Review by Booklist Review
Francis heads straight for the winner's circle with his latest book, a baker's dozen of short stories, all featuring the horses, stables, trainers, jockeys, and assorted horsey hangers-on upon which Francis has built his hugely successful and incredibly long-running writing career. Many of the stories were written in the 1970s and originally appeared in British and American sporting magazines, but a few have never been published before, thus offering a rare and unexpected treat for Francis' legions of loyal fans. Whether he's writing about a horse thief who kills his own father and eventually reaps exactly what he's sown, the sweet Miss Marple^-like racing fan who falls disastrously in love with a cheating jockey, or the quiet French assassin who gets a shocking (and final) taste of his own medicine, Francis injects his own brand of magic into each story. His ingenious plotting, pared-down writing style, wry humor, and skillful characterizations make every story in this collection a sheer delight to read. --Emily Melton
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Though nearly two score of his novels have come to print, Francis has published only eight short stories in his 41 years as a bestselling author. That octet, composed mostly in the 1970s and initially appearing in various journals (Sports Illustrated, the Times of London, etc.), is reprinted here, along with five new tales, each introduced in brief by Francis. There's not a slacker among them, though few champions either. The earliest yarn, "Carrot for a Chestnut," dating from 1970 (eight years after Francis's first novel), is typical, presenting a morally ordered universe in which malefactors get their due, albeit commonly through indirect means. Here, a jockey who bends a race by feeding a horse a drugged carrot receives his comeuppance by losing his concentration as a result of his crime and getting involved in a nasty accident; as in most of the stories, there's a light twist to the ending. Horse racing figures in every entry, of course. Sometimes it's the focus of a crimeas in "Blind Chance," in which a blind boy picks up on how bettors are getting inside info on races with photo finishes. Sometimes, it's only background, as in "Collision Course," about how a fired newspaper editor hoists poetic justice upon a horrid restaurateur/horse trainer. Most of the stories are superficially clever, but below the quick plotting there's emotional depth; in "Spring Fever," for instance, Francis plumbs the innocent desperation of unrequited December-May love. And throughout there is Francis's voice, strong, smart, ironic, developed even at the beginning but maturing in timbre as he hones his skill. Even more than the horse racing, this voice is the tie that binds these 13 tales into a charmed entertainment. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
This latest book by Francis (10 Lb. Penalty, Audio Reviews, LJ 3/15/98) is a collection of 13 short stories, written in the "expanded anecdote formula," with interesting twists and many surprise endings. More in the style of the great American short story writer O. Henry, these stories are not at all like the tense thrillers readers have come to expect from the Grand Master of Mystery (awarded to Francis in 1996). From a French assassin to an English computer-chip creator, this work covers diverse terrain, and Martin Jarvis does an excellent job of narrating. This intriguing program is recommended for all public libraries.Theresa Connors, Arkansas Tech. Univ., Russellville (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
In lieu of his annual novel (10 Lb. Penalty, 1997, etc.), horse racing's gift to the mystery offers his fans his first collection of shorts, including five colts appearing in their first event and eight fillies who've been around the track once or twice. Most of the new stories are horsey parables of revenge. A small-town newspaper editor plots against the restaurant that humiliated his guests; a mild expatriate Brit patiently pursues legal remedies against the lawyer who swindled him out of the bail money he put up for an acquaintance; a couple of means gets even with the social-climbing daughter who neglected her mother, their faithful groom; a timely accident puts paid to the plans of a hit man and the jockey who hired him. The last story, Haig's Death, about the effects of a race judge's fatal heart attack on the owners of the entrants, is the most original. But Francis fans won't be looking for originality here; they'll be content with the brisk authority with which the author sets up his familiar types for a series of falls as satisfying as they are predictable.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.