Friday, 7 December 2007

Off Minor - John Harvey

Another pretty average detective novel, fine if you like that sort of thing - but this is a routine police drama, ideal for turning into a TV series. I find it difficult to gain empathy with most of
John Havey's characters, but he is competent at police procedures and there is always a nice twist in the tale. Rating: 6/10

Monday, 3 December 2007

Agatha Raisin and the Wizard of Evesham - MC Beaton

I probably read this book too quickly after my first taste of M C Beaton and Mrs Raisin.
This volume centres on Agatha encountering crimes and misdeeds at a hairdressers' in Evesham. She really is an egotistical heroine and amateur detective - always imagining that every man with a pulse is either in love with her or suitable for ensnaring into her clutches. In fact she comes close to becoming insufferable. However, this is a light tale and an easy read, lots of red herrings, a believable story line (apart from the incredible number and variety of real or imagined romances Agatha encounters) and so deserves a rating of 6/10

Saturday, 1 December 2007

The Christmas Mystery - Jostein Gaarder

Well an interesting notion - telling the Christmas story in 25 daily chapters, to co-incide with
the Christian festival of Advent. However, I don't think it really works. I can't imagine that it really can be read to a child on a daily basis - the language seems to be aimed at no age range in particular. Of course I have no religious beliefs,so perhaps it does go down well with that audience. I thought it was over sentimental, and holds no real mysteries or surprises. More of a travelogue than a rattling good yarn, and would this reveal anything new about the nativity?
Rating 5/10

Tuesday, 27 November 2007

Love Over Scotland - Alexander McCall Smith



The author of 'The Number 1 Ladies' Detective Agency' series, also does other books. Some are less successful than others. I rather enjoy the series (of which this is one) set in Scotland Street Edinburgh. This is the third in the series. It is a very episodic book, as you expect as (like Armistead Maupin's 'Tales of the City' books) it originated in articles written as a newspaper serial. This has plenty of advantages, each chapter is short, but full of incident, the writing is spare and uncluttered. Alexander McCall Smith has this genre down to a tee, and you really care about what happens to the central characters, whether it be Bertie and his impossible mother, the fate of Big Lou the cafe owner, the anthropologist with the pirates of Malacca, the artist (who rarely paints) or the gallery owner (who never sells any paintings). Light, enjoyable, rather like having coffe and cake at a genteel tea shop - and that kind of life suits me down to the ground. Rating: 8/10

Agatha Raisin and the Vicious Vet - MC Beaton

I heard the 'Agatha Raisin' series being dramatised on Radio 4 with Penelope Keith as the
eponymous heroine. These are in many ways spoof detective stories, as Ms Raisin is something of a battleaxe - a lady of a certain age who believes herself to be incredibly attrative to men - but in fact she appears both needy & desperate, and they find her 'come ons' to be definit 'turnoffs'! Agatha has taken early retirement from work in PR and has moved to a deadly village in the Cotswolds. Deadly because there seem to be an extrordinary number of suspicious deaths. In this volume a particularly nasty vet (who doesn't like small animals like cats & dogs - but is happy to work on farm animals) dies in a bizarre 'accident'. Agatha sets off to solve the mystery with her neighbour (who scared to death almost that Agatha may have him earmarked as her next husband). The story is suitably complicated, as whodunnits should be, it is light and amusing - funny in places, and an easy read. It deserves 7/10

Atonement - Ian McEwan

Should I have read the book before I saw the film? It probably severely influenced my view of the book. This is a book in three parts - not only in terms of plot, but in terms of the style (and in my view the quality) of the author's writing. Now I have a problem with Ian McEwan - especially in terms of his writing style. In the second part of this book Briony (one of the principal characters) has her first novel returned with some constructive criticisms attached. Probably intentionally (and somewhat ironically) these comments encapsulate the difficulty I often experience with McEwan's books. They are generally over written, too minutely descriptive, as though the author has spent several hours over the choice of each word in a sentence. The concentration of detail muddies my appreciation of the plot - and Ian McEwan can be a wonderful storyteller. So this book's first part is overwritten and over detailed, the second is a magnificent story, pacy, well written, and drawing the reader in to the central character of this part, Robbie. The third part is light and almost superficial. It is almost as though the author cannot make up his mind about what he's supposed to be doing. Is it an experiment? Is every book an experiment?
The plot is fairly straightforward. The first section is set around the events of one day in a country house a few years before World War II. On that day when the youngest daughter of the house, Briony, is attempting to stage a play she has scripted in honour of the return of her brother. Her cousins are to take part (reluctantly). Briony observes an event taking place in the gardens involving her sister Cecilia and Robbie, son of the house's charwoman, and Briony's father's protege (despite the boy's lowly background he has been financed through Cambridge). Briony totally misinterprets the incident, and when she intercepts a letter mistakenly sent by Robbie to Cecilia, and interrupts the couple in the library, a chain of events is unleashed placing Robbie in jeopardy. The second part is the most wonderful description of the lives of Robbie and two other soldiers in the days leading to the Dunkrk evacuation, Cecilia and Briony's work as nurses in London at that time, and the realisation by Briony of the magnitude of the wrong she has done. The third part reveals Briony as a bestselling author trying to right the wrong of her youth by publishing a true account of the lives of Robbie and Cecilia. There is a twist in the tail (or tale) but does this make the book or marr it - is it true atonement?
There are plenty of excellent books about World War I, but comparatively fewer about World War II - and it is for this reason, alone, that I would applaud Ian McEwan for writing this excellent account. Rating 8/10