CDs, and DVDs comes entirely from the private libraries of the townsfolk. They bring in books they’ve read and swap them out for books they haven’t read. Periodically, checks are made to see what products are moving and what aren’t. The books everyone’s read get shipped off to the charity shop and replaced with new books. It’s kind of like the library you have in your town, except more efficient and significantly more compact.
Why MYSTERIES? Because that is the genre I read.
Why PARADISE? Because that is where I live.
Among other things, this blog, the result of a 2008 New Year's resolution,
will act as a record of books that I've read, and random thoughts.
Pages
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31 August 2010
30 August 2010
Australian Sisters in Crime 2010 Davitt Awards
Australia's 2010 Davitt Awards were announced at a dinner at the Melbourne Writer's Festival on August 30.
This year is the 10th anniversary of the awards.
The winners were
Best Adult Crime Novel: Sharp Shooter, Marianne Delacourt
Children's & YA Adult Fiction - Liar, Justine Larbalestier
True Crime - Lady Killer, Candace Sutton and Ellen Connolly
Readers Choice - FORBIDDEN FRUIT, Kerry Greenwood
The longlists were
This year is the 10th anniversary of the awards.
The winners were
Best Adult Crime Novel: Sharp Shooter, Marianne Delacourt
Children's & YA Adult Fiction - Liar, Justine Larbalestier
True Crime - Lady Killer, Candace Sutton and Ellen Connolly
Readers Choice - FORBIDDEN FRUIT, Kerry Greenwood
The longlists were
Adult Fiction
- Sharp Shooter by Marianne Delacourt
- Forbidden Fruit by Kerry Greenwood
- Red Dust by Fleur McDonald
- Steel River by Antoinette Eklund
- Dark Country by Bronwyn Parry
- The Labyrinth of Drowning by Alex Palmer
- Too Many Murders by Colleen McCulloch
- A Beautiful Death by Fiona McIntosh
- Siren by Tara Moss
- Gene Thieves by Maria Quinn
- Gladiatrix by Rhonda Roberts
- Move to Strike by Sydney Bauer
- Pearl in A Cage by Joy Dettman
- Bloodborn by Kathryn Fox
- The Killing Hands by PD Martin
- The Devil’s Staircase by Helen Fitzgerald
- Riding High by Emma Boling
- Red Queen by H.M. Brown
- Ghost Child: The Past Is Always Close Behind by Caroline Overington
- Black Ice by Leah Giarrantano
- Pestle & Mortar by Carol Gibson
Children's and Young Adult Fiction
- The Reformed Vampire Support Group by Catherine Jinks
- Genius Wars by Catherine Jinks
- Liar by Justine Larbalestier
- Hedgeburners: An A~Z Mystery by Goldie Alexander
- Pop Princess by Isabelle Merlin
- Cupid’s Arrow by Isabelle Merlin
- Conspiracy 365 - January by Gabrielle Lord
- The Walk Right in Detective Agency – Bad News for Milk Bay by Moya Simons
- The Walk Right in Detective Agency – On the Case The Walk by Moya Simons
- The Walk Right in Detective Agency – Mischief Afoot by Moya Simons
True Crime
- Lady Killer: How Conman Bruce Burrell Kidnapped and Killed Rich Women for Their Money by Candace Sutton and Ellen Connolly
- A Greater Guilt: Constance Emilie Kent and the Road Murder by Noelene Kyle
- Crime Time: Australians Behaving Badly by Sue Bursztynski
- Salvation – The True Story of Rod Braybon’s Fight for Justice by Vikki Petraitis
- Hotel Kerobokan: The Shocking Inside Story of Bali's Most Notorious Jail by Kathryn Bonella
- Lambs to the Slaughter by Debi Marshall
- Blood Brother: Justice at Last by Robin Bowles
- Outside the Law 3 by Lindy Cameron (ed)
- Forensic Investigator: True Stories from the Life of a Country Crime Scene Cop by Esther Mckay
There are some wonderful book blogs out there
On Saturday BBAW announced it's shortlists for the 2010, and those who registered some time ago get to vote.
I was delighted to find MYSTERIES in PARADISE shortlisted.
I've been scooting around cyberspace looking at contenders in all the categories, and I tell you, there are some wonderful blogs out there.
Even though you don't have a vote, do go and have a look.
The 2010 BBAW Awards Shortlists - Niche Categories
Best Thriller/Mystery/Suspense/Crime Book Blog
Jen’s Book Thoughts
The Drowning Machine
Mysteries in Paradise
Jen’s Book Thoughts
The Drowning Machine
Mysteries in Paradise
Best Eclectic Book Blog
eclectic/eccentric
write meg!
STACKED
Iris on Books
Truth, Beauty, Freedom, and Books
Devourer of Books
Find Your Next Book Here
Best KidLit Book Blog
Playing by the book
Teach Mentor Texts
There’s A Book
Best Young Adult Book Blog
Steph Su Reads
Forever Young Adult
Presenting Lenore
Angieville
Pure Imagination
Best Nonfiction Book Blog
Sophisticated Dorkiness
SMS Book Reviews
Mental Foodie: A Book and Food Lover
Best Literary Fiction Book Blog
Shelf Love
The New Dork Review of Books
Caribousmom
Best Romance Book Blog
Gossamer Obsessions
Smexy Books
Fiction Vixen Book Reviews
Best Cultural Review Book Blog
S. Krishna’s Books
Summer Edward’s Caribbean Children’s Literature
Hawaii Book Blog
Best Spiritual, Inspiration, or Religious Book Blog
Edgy Inspirational Romance
Books, Movies and Chinese Food
Quotidian Grace
Best Historical Fiction Book Blog
Historical Tapestry
Medieval Bookworm
Hist-Fic Chick
Best Speculative Fiction Book Blog
The Book Smugglers
All Things Urban Fantasy
Wicked Lil Pixie
Best Audiobook Blog
You’ve GOTTA Read This!
Best GLBT Blog
Dreaming in Books
The Zen Leaf
The Lesbrary
Best Publishing/Industry Blog
The World of Peachtree Publishers
The Olive Reader
Book Club Girl
Tribute Books Blog
Best Bookstore Blog
Between the Covers
Best Poetry Blog
Savvy Verse & Wit
Necromancy Never Pays
eclectic/eccentric
write meg!
STACKED
Iris on Books
Truth, Beauty, Freedom, and Books
Devourer of Books
Find Your Next Book Here
Best KidLit Book Blog
Playing by the book
Teach Mentor Texts
There’s A Book
Best Young Adult Book Blog
Steph Su Reads
Forever Young Adult
Presenting Lenore
Angieville
Pure Imagination
Best Nonfiction Book Blog
Sophisticated Dorkiness
SMS Book Reviews
Mental Foodie: A Book and Food Lover
Best Literary Fiction Book Blog
Shelf Love
The New Dork Review of Books
Caribousmom
Best Romance Book Blog
Gossamer Obsessions
Smexy Books
Fiction Vixen Book Reviews
Best Cultural Review Book Blog
S. Krishna’s Books
Summer Edward’s Caribbean Children’s Literature
Hawaii Book Blog
Best Spiritual, Inspiration, or Religious Book Blog
Edgy Inspirational Romance
Books, Movies and Chinese Food
Quotidian Grace
Best Historical Fiction Book Blog
Historical Tapestry
Medieval Bookworm
Hist-Fic Chick
Best Speculative Fiction Book Blog
The Book Smugglers
All Things Urban Fantasy
Wicked Lil Pixie
Best Audiobook Blog
You’ve GOTTA Read This!
Best GLBT Blog
Dreaming in Books
The Zen Leaf
The Lesbrary
Best Publishing/Industry Blog
The World of Peachtree Publishers
The Olive Reader
Book Club Girl
Tribute Books Blog
Best Bookstore Blog
Between the Covers
Best Poetry Blog
Savvy Verse & Wit
Necromancy Never Pays
29 August 2010
Review: GUNSHOT ROAD, Adrian Hyland
This edition published by Soho Press 2010
ISBN 978-1-56947-636-9
372 pages
When Tom McGillivray, superintendent of the Bluebush Police and an old friend of the Tempest clan, came up with some paid employment for Emily as an Aboriginal Community Police Officer, she was happy to accept. The deal was that she would spend a month in Bluebush in training and then she'd be based at Moonlight Downs as its ACPO.
Emily's just come back from a short training course in Darwin in time to catch the tail end of the Bluebush aboriginal community's Young Man's Time. On her way from the women's camp to work she stops and washes off her body art under a garden hose, and dons her oversize police uniform. That in itself seems symbolic, as she attempts to bridge two cultures.
She arrives at work to find that there's been a murder: One oldie has killed another out at Green Swamp Well, and McGillivray is in hospital, his place taken by a new senior sergeant Bruce Cockburn. On their way to the crime scene Emily senses something out of place and discovers a Range Rover that's gone off the road, its occupants spilled into the gully and in need of help.
When they eventually make it to Green Swamp Well, Emily finds that she knows both the victim, and the apparent perpetrator, two eccentrics who had a history of argumentation, but were underneath it all the best of mates.
Emily was never going to get on with Senior Sergeant Cockburn: where he tries to simplify things, she sees complications. Emily's aboriginal background gives her a heightened sense of disturbed balance. He reminds her that she is simply meant to be a liaison officer not an investigator, but Emily really can't help herself.
There is such a lot to like about this book: starting with Emily herself and her unexpected sense of humour, and then there is such a range of interesting and intriguing characters, and description that takes you right into the heart of the outback. I like the way Hyland layers our introduction to people and events. One or two characters from his earlier novel DIAMOND DOVE make an appearance. Emily herself seems more certain of who she is, and she has a status with the locals that I didn't pick up in the earlier novel.
The author says, in the blog post he wrote for Readings:
Takes a little time for the country to get to know you.
.....
It is this world-view, and its ongoing clash with the threshing machine of Western materialism, that lies at the heart of Gunshot Road. I find this conflict utterly compelling, and of great significance;
I have no hesitation in recommending that you find a copy of GUNSHOT ROAD.
My rating: 5.0
Other reviews to check
Debut author Adrian Hyland topped the oz_mystery_readers 2007 best reads list with DIAMOND DOVE with 5 people recommending it. The group discussed it in September when Adrian was the group's guest on Quiz an Author, an event when an author is invited to be an online guest for a week, and questions and answers fly thick and fast. Fresh from being named the Ned Kelly best first fiction novel of the year winner at Melbourne Writers Festival, Adrian was frank and eloquent in his replies and has remained an active member of the list.
DIAMOND DOVE was given a rating of 5 by the members, a rare achievement in itself. The only other book to be given a rating of 5 was RAVEN BLACK by Ann Cleeves.
DIAMOND DOVE has been published in the US as MOONLIGHT DOWNS.
My review of DIAMOND DOVE:
Emily Tempest returns to Moonlight Downs, a scatter of corrugated iron hovels nine hours from Alice Springs out in the spinifex desert, 14 years after leaving to go to secondary school in Adelaide. The daughter of a local miner, Motor Jack, she is welcomed home by Lincoln Flinders, the head of the community. The Moonlight mob have only recently returned to their land themselves. The Moonlight mob are Emily's community by adoption - her mother was a Wantiya woman from the Gulf Country. Unmistakably aboriginal in appearance, Emily has not yet decided which world she belongs to - aboriginal or white. She meets up with Lincoln's daughter Hazel, her best friend in the past. The morning after Emily arrives, Lincoln is found dead, unmistakably murdered, and Emily finds it impossible to rest until she knows who killed him. Adrian Hyland's debut novel. Very polished writing and a feel of authenticity about the setting and customs. I came away feeling I had learnt quite a lot.
ISBN 978-1-56947-636-9
372 pages
When Tom McGillivray, superintendent of the Bluebush Police and an old friend of the Tempest clan, came up with some paid employment for Emily as an Aboriginal Community Police Officer, she was happy to accept. The deal was that she would spend a month in Bluebush in training and then she'd be based at Moonlight Downs as its ACPO.
Emily's just come back from a short training course in Darwin in time to catch the tail end of the Bluebush aboriginal community's Young Man's Time. On her way from the women's camp to work she stops and washes off her body art under a garden hose, and dons her oversize police uniform. That in itself seems symbolic, as she attempts to bridge two cultures.
She arrives at work to find that there's been a murder: One oldie has killed another out at Green Swamp Well, and McGillivray is in hospital, his place taken by a new senior sergeant Bruce Cockburn. On their way to the crime scene Emily senses something out of place and discovers a Range Rover that's gone off the road, its occupants spilled into the gully and in need of help.
When they eventually make it to Green Swamp Well, Emily finds that she knows both the victim, and the apparent perpetrator, two eccentrics who had a history of argumentation, but were underneath it all the best of mates.
Emily was never going to get on with Senior Sergeant Cockburn: where he tries to simplify things, she sees complications. Emily's aboriginal background gives her a heightened sense of disturbed balance. He reminds her that she is simply meant to be a liaison officer not an investigator, but Emily really can't help herself.
There is such a lot to like about this book: starting with Emily herself and her unexpected sense of humour, and then there is such a range of interesting and intriguing characters, and description that takes you right into the heart of the outback. I like the way Hyland layers our introduction to people and events. One or two characters from his earlier novel DIAMOND DOVE make an appearance. Emily herself seems more certain of who she is, and she has a status with the locals that I didn't pick up in the earlier novel.
The author says, in the blog post he wrote for Readings:
Takes a little time for the country to get to know you.
.....
It is this world-view, and its ongoing clash with the threshing machine of Western materialism, that lies at the heart of Gunshot Road. I find this conflict utterly compelling, and of great significance;
I have no hesitation in recommending that you find a copy of GUNSHOT ROAD.
My rating: 5.0
Other reviews to check
Debut author Adrian Hyland topped the oz_mystery_readers 2007 best reads list with DIAMOND DOVE with 5 people recommending it. The group discussed it in September when Adrian was the group's guest on Quiz an Author, an event when an author is invited to be an online guest for a week, and questions and answers fly thick and fast. Fresh from being named the Ned Kelly best first fiction novel of the year winner at Melbourne Writers Festival, Adrian was frank and eloquent in his replies and has remained an active member of the list.
DIAMOND DOVE was given a rating of 5 by the members, a rare achievement in itself. The only other book to be given a rating of 5 was RAVEN BLACK by Ann Cleeves.
DIAMOND DOVE has been published in the US as MOONLIGHT DOWNS.
My review of DIAMOND DOVE:
Emily Tempest returns to Moonlight Downs, a scatter of corrugated iron hovels nine hours from Alice Springs out in the spinifex desert, 14 years after leaving to go to secondary school in Adelaide. The daughter of a local miner, Motor Jack, she is welcomed home by Lincoln Flinders, the head of the community. The Moonlight mob have only recently returned to their land themselves. The Moonlight mob are Emily's community by adoption - her mother was a Wantiya woman from the Gulf Country. Unmistakably aboriginal in appearance, Emily has not yet decided which world she belongs to - aboriginal or white. She meets up with Lincoln's daughter Hazel, her best friend in the past. The morning after Emily arrives, Lincoln is found dead, unmistakably murdered, and Emily finds it impossible to rest until she knows who killed him. Adrian Hyland's debut novel. Very polished writing and a feel of authenticity about the setting and customs. I came away feeling I had learnt quite a lot.
Sunday Salon: 29 Aug 2010: Get Thee Reading
My guess is that my fellow Sunday Saloners need no encouragement to read. We've probably had our noses in our books all our lives.
The beauty of a project like the Sunday Salon is that we get to talk about what we're reading and get ideas from others in the Salon.
Perhaps our cyber reading room looks a bit like this magnificent one in the New York library:
Events of note
- Get Reading Australia - a national campaign that runs until the end of September
- Agatha Christie Blog Tour - celebrates Agatha Christie's 120th birthday, with tour stops throughout September. There are still some stops available if you are interested.
- Book Blogger Appreciation Week - September 13-17
MYSTERIES in PARADISE has been shortlisted for
Best Thriller/Mystery/Suspense/Crime Book Blog
Jen’s Book Thoughts
The Drowning Machine
Mysteries in Paradise - Melbourne Writer's Week will culminate (for crime fiction enthusiasts anyway) with the announcement of the Ned Kelly Awards on Friday Sept 3. Ned Kelly Awards 2010 Shortlist
- The Christchurch Writers' Festival will announce the first ever Ngaio Marsh Awards for Crime Fiction on Friday 10 September. I have one of the shortlisted books to read still.
Take part in this poll whether you are reading e-books or not, and do leave a comment on the post linked to the poll.
Headlines of interest
- Mystery of Japan's Living Dead
- Swedish stamps honor crime fiction authors
- Get Reading Australia
- Kindle3 shipping ahead of schedule
- PD Martin releases free e-book
- Shamus Nominations 2010
- Larsson's Just The Tip Of The Nordic Literary Iceberg
- Pieces of carpet that could solve a murder mystery
- Finalists for remaining CWA Daggers - Gold, Steel and John Creasey (New Blood)
- 49th Book Review Blog Carnival available
- Weekly Geeks 2010-30: – Who Do You Connect With?
- The Polls are in - well ours are anyway!
- Review, THE WOODCUTTER, Reginald Hill
- Forgotten Book: BACKHAND, Liza Cody
- Thalia: Book sculpture
- ACRC: Agatha Christie Blog Carnival 2010 #8 now posted
- Weekly Geeks 2010-29: Reading from the Decades
- now - GUNSHOT ROAD, Adrian Hyland
- and then - CUT & RUN, Alix Bosco
- after that - FEAR THE WORST, Linwood Barclay
- next (on Kindle) - BLACKLANDS, Belinda Bauer
- now on Audio - ROYAL FLUSH, Lynda la Plante
- next Audio - THE SKULL BENEATH THE SKIN, PD James
28 August 2010
Weekly Geeks 2010-30: – Who Do You Connect With?
This week's Weekly Geeks task asks participants to think about who we read with. EH's post reminded me of the Wordle tool which is what I used to create the word map below.
Have you ever used it? All I did was put in the URL of my blog and Wordle did the rest.
I think what is important to me in my reading and in this blog comes through pretty well.
I read and share my thoughts about what I've read with a range of friends both in face2face and cyber worlds. Just look around my blog and you'll see some of the challenges I participate in, the discussion lists, as well as the Crime and mystery fiction on FriendFeed. It sure beats reading in isolation!
Have you ever used it? All I did was put in the URL of my blog and Wordle did the rest.
I think what is important to me in my reading and in this blog comes through pretty well.
I read and share my thoughts about what I've read with a range of friends both in face2face and cyber worlds. Just look around my blog and you'll see some of the challenges I participate in, the discussion lists, as well as the Crime and mystery fiction on FriendFeed. It sure beats reading in isolation!
The Polls are in - well ours are anyway!
In a week when politics in Australia has come to a standstill in the aftermath of last Saturday's cliffhanger election that appears to have resulted in a hung parliament, the polls on MYSTERIES in PARADISE has showed some conclusive results.
Many of the readers of this blog participate in reading challenges but most say that they don't really determine ALL the books that they read. The comments on the poll are available here.
Listed in the reasons for participating in challenges:
The poll about the size of Mount TBR shows that many of us have a problem, far too many books on hand.
My guess is that the problem arises from an acute awareness of the titles available in the genres we read, the fact that we are alert for book bargains, that family give us books for birthdays, that we belong to lists and discussion rooms that tell us about new titles, and the fact that most of us can't bear the thought of being book-less. Check the comments on this poll here.
Many of the readers of this blog participate in reading challenges but most say that they don't really determine ALL the books that they read. The comments on the poll are available here.
Listed in the reasons for participating in challenges:
- to push myself to read books from regions I don't usually read about.
- challenges are good for me, expanding my reading choices.
- What I've learned is that I enjoy the ones that actually challenge me to read books I otherwise wouldn't have read but I only want 1 or 2 of them on the go at any one time.
- I have enjoyed the personal challenges like reading all the shortlist for the International Dagger award
- Challenges encourage me to read books I already own
- I tend to choose challenges that fit what I am likely to read rather than challenges that make me add yet more books to my reading list.
- Certain challenges, like the 2010 Global Challenge and the Japanese Literature Challenge have definitely expanded my reading.
The poll about the size of Mount TBR shows that many of us have a problem, far too many books on hand.
My guess is that the problem arises from an acute awareness of the titles available in the genres we read, the fact that we are alert for book bargains, that family give us books for birthdays, that we belong to lists and discussion rooms that tell us about new titles, and the fact that most of us can't bear the thought of being book-less. Check the comments on this poll here.
Are you reading e-books?
Earlier this year I ran this poll - see the post behind the poll
I'm interested to see whether the balance has changed (although I have slightly changed the focus of the poll too).
Amazon has been saying for example that sales of e-books have been outdoing hardbacks - not surprising in my opinion because I so rarely buy hardbacks, but I'm wondering whether readers of my blog have ventured more definitely into the e-book world.
So you might be reading e-books on any one of a number of devices these days: a Kindle, a Kobo, an iPad, on your computer etc.
Take the poll in the right hand column and then leave a comment about your e-book reading experience.
Has it reduced the number of paper books you are buying, or your library borrowings?
How are you finding availability of books? Are you reading books you might not have read before you acquired your reader?
If you answered No - how close are you to acquiring an e-reader? Do you have questions I can help you with?
I'm interested to see whether the balance has changed (although I have slightly changed the focus of the poll too).
Amazon has been saying for example that sales of e-books have been outdoing hardbacks - not surprising in my opinion because I so rarely buy hardbacks, but I'm wondering whether readers of my blog have ventured more definitely into the e-book world.
So you might be reading e-books on any one of a number of devices these days: a Kindle, a Kobo, an iPad, on your computer etc.
Take the poll in the right hand column and then leave a comment about your e-book reading experience.
Has it reduced the number of paper books you are buying, or your library borrowings?
How are you finding availability of books? Are you reading books you might not have read before you acquired your reader?
If you answered No - how close are you to acquiring an e-reader? Do you have questions I can help you with?
27 August 2010
Get Reading Australia
Get Reading is the Australian book industry's annual promotion of books developed through the Australia Council for the Arts. It runs from August 25 to September 30.
For each book you purchase from the Get Reading "50 Books You Can't Put Down" selection in that period, you are eligible to choose a FREE copy of either Tickled Onions or 10 Short Stories You Must Read in 2010.
The short stories in 10 Short Stories You Must Read are written by Australian authors
Maggie Alderson, Georgia Blain, Mark Dapin, Nick Earls, Alex Miller, Judy Nunn, Malla Nunn, Craig Silvey, Rachael Treasure and Christos Tsiolkas.
Tap into the online ebook detailing the 50 books by clicking on image to the right.
Crime Fiction offerings are a bit lean but the books on offer are:
Postage costs $6.50 per order for regular mail for anyone within Australian delivery address. Order as many books as you want and it is only $6.50 per order.
Sorry, if you are overseas, it is still costly. Details here.
For each book you purchase from the Get Reading "50 Books You Can't Put Down" selection in that period, you are eligible to choose a FREE copy of either Tickled Onions or 10 Short Stories You Must Read in 2010.
The short stories in 10 Short Stories You Must Read are written by Australian authors
Maggie Alderson, Georgia Blain, Mark Dapin, Nick Earls, Alex Miller, Judy Nunn, Malla Nunn, Craig Silvey, Rachael Treasure and Christos Tsiolkas.
Tap into the online ebook detailing the 50 books by clicking on image to the right.
Crime Fiction offerings are a bit lean but the books on offer are:
- Stieg Larsson's THE GIRL WHO KICKED THE HORNET'S NEST
- BLEED FOR ME by Michael Robotham
- TRUTH by Peter Temple
- KING OF THE CROSS, Mark Dapin
Postage costs $6.50 per order for regular mail for anyone within Australian delivery address. Order as many books as you want and it is only $6.50 per order.
Sorry, if you are overseas, it is still costly. Details here.
26 August 2010
Review, THE WOODCUTTER, Reginald Hill
published Harper Collins, 2010
ISBN 978-0-00-734387-4
519 pages
borrowed from my local library
Publisher's blurb
Wolf Hadda's life has been a fairytale. From humble origins as a woodcutter's son, he has risen to become a hugely successful entrepreneur, happily married to the girl of his dreams. But a knock on the door one morning ends it all.
Universally reviled, thrown into prison while protesting his innocence, abandoned by friends and family, Wolf retreats into silence. Seven years later prison psychiatrist Alva Ozigbo makes the breakthrough. Wolf begins to talk and under her guidance gets parole, returning to his rundown family home in rural Cumbria. But there's a mysterious period in Wolf's youth when he disappeared from home and was known to his employers as the Woodcutter. And now the Woodcutter is back, looking for the truth - and with the truth, revenge. Can Alva intervene before his pursuit of vengeance takes him to a place from which he can never come back . . .?
Probably, had I written the blurb which is printed on the dustjacket of the hard cover version, I wouldn't have told you as much of the story as it reveals. But never mind, it hardly tells the reader all, just enough to intrigue.
The structure and timeframe of THE WOODCUTTER is interesting. The real action begins in 2008, although there are a couple of vignettes at the beginning set in 1963 and 1989. (If you have read the book, you might like to tell me who the boy in the 1963 story was). By the time Alva meets Wolf in prison the date is January 2015, and the subsequent story takes place over the next two years. I couldn't help wondering why Reginald Hill structured it like that.
This novel is a tale of love and deception, of manipulation, and contains some very strange characters. Wolf himself is not particularly easy to get to know, partly because you see him at first through Alva's eyes. THE WOODCUTTER reminded me a little of some of Reginald Hill's spy stories. (Once you've read it you may understand what I mean by that.) It is a complex novel, not a particularly easy read, and some readers will be dissatisfied with both its length and its complexity in both language and plot. It's about as far from a Daziel & Pascoe as you can get.
For me, I continue to like the way Hill forces the reader to think, the way he makes the reader (well, me, anyway) go back and check details you read a little too quickly, and only half remember. It is one of those novels that would bear re-reading, to see if there were details that you missed first time around, and to appreciate the way the strands of the story are skeined together. Reginald Hill is one of those writers who raises crime fiction into a literary plane.
My rating: 4.8
Other reviews to check:
ISBN 978-0-00-734387-4
519 pages
borrowed from my local library
Publisher's blurb
Wolf Hadda's life has been a fairytale. From humble origins as a woodcutter's son, he has risen to become a hugely successful entrepreneur, happily married to the girl of his dreams. But a knock on the door one morning ends it all.
Universally reviled, thrown into prison while protesting his innocence, abandoned by friends and family, Wolf retreats into silence. Seven years later prison psychiatrist Alva Ozigbo makes the breakthrough. Wolf begins to talk and under her guidance gets parole, returning to his rundown family home in rural Cumbria. But there's a mysterious period in Wolf's youth when he disappeared from home and was known to his employers as the Woodcutter. And now the Woodcutter is back, looking for the truth - and with the truth, revenge. Can Alva intervene before his pursuit of vengeance takes him to a place from which he can never come back . . .?
Probably, had I written the blurb which is printed on the dustjacket of the hard cover version, I wouldn't have told you as much of the story as it reveals. But never mind, it hardly tells the reader all, just enough to intrigue.
The structure and timeframe of THE WOODCUTTER is interesting. The real action begins in 2008, although there are a couple of vignettes at the beginning set in 1963 and 1989. (If you have read the book, you might like to tell me who the boy in the 1963 story was). By the time Alva meets Wolf in prison the date is January 2015, and the subsequent story takes place over the next two years. I couldn't help wondering why Reginald Hill structured it like that.
This novel is a tale of love and deception, of manipulation, and contains some very strange characters. Wolf himself is not particularly easy to get to know, partly because you see him at first through Alva's eyes. THE WOODCUTTER reminded me a little of some of Reginald Hill's spy stories. (Once you've read it you may understand what I mean by that.) It is a complex novel, not a particularly easy read, and some readers will be dissatisfied with both its length and its complexity in both language and plot. It's about as far from a Daziel & Pascoe as you can get.
For me, I continue to like the way Hill forces the reader to think, the way he makes the reader (well, me, anyway) go back and check details you read a little too quickly, and only half remember. It is one of those novels that would bear re-reading, to see if there were details that you missed first time around, and to appreciate the way the strands of the story are skeined together. Reginald Hill is one of those writers who raises crime fiction into a literary plane.
My rating: 4.8
Other reviews to check:
- Martin Edwards recommends it
- Elaine Simpson-Long says "Brilliant"
Forgotten Book: BACKHAND, Liza Cody
This week's contribution to Pattinase's Friday's Forgotten Books comes from mid 1994 in my records.
This was #6 in Cody's Anna Lee mysteries.
Anna Lee
1. Dupe (1980)
2. Bad Company (1982)
3. Stalker (1984)
4. Head Case (1985)
5. Under Contract (1986)
6. Backhand (1991)
She followed them with a new character
Eva Wylie
1. Bucket Nut (1992)
2. Monkey Wrench (1994)
3. Musclebound (1997)
and then a couple of stand alone novels
Rift (1988)
Gimme More (2000)
BACKHAND was an Edgar Awards Best Novel nominee (1993)
Blurb
When her boss at Brierly Security assigns her a case--involving pilfered designer sweaters--that will take her to the States, Lee soon finds herself embroiled in a depressing and dangerous family drama. Is the designer's missing teenage daughter involved with a pedophile, or has she just run off to marry a much older man? What connection does this man have to the stolen merchandise and to the designer's husband? The Florida Keys and a handsome U.S. operative give Anna her first blissful taste of the sunny, fog-free New World even as she handily attempts to answer these questions and dodge the bullets that seem to her so quintessentially American.
Liza Cody won
Wikipedia article.
This was #6 in Cody's Anna Lee mysteries.
Anna Lee
1. Dupe (1980)
2. Bad Company (1982)
3. Stalker (1984)
4. Head Case (1985)
5. Under Contract (1986)
6. Backhand (1991)
She followed them with a new character
Eva Wylie
1. Bucket Nut (1992)
2. Monkey Wrench (1994)
3. Musclebound (1997)
and then a couple of stand alone novels
Rift (1988)
Gimme More (2000)
BACKHAND was an Edgar Awards Best Novel nominee (1993)
Blurb
When her boss at Brierly Security assigns her a case--involving pilfered designer sweaters--that will take her to the States, Lee soon finds herself embroiled in a depressing and dangerous family drama. Is the designer's missing teenage daughter involved with a pedophile, or has she just run off to marry a much older man? What connection does this man have to the stolen merchandise and to the designer's husband? The Florida Keys and a handsome U.S. operative give Anna her first blissful taste of the sunny, fog-free New World even as she handily attempts to answer these questions and dodge the bullets that seem to her so quintessentially American.
Liza Cody won
- 1980 John Creasey Memorial Award for Dupe
- 1992 Silver Dagger for Bucket Nut
- 1992 Anthony Award for short fiction for Lucky Dip
Wikipedia article.
24 August 2010
Thalia: Book sculpture
This giant book sculpture was placed outside a bookstore called Thalia in Linz, Austria. Believe it or not, this is an advertisement!
To celebrate its status of European Capital of Culture 2009, Linz (Austria) organized in May 2007 a life-size exhibition, Schaurausch - Art in 50 Shop Windows.
The idea was to enable thirty Austrian and International artists to transform 50 storefronts.Here the work of Spanish artist Alicia Martin who reinterpreted the front of a bookstore, Thalia.
A 12 meters waterfall of books rose from the first floor of the library, to symbolize a tower of Babel from which knowledge would be available beyond the huge number of shelves that a bookstore used to have.
23 August 2010
ACRC: Agatha Christie Blog Carnival 2010 #8 now posted
The latest edition, #8 for 2010, of the Agatha Christie Blog Carnival is now available.
There are 24 contributions from 12 participants, including some really interesting "discoveries".
There will be no blog carnival next month as we are celebrating Agatha Christie's 120th birthday with a blog tour throughout the month.
22 August 2010
Weekly Geeks 2010-29: Reading from the Decades
Our Weekly Geeks task this week is as follows
Weekly Geeks is about examining a book (or books) which were published in your birth decade. Tell us about a book that came out in the decade you were born which you either loved or hated. Is is relevant to today? Is it a classic, or could it be? Give us a mini-review, or start a discussion about the book or books.
My first choice is from my birth year, 1946, and it's author has a lot to do with my love of reading. Enid Blyton provided a constant source of new titles for me to bury myself in, and I loved the stories from the Faraway Tree, an enormous tree which reaches faraway into the sky and is populated by many of the fairy-folk. Every now and again a strange and wonderful land arrives and rests on the topmost branches and the children have visited many of them and experienced all kinds of adventures.
Click on the picture to go to the website.
And to talk about a taste of the future, see the tin of Google buns?
My second choice comes also from 1946, but reflects my interest in reading as an adult - early on I read historical romance blended with mystery. Daphne du Maurier became a favourite author.
Inspired by a grisly discovery in the nineteenth century, The King's General was the first of du Maurier's novels to be written at Menabilly, the model for Manderley in Rebecca. Set in the seventeenth century, it tells the story of a country and a family riven by war, and features one of fiction's most original heroines.
Honor Harris is only eighteen when she first meets Richard Grenvile, proud, reckless - and utterly captivating. But following a riding accident, Honor must reconcile herself to a life alone. As Richard rises through the ranks of the army, marries and makes enemies, Honor remains true to him, and finally discovers the secret of Menabilly.
And then finally, I wondered what Agatha Christie wrote in 1946.
The answer is THE HOLLOW (aka MURDER AFTER HOURS), the 25th Hercule Poirot mystery.
Hercule Poirot soon realizes that what he at first thought was a clever hoax, is very real--there is a dead body by the swimming pool, accompanied by a hysterical woman--and this will be one his toughest cases to crack.
From the Agatha Christie site:
Lady Angkatell, intrigued by the criminal mind, has invited Hercule Poirot to her estate for a weekend house party. The Belgian detective's arrival at the Hollow is met with an elaborate tableau staged for his amusement: a doctor lies in a puddle of red paint, his timid wife stands over his body with a gun while the other guests look suitably shocked. But this is no charade. The paint is blood and the corpse real!
Christie described this novel as the one "I had ruined by the introduction of Poirot." It was first published in 1946 in London. In the USA it was published under the title Murder after Hours. Christie adapted the novel for the stage though with the omission of Hercule Poirot. It was broadcast in 2004 with David Suchet as Poirot.
Weekly Geeks is about examining a book (or books) which were published in your birth decade. Tell us about a book that came out in the decade you were born which you either loved or hated. Is is relevant to today? Is it a classic, or could it be? Give us a mini-review, or start a discussion about the book or books.
My first choice is from my birth year, 1946, and it's author has a lot to do with my love of reading. Enid Blyton provided a constant source of new titles for me to bury myself in, and I loved the stories from the Faraway Tree, an enormous tree which reaches faraway into the sky and is populated by many of the fairy-folk. Every now and again a strange and wonderful land arrives and rests on the topmost branches and the children have visited many of them and experienced all kinds of adventures.
Click on the picture to go to the website.
And to talk about a taste of the future, see the tin of Google buns?
My second choice comes also from 1946, but reflects my interest in reading as an adult - early on I read historical romance blended with mystery. Daphne du Maurier became a favourite author.
Inspired by a grisly discovery in the nineteenth century, The King's General was the first of du Maurier's novels to be written at Menabilly, the model for Manderley in Rebecca. Set in the seventeenth century, it tells the story of a country and a family riven by war, and features one of fiction's most original heroines.
Honor Harris is only eighteen when she first meets Richard Grenvile, proud, reckless - and utterly captivating. But following a riding accident, Honor must reconcile herself to a life alone. As Richard rises through the ranks of the army, marries and makes enemies, Honor remains true to him, and finally discovers the secret of Menabilly.
And then finally, I wondered what Agatha Christie wrote in 1946.
The answer is THE HOLLOW (aka MURDER AFTER HOURS), the 25th Hercule Poirot mystery.
Hercule Poirot soon realizes that what he at first thought was a clever hoax, is very real--there is a dead body by the swimming pool, accompanied by a hysterical woman--and this will be one his toughest cases to crack.
From the Agatha Christie site:
Lady Angkatell, intrigued by the criminal mind, has invited Hercule Poirot to her estate for a weekend house party. The Belgian detective's arrival at the Hollow is met with an elaborate tableau staged for his amusement: a doctor lies in a puddle of red paint, his timid wife stands over his body with a gun while the other guests look suitably shocked. But this is no charade. The paint is blood and the corpse real!
Christie described this novel as the one "I had ruined by the introduction of Poirot." It was first published in 1946 in London. In the USA it was published under the title Murder after Hours. Christie adapted the novel for the stage though with the omission of Hercule Poirot. It was broadcast in 2004 with David Suchet as Poirot.
Sunday Salon: Tyrannosaurus TBR, 22 Aug 2010
Hello fellow Sunday Saloners
I've written before about my TBR. I'm alarmed today as I suspect things are really getting out of hand.
It has grown by an estimated 55 books since my last look. And the culprit is my Kindle!
Or rather the culprit is Net Galley together with Books-on-the-Knob.
NetGalley puts me in touch with e-books that publishers want reviewed, while Books on the Knob alerts me to far too many bargains.
So, how is your TBR (To Be Read)looking?
Don't have one? You are not trying!
Over on the right you'll find a poll you can take to make me feel either better or worse about my growing TBR. Give me an estimate of your TBR. Now be honest - count everything!
What makes us accumulate a TBR? Is it greed? Are we afraid that we'll miss out? Are you afraid of being without a book to read?
Posts this week:
21 August 2010
Audio Book Challenge Update, 21 Aug 2010
Audio Book Challenge is hosted at Royal Reviews.
.
Listening to audio versions of crime fiction and thrillers is a way of life for me I listen to books to and from work every day and in fact almost whenever I drive the car. Add to that the fact that I've also realised the usefulness of an audio book on my I-Pod for long flights.
I seem to be more tolerant of thrillers in audio, and it stretches the range of books I am comfortable in reading.
Sometimes, I think, a good narrator will get me to the end of a book, and enjoying it too, where I may have become frustrated when just turning pages. Comedy in crime comes in that category.
I count all audio books in my list of book read, and I review them too.
I have set my sights on Obsessed and at this stage it is well within my reach.
There are four levels:
--Curious – Listen to 3 Audio Books.
--Fascinated – Listen to 6 Audio Books.
--Addicted – Listen to 12 Audio Books.
-- Obsessed – Listen to 20 Audio Books.
My progress so far... 16 books
.
Listening to audio versions of crime fiction and thrillers is a way of life for me I listen to books to and from work every day and in fact almost whenever I drive the car. Add to that the fact that I've also realised the usefulness of an audio book on my I-Pod for long flights.
I seem to be more tolerant of thrillers in audio, and it stretches the range of books I am comfortable in reading.
Sometimes, I think, a good narrator will get me to the end of a book, and enjoying it too, where I may have become frustrated when just turning pages. Comedy in crime comes in that category.
I count all audio books in my list of book read, and I review them too.
I have set my sights on Obsessed and at this stage it is well within my reach.
There are four levels:
--
--
--
-- Obsessed – Listen to 20 Audio Books.
My progress so far... 16 books
- DEVIL'S PEAK, Deon Myer
- A CHRISTMAS CAROL, Charles Dickens
- THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER, Edgar Allan Poe
- THE SPY'S WIFE, Reginald Hill
- THE SUFFOCATING SEA, Pauline Rowson
- THE CONCRETE BLONDE, Michael Connelly
- DANCING FOR THE HANGMAN, Martin Edwards
- HIDE & SEEK, Ian Rankin
- MARCH VIOLETS, Philip Kerr
- THE THIRD GIRL, Agatha Christie
- THE FIFTH WOMAN, Henning Mankell
- THE CHORISTER AT THE ABBEY, Lis Howell
- DEATH OF A GLUTTON, M. C. Beaton
- DOUBLE VISION, Pat Barker
- THE MESSENGER, Daniel Silva
- THE PILGRIM OF HATE, Ellis Peters
Review: PILGRIM OF HATE, Ellis Peters (audio)
I have already read this Ellis Peters novel, but so long ago that my memory was very dim, and so I decided to listen to an audio copy.
It is of course one of the Brother Cadfael series, made famous particularly by Derek Jacobi's TV series.
1. A Morbid Taste for Bones (1977)
2. One Corpse Too Many (1979)
3. Monk's Hood (1980)
4. St. Peter's Fair (1981)
5. The Leper of Saint Giles (1981)
6. The Virgin in the Ice (1982)
7. The Sanctuary Sparrow (1982)
8. The Devil's Novice (1983)
9. Dead Man's Ransom (1984)
10. The Pilgrim of Hate (1984)
11. An Excellent Mystery (1985)
12. The Raven in the Foregate (1986)
13. The Rose Rent (1986)
14. The Hermit of Eyton Forest (1987)
15. The Confession of Brother Haluin (1988)
16. The Heretic's Apprentice (1989)
17. The Potter's Field (1989)
18. The Summer of the Danes (1991)
19. The Holy Thief (1992)
20. Brother Cadfael's Penance (1994)
The setting is the Benedictine Abbey at Shrewsbury, on the eve of the installation of the casket with St. Winifred's bones into the Abbey. The political setting is the struggle between King Stephen and the Empress Maud. Will the installation of Saint Winifred's bones be accompanied by a miracle? So far Shrewsbury has not been favoured with a miracle, and certainly there are many who are hoping for her favour.
In the early hours of listening to the novel, I found myself thinking that the series had dated a little. The language is bit more formal than that of more modern writing, but then I found that as the story developed, that didn't really matter. It helps if you know a bit of the political background when you are reading the novel, and that may have been what frustrated me at the beginning - I was struggling to resurrect my history, couldn't quite remember who was vying for what. And then this is #10 in the Cadfael series, and things have been revealed about his earlier life that it helps to know about.
But if you like historical mysteries, then this is a series you will enjoy. It is not for nothing that the CWA awards for historical mystery is dedicated to Ellis Peters. And she had such a great love of this period in English history and this particular part of England. So get to a library and borrow the series, starting at the beginning. Or check out the CWA page for other historical mystery reading.
Check out my other Ellis Peters posts.
My rating: a very solid 4.3
It is of course one of the Brother Cadfael series, made famous particularly by Derek Jacobi's TV series.
1. A Morbid Taste for Bones (1977)
2. One Corpse Too Many (1979)
3. Monk's Hood (1980)
4. St. Peter's Fair (1981)
5. The Leper of Saint Giles (1981)
6. The Virgin in the Ice (1982)
7. The Sanctuary Sparrow (1982)
8. The Devil's Novice (1983)
9. Dead Man's Ransom (1984)
10. The Pilgrim of Hate (1984)
11. An Excellent Mystery (1985)
12. The Raven in the Foregate (1986)
13. The Rose Rent (1986)
14. The Hermit of Eyton Forest (1987)
15. The Confession of Brother Haluin (1988)
16. The Heretic's Apprentice (1989)
17. The Potter's Field (1989)
18. The Summer of the Danes (1991)
19. The Holy Thief (1992)
20. Brother Cadfael's Penance (1994)
The setting is the Benedictine Abbey at Shrewsbury, on the eve of the installation of the casket with St. Winifred's bones into the Abbey. The political setting is the struggle between King Stephen and the Empress Maud. Will the installation of Saint Winifred's bones be accompanied by a miracle? So far Shrewsbury has not been favoured with a miracle, and certainly there are many who are hoping for her favour.
In the early hours of listening to the novel, I found myself thinking that the series had dated a little. The language is bit more formal than that of more modern writing, but then I found that as the story developed, that didn't really matter. It helps if you know a bit of the political background when you are reading the novel, and that may have been what frustrated me at the beginning - I was struggling to resurrect my history, couldn't quite remember who was vying for what. And then this is #10 in the Cadfael series, and things have been revealed about his earlier life that it helps to know about.
But if you like historical mysteries, then this is a series you will enjoy. It is not for nothing that the CWA awards for historical mystery is dedicated to Ellis Peters. And she had such a great love of this period in English history and this particular part of England. So get to a library and borrow the series, starting at the beginning. Or check out the CWA page for other historical mystery reading.
Check out my other Ellis Peters posts.
My rating: a very solid 4.3
19 August 2010
Forgotten Books: My Escape Hatch
This week's task for Pattinase's Friday's Forgotten Books
Books we loved when we were between 18-23, college age. What book did you read when you should have been reading THE ODYSSEY and THE HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION?
Well, you see that was when I became an Agatha Christie addict. Officially I was plodding my way through English classics: an English lecturer who believed that if he read Spenser's Faerie Queene to us in old English we would understand "enough" and appreciate the beauty of the language, another who decided to analyse James Joyce's ULYSSES at the rate of a chapter each week and miraculously stopped appearing at lectures after 4 or 5 weeks, solid reads like Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, Daniel Defoe, Restoration comedy, Shakespeare etc etc.
My escape hatch was Agatha Christie, newly available here in Australia in Fontana paperbacks, those lovely little green Penguins of Maigret titles by George Simenon, and Josephine Tey's DAUGHTER OF TIME.
Books we loved when we were between 18-23, college age. What book did you read when you should have been reading THE ODYSSEY and THE HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION?
Well, you see that was when I became an Agatha Christie addict. Officially I was plodding my way through English classics: an English lecturer who believed that if he read Spenser's Faerie Queene to us in old English we would understand "enough" and appreciate the beauty of the language, another who decided to analyse James Joyce's ULYSSES at the rate of a chapter each week and miraculously stopped appearing at lectures after 4 or 5 weeks, solid reads like Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, Daniel Defoe, Restoration comedy, Shakespeare etc etc.
My escape hatch was Agatha Christie, newly available here in Australia in Fontana paperbacks, those lovely little green Penguins of Maigret titles by George Simenon, and Josephine Tey's DAUGHTER OF TIME.
18 August 2010
Do You Remember? Blott on the Landscape
17 August 2010
Book Towers - creator Tom Bendsten
This tower consists of 12,000 books. (exterior)
Built 4 different ways in 3 years. 16' (height)
It's creator is Tom Bendsten, a Canadian visual artist, and this is one of a number in a series titled Arguments.
Click on the image to the left for a view of the interior.
And below is the view up the middle.
16 August 2010
Ned Kelly Awards 2010 Shortlist
A little bird told me..
Crime writers and readers converge for the 15th Ned Kelly Awards, honouring the past year’s best Australian crime writing. Host Jane Clifton will convene a panel on the topic ‘That one can do right in a world gone wrong’. In addition, a Lifetime Achievement Award will be presented to Peter Doyle by Shane Maloney.
The Awards will be presented from 7pm on September 3 at the Melbourne Writers' Festival.
True Crime
Peter Doyle – CROOKS LIKE US, Publisher: Historic Houses Trust
Kathy Marks – PITCAIRN: PARADISE LOST, Publisher: Harper Collins
Robert M.Kaplan: MEDICAL MURDER,: Publisher Allen & Unwin
Best First Fiction
Andrew Croome – DOCUMENT Z, Allen & Unwin
Mark Dapin – KING OF THE CROSS, Macmillan
Robin Adair – DEATH AND THE RUNNING PATTERER, Penguin
Best Fiction
Lenny Bartulin – THE BLACK RUSSIAN, Scribe Publications
Michael Robotham - BLEED FOR ME, Hatchette
Gary Disher – WYATT, Text
SD Harvey Short Story
Lucy Sussex THE FOUNTAIN OF JUSTICE
Zane Lovitt LEAVING THE FOUNTAINHEAD
Robert Goodman THE TRAVERTINE FOUNTAIN
Lifetime Achievement Award
Peter Doyle
See the Longlist here
Crime writers and readers converge for the 15th Ned Kelly Awards, honouring the past year’s best Australian crime writing. Host Jane Clifton will convene a panel on the topic ‘That one can do right in a world gone wrong’. In addition, a Lifetime Achievement Award will be presented to Peter Doyle by Shane Maloney.
The Awards will be presented from 7pm on September 3 at the Melbourne Writers' Festival.
True Crime
Peter Doyle – CROOKS LIKE US, Publisher: Historic Houses Trust
Kathy Marks – PITCAIRN: PARADISE LOST, Publisher: Harper Collins
Robert M.Kaplan: MEDICAL MURDER,: Publisher Allen & Unwin
Best First Fiction
Andrew Croome – DOCUMENT Z, Allen & Unwin
Mark Dapin – KING OF THE CROSS, Macmillan
Robin Adair – DEATH AND THE RUNNING PATTERER, Penguin
Best Fiction
Lenny Bartulin – THE BLACK RUSSIAN, Scribe Publications
Michael Robotham - BLEED FOR ME, Hatchette
Gary Disher – WYATT, Text
SD Harvey Short Story
Lucy Sussex THE FOUNTAIN OF JUSTICE
Zane Lovitt LEAVING THE FOUNTAINHEAD
Robert Goodman THE TRAVERTINE FOUNTAIN
Lifetime Achievement Award
Peter Doyle
See the Longlist here
15 August 2010
Review: ON EDGE, Barbara Fister
- Format: Kindle Edition
- File Size: 391 KB
- Print Length: 288 pages
- Publisher: Dell (December 18, 2008)
Originally published by Dell 2002
ISBN 0-440-23751-3 - Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
- Language: English
- ASIN: B001O1O6W2
Product Description (Amazon)
Konstantin Slovo knows his way through the dark. He knows what it’s like to live on the edge--of tragedy, of sanity, of humanity. A Chicago cop, Slovo’s own life had come violently apart with the shooting death of his partner. Here on the picture-perfect Maine coast, he thought he could outrun his past. But amid the crying of gulls, he has found something even worse.Twenty years ago in Brimsport, Maine, police investigated a ring of sexual predators--and left behind a town seething in secrets and rage. Now children are disappearing from Brimsport--in ways that buckle the knees of hardened investigators...and plunge the town back into a nightmare. Now Slovo, a man who’s already seen too much, must peer into the darkness of a town torn apart by fear...to glimpse the secrets in the shadows--the glitter in a killer’s eyes.
Fister seems to be exploring several ideas in this, her debut novel. In particular some are connected with the nature of paedophilia: a commonly accepted one that those who are victims as children become predators in adult life; that it is relatively easy to get children to "confess" to being victims of adult predations where the acts exist only in the minds of the accusers; that there are others who feed off the hype that surrounds these public witch hunts.
ON EDGE is not a novel for the faint-hearted. There is some graphic description of what happened to the child victims, and also of what was done to Slovo by those who irrationally assumed he was the predator they were hunting.
The sense of hysteria that grips the small town of Brimsport when the fourth child disappears and the count down for his survival begins is particularly well done. I must also confess that I had the wrong person in mind.
My rating: 4.5
Read an excerpt on the author's site.
Fister has two more novels to her credit:
In the Wind (Anni Koskinen, 1, 2008) / Through the Cracks (Anni Koskinen, 2, 2010)
Sunday Salon 14 Aug 2010 - focus on Challenges
Yesterday I wrote a post for my Weekly Geeks task in which I listed the challenges that I have been participating in during 2010. I know some fellow bloggers feel that taking part in challenges in some ways puts a strait-jacket on their reading, and that they cease to be the chooser of the books they read.
My experience with challenges is a little different to that: I feel you can still read the books you want to read - you just need to keep an eye on the requirements of the challenges as well, and complete those that you can. Take the Global Reading Challenge for example - what this does is encourage you to choose books set authentically (often translated titles) outside your usual geographic boundaries.
So I'm interested to know how you feel about reading challenges, how many you have on the go at present (including those you've already completed this year), and what you feel participation does for you. Equally, if you have decided against challenges, why have you done that?
Over at the top of the right hand column you'll find a poll where you can record the number of challenges you are (or have been) taking part in this year. But do leave a comment too. If you have a page on your blog where you list your challenges, leave the URL in your comment. Or alternatively just list the challenges so others can Google for them.
** Do you read Agatha Christie novels? or watch Agatha Christie films? How about writing a blog post about them?
Put your hand up for the celebratory Agatha Christie blog tour in September
There are tour stops available so think about when it would suit you to host a stop on your blog.
Other posts this week
- ACRC Update - 14 August 2010
- Review: THE ABC Murders, Agatha Christie
- Setting the Stage for Murder in New Zealand #3X - the finalists
- To read an e-book or not?
- Forgotten Books: THE STONE HAWK, Gwen Moffat
- Audio Book Challenge Update #7
- Review: THE MESSENGER, Daniel Silva (Audio)
- Review: THE CROSSING PLACES, Elly Griffiths
- Step into a world made entirely of books
- Melbourne Writers Festival, Aug 27 - Sep 5
- Shamus Nominations 2010
- Larsson's Just The Tip Of The Nordic Literary Iceberg
- Pieces of carpet that could solve a murder mystery
- Finalists for remaining CWA Daggers - Gold, Steel and John Creasey (New Blood)
- 49th Book Review Blog Carnival available
- PD James turns 90
- Happy 75th birthday to the paperback
- TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD turns 50
- Ned Kelly Awards at MWF Sept 3
- 2012 National Year of Reading in Australia
14 August 2010
Weekly Geeks: 2010-28: Choose Your Own Topic: Challenges
This week Weekly Geeks invites us to revisit a favorite past Weekly Geek topic or one that you've haven't done before.
I've decided to write a progress report for challenges I have been participating in, both "official" and personal.
Last year's Challenges task defined it as
"Reading Challenges: a help or a hurt? Do you find that the reading challenges keep you organized and goal-oriented? Or, do you find that as you near the end of a challenge that you've failed because you fell short of your original goals? As a result of some reading challenges, I've picked up books that I would have otherwise never heard of or picked up; that, frankly, I have loved. Have you experienced the same with challenges? If so, which ones? Do you have favorite reading challenges?"
Some of the challenges I have been taking part in have been well within my comfort zone, while others have led me into reading books I may never have even looked for before.
For me though the over-riding principle is that all the books I choose, read and list are crime fiction titles, although every now and again a thriller or two creeps in
Of course the books can often be counted in more than one challenge.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I began the year with the last half of the Crime Fiction Alphabet
I guess this was a meme rather than a challenge but for 26 weeks 2009-2010 it kept a bunch of us busy finding books and authors whose titles or names began with the letter of the week.
My final choices are listed here.
I have ideas for running something similar in 2011.
On a weekly basis I participate in Weekly Geeks, Sunday Salon, and Pattinase's Friday's Forgotten Books
True Challenges: (click on the icons to be taken to the home page of the challenge.)
Audio Book Challenge hosted at Royal Reviews.
My Audio Book Challenge posts
.
Currently I've read 16
My Global Reading Challenge posts
I'm using a world map to track my progress.
Agatha Christie Reading Challenge
This is my own challenge- I read roughly an Agatha Christie title a month, in order of publication, but I have been joined on my journey by a number of people.
I feed them into the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge Blog Carnival.
I've read 7 titles this year
All my Agatha Christie Reading Challenge posts
100+ ReadingChallenge hosted by J. Kaye
I'm well underway with this one: last count 84 books read in 2010
Smik's Reviews.provides a running count of my progess
Typically British Reading Challenge - completed
Perhaps if you need some encouragement to read British crime fiction, this challenge hosted at Book Chick City, will be the challenge for you.
Timeline: 1st Jan 2010~ 31st Dec 2010.
Only books started on January 1st count towards this challenge.
You may already have read some eligible books
Completed at Cream Crackered level with 8 books
Scandinavian Reading Challenge: completed
6 books read
All my Scandinavian Reading Challenge posts
Canadian Book Challenge
You have one year to read 13 Canadian books and review them somewhere online, from Canada Day, July 1st, 2010- Canada Day, July 1st, 2011.
So far I've read 1, so I have quite a way to go at this stage.
See Canadian Book Challenge, Canadian crime fiction
Unofficial challenges
These are not really challenges - more like trying to read books shortlisted for an award, before the results are announced.
I've done a couple of these this year.
I read 6 books for the CWA International Dagger.
My verdict
The final result.
I'm currently reading the novels by New Zealand authors shortlisted for the Inaugural Ngaio Marsh Crime Fiction Award.
There were 5. A Final list of 3 has been announced and I have 1 of them to go.
I've decided to write a progress report for challenges I have been participating in, both "official" and personal.
Last year's Challenges task defined it as
"Reading Challenges: a help or a hurt? Do you find that the reading challenges keep you organized and goal-oriented? Or, do you find that as you near the end of a challenge that you've failed because you fell short of your original goals? As a result of some reading challenges, I've picked up books that I would have otherwise never heard of or picked up; that, frankly, I have loved. Have you experienced the same with challenges? If so, which ones? Do you have favorite reading challenges?"
Some of the challenges I have been taking part in have been well within my comfort zone, while others have led me into reading books I may never have even looked for before.
For me though the over-riding principle is that all the books I choose, read and list are crime fiction titles, although every now and again a thriller or two creeps in
Of course the books can often be counted in more than one challenge.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I began the year with the last half of the Crime Fiction Alphabet
I guess this was a meme rather than a challenge but for 26 weeks 2009-2010 it kept a bunch of us busy finding books and authors whose titles or names began with the letter of the week.
My final choices are listed here.
I have ideas for running something similar in 2011.
On a weekly basis I participate in Weekly Geeks, Sunday Salon, and Pattinase's Friday's Forgotten Books
True Challenges: (click on the icons to be taken to the home page of the challenge.)
Audio Book Challenge hosted at Royal Reviews.
My Audio Book Challenge posts
.
Currently I've read 16
My Global Reading Challenge posts
I'm using a world map to track my progress.
Aussie Author Challenge: Completed
This one is being run by Book Lover Book Reviews.
I'm signed up for the FAIR DINKUM challenge which required me to read 8 titles by at least 5 different Aussie authors.
My Aussie Author challenge posts
This one is being run by Book Lover Book Reviews.
I'm signed up for the FAIR DINKUM challenge which required me to read 8 titles by at least 5 different Aussie authors.
My Aussie Author challenge posts
Agatha Christie Reading Challenge
This is my own challenge- I read roughly an Agatha Christie title a month, in order of publication, but I have been joined on my journey by a number of people.
I feed them into the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge Blog Carnival.
I've read 7 titles this year
All my Agatha Christie Reading Challenge posts
100+ ReadingChallenge hosted by J. Kaye
I'm well underway with this one: last count 84 books read in 2010
Smik's Reviews.provides a running count of my progess
Typically British Reading Challenge - completed
Perhaps if you need some encouragement to read British crime fiction, this challenge hosted at Book Chick City, will be the challenge for you.
Timeline: 1st Jan 2010~ 31st Dec 2010.
Only books started on January 1st count towards this challenge.
You may already have read some eligible books
Completed at Cream Crackered level with 8 books
Scandinavian Reading Challenge: completed
6 books read
All my Scandinavian Reading Challenge posts
Canadian Book Challenge
You have one year to read 13 Canadian books and review them somewhere online, from Canada Day, July 1st, 2010- Canada Day, July 1st, 2011.
So far I've read 1, so I have quite a way to go at this stage.
See Canadian Book Challenge, Canadian crime fiction
Unofficial challenges
These are not really challenges - more like trying to read books shortlisted for an award, before the results are announced.
I've done a couple of these this year.
I read 6 books for the CWA International Dagger.
My verdict
The final result.
I'm currently reading the novels by New Zealand authors shortlisted for the Inaugural Ngaio Marsh Crime Fiction Award.
There were 5. A Final list of 3 has been announced and I have 1 of them to go.
ACRC Update - 14 August 2010
My intent in the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge is to read her books in order, so that I can get some idea of what she is doing, problems she is attempting to solve, and her development as a writer. If you look at some of my reviews you will see that I have been able to undertake some of this reflection.
Currently I am managing about a book a month.
I've read 19 books and 8 collections of short stories.
Read & reviewed so far
If you'd like to join the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge click here.
I am using the list at Wikipedia of novels and collections of short stories. I will interlace the short story collections into the list where I can, but may have to read them out of order. I have decided on a method for reporting on the short stories.
Please feel free to join in my challenge, comment on my reviews etc.
I have set up a block over in the right hand column called Agatha Christie Reading Challenge (with the same logo as this post) where I am listing the books I'm currently reading and those I've finished.
The challenge is called ACRC so each review will be preceded by those letters.
If you want to follow my progress through your RSS reader, then the RSS URL is
http://www2.blogger.com/feeds/8273911883856580200/posts/default/-/Agatha%20Christie%20Challenge
Just save that in your bookmarks or RSS reader and you will be notified when I have written a new post.
Alternatively you could subscribe to the feed through FeedMyInbox. Just copy the RSS URL, click on the FeedMyInbox link and paste the URL in there.
You will need to confirm your subscription by email.
Contribute your blog postings about any Agatha Christie novels to the monthly carnival. Make an agreement with yourself that whenever you complete reading an Aggie you will write a blog posting about it and then submit the posting to the carnival.
If you are participating in the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge then write updates like this one and submit them to the Carnival. Let us know what progress you are making.
Currently I am managing about a book a month.
I've read 19 books and 8 collections of short stories.
Read & reviewed so far
- 1920, THE MYSTERIOUS AFFAIR AT STYLES
- 1922, THE SECRET ADVERSARY
- 1923, THE MURDER ON THE LINKS
- 1924, THE MAN IN THE BROWN SUIT
1924, POIROT INVESTIGATES (short stories: eleven in the UK, fourteen in the US) - 1925, THE SECRET OF CHIMNEYS
- 1926, THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD
- 1927, THE BIG FOUR
- 1928, THE MYSTERY OF THE BLUE TRAIN
- 1929, THE SEVEN DIALS MYSTERY
1929, Partners in Crime (fifteen short stories; featuring Tommy and Tuppence) - 1930, THE MURDER AT THE VICARAGE
1930, The Mysterious Mr. Quin (twelve short stories; introducing Mr. Harley Quin) - 1931, THE SITTAFORD MYSTERY (aka MURDER AT HAZELMOOR)
- 1932, PERIL AT END HOUSE
1932 The Thirteen Problems (thirteen short stories; featuring Miss Marple, also known as The Tuesday Club Murders in the US) - 1933, LORD EDGEWARE DIES (aka THIRTEEN AT DINNER)
- 1934, MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS (aka MURDER IN THE CALAIS COACH)
- 1934, WHY DIDN'T THEY ASK EVANS? (aka THE BOOMERANG CLUE)
1991, Problem at Pollensa Bay publ. 1991 (Two of them feature Hercule Poirot, two Mr. Satterthwaite and Mr. Harley Quin, and two Mr Parker Pyne.) - 1935, THREE ACT TRAGEDY (aka MURDER IN THREE ACTS)- Hercule Poirot and Mr Satterthwaite.
1933, The Hound of Death - 12 short stories, UK only
1934, Parker Pyne Investigates - 12 stories introducing Parker Pyne and Ariadne Oliver
1934, The Listerdale Mystery - 12 short stories, UK only - 1935, DEATH IN THE CLOUDS (aka DEATH IN THE AIR) - Hercule Poirot
- 1936, THE A.B.C. MURDERS (aka THE ALPHABET MURDERS) - Hercule Poirot
- 1966, THE THIRD GIRL - Hercule Poirot and Ariadne Oliver
Reading schedule
- 1936, MURDER IN MESOPOTAMIA
- 1936, CARDS ON THE TABLE
- 1937, DUMB WITNESS (aka POIROT LOSES A CLIENT)
- 1937, DEATH ON THE NILE
- 1938, APPOINTMENT WITH DEATH
- 1938, HERCULE POIROT'S CHRISTMAS (aka MURDER FOR CHRISTMAS, aka A HOLIDAY FOR MURDER)
- 1939, MURDER IS EASY (aka EASY TO KILL)
- 1939, TEN LITTLE NIGERS (aka AND THEN THERE WERE NONE; also TEN LITTLE INDIANS)
- 1940, SAD CYPRESS
- 1940, ONE, TWO, BUCKLE MY SHOE (aka AN OVERDOSE OF DEATH; also THE PATRIOTIC MURDERS)
If you'd like to join the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge click here.
I am using the list at Wikipedia of novels and collections of short stories. I will interlace the short story collections into the list where I can, but may have to read them out of order. I have decided on a method for reporting on the short stories.
Please feel free to join in my challenge, comment on my reviews etc.
I have set up a block over in the right hand column called Agatha Christie Reading Challenge (with the same logo as this post) where I am listing the books I'm currently reading and those I've finished.
The challenge is called ACRC so each review will be preceded by those letters.
If you want to follow my progress through your RSS reader, then the RSS URL is
http://www2.blogger.com/feeds/8273911883856580200/posts/default/-/Agatha%20Christie%20Challenge
Just save that in your bookmarks or RSS reader and you will be notified when I have written a new post.
Alternatively you could subscribe to the feed through FeedMyInbox. Just copy the RSS URL, click on the FeedMyInbox link and paste the URL in there.
You will need to confirm your subscription by email.
Contribute your blog postings about any Agatha Christie novels to the monthly carnival. Make an agreement with yourself that whenever you complete reading an Aggie you will write a blog posting about it and then submit the posting to the carnival.
If you are participating in the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge then write updates like this one and submit them to the Carnival. Let us know what progress you are making.