Review by New York Times Review
It's 1947. The war is over, and no one in the modest English town of Lewes expects a person like Gibson to be shot in broad daylight with a military issue Luger. Just as mysterious is the unfinished letter he was writing that mentions John Madden, which brings the former Scotland Yard detective out of retirement to assist in the investigation of other killings committed with the same pistol. As he did with poor Gibson, Airth constructs carefully detailed portraits of each victim, along with the family members other authors often neglect to count as casualties. After interviewing the wife and daughter of one of the dead, a detective is reminded of London during the Blitz, with "survivors wandering the streets of the capital, white-faced as ghosts." That compassion defines Airth's memorable novels, as much as any other aspect of his work, Here, though, the plot suffers somewhat from his meticulous technique. While the police are thrashing about, conducting mostly unhelpful interviews trying to find a common cause for the murders, the reader has already figured out that the victims must have served in the same unit during the war. Not the war that has just ended but the Great War that left its "lingering curse" on everyone. Like the previous books in this almost too beautifully written series, "The Reckoning" is about the comforts of redemption and forgiveness - and the impossibility of forgetting. DEBORAH KNOTT, the kind and clever sleuth in Margaret Maron's wonderful down-home mysteries set in rural North Carolina, has a very large family - by last count, 11 brothers, their wives and children, plus untold aunts, uncles and cousins. In DESIGNATED DAUGHTERS (Grand Central, $27), practically the whole clan shows up at the hospice where Aunt Rachel has interrupted the process of dying to deliver a rambling account of all the things that have been on her wandering mind. It's quite a lovely deathbed aria, narrated in the honeyed accents of the region. But someone must have feared Aunt Rachel might divulge a buried secret because that someone creeps into her room and smothers her with a pillow. Maron knows how to adorn a solid murder mystery with plenty of ancillary entertainments. But her broader theme involves the way families flourish when they work together for the common good. While there are charming scenes of group projects like building a pond shed and assembling a bluegrass band, the clan members Maron really cherishes are those who devote themselves to caring for the elders of the family. Living saints they are, every last one of them. KURT WALLANDER will absolutely, positively and quite definitely never appear in another detective novel by Henning Mankell. But as the Swedish author explains in an afterword to Laurie Thompson's translation of an EVENT IN AUTUMN (Vintage Crime/ Black Lizard, paper, $14.95), this is a story he wrote "many years ago" for a literary promotion in Holland. Later, the BBC made it into a television movie starring Kenneth Branagh. Although it doesn't have the thematic density and moral ambiguity of his better books, the narrative does capture the unsettled state of Wallander's mind toward the end of his career, when he is "pleased with his performance as a police officer," but not at all "pleased with his life as a human being." Thinking he might be happier if he had a house in the country (along with a dog and maybe even a female companion), Wallander finds himself drawn to an old farmhouse - until he finds a human hand poking out of the overgrown garden. Since the body went into the ground at least 50 years earlier, a good bit of Sweden's wartime history must be unearthed along with the bones, which leaves Wallander more depressed than he was when we met him. NO ONE WRITES noir like the French. One eloquent voice in that bleak genre belongs to Pascal Garnier, who fuses dark comedy and existential despair, and Gallic Books is publishing appropriately austere translations of a number of his novels. MOON IN A DEAD EYE (Gallic Books, paper, $12.95), translated by Emily Boyce and written in the absurdist manner of Jean Anouilh, is a takedown of the haughty residents of an exclusive retirement community. All that's needed is a caravan of Gypsies to turn these smug provincials into savage beasts. Also translated by Emily Boyce, HOW'S THE PAIN? (Gallic Books, paper, $12.95), which borrows its title from a friendly African greeting, is a deliciously dark tale about a professional hit man's last job. Too old and ill to carry out his assignment alone, Simon Marechall entices strapping young Bernard Ferrand to drive him to a town in the South of France. A simple job. But Bernard is such a sweet naïf that he gets them into one misadventure after another, all painfully funny - except for that last one.
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [August 3, 2014]
Review by Booklist Review
We thought we'd seen the last of Mankell's quintessential Scandinavian police detective Kurt Wallander in The Troubled Man (2011), but crime fiction readers know never to say never when it comes to popular series leads. This curiosity is a bit like one of those handmade chocolates fancy restaurants serve as an extra when the bill comes. It's a novella, really, less than 200 pages, and it was originally written for a Dutch book promotion in which purchasers of a crime novel would receive an extra story as a bonus. Later, the story was adapted as an episode in the PBS Wallander series. Chronologically, the tale fits into the Wallander series just prior to The Troubled Man. Wallander is aging, aware that his days as a copper are numbered, and he's looking for a house in the country, a landscape distant in every way from the 24/7 routine of police work. On the recommendation of a colleague, he thinks he's found the perfect spot, but something seems amiss in the backyard. Crime has a way of reaching out and grabbing the melancholy Wallander, as he discovers yet again when, after a bit of foraging, he finds a hand well, the skeleton of a hand sticking out through the soft earth in the yard. You're not through yet, the hand seems to say, and further investigating uncovers two more skeletons, at least 50 years old, buried nearby. Naturally, the house loses its allure as a retirement getaway, but as a crime scene, it draws the reluctant Wallander back into the game. What follows is a stripped-down version of a standard Wallander novel. As in The Troubled Man, there is much rummaging in the distant past as the detective attempts to first identify and then trace the provenance of the victims. That rummaging prompts the usual melancholy reflection, too, but for readers of the series, it all seems to be done in shorthand, without the layering of both investigation detail and human emotion that gives the books their remarkable depth. Still, for those who have followed the long, slow decline of Wallander's life, this unexpected extra chapter possesses considerable power, with the intimations of mortality carrying more weight given what we know will happen in the series finale. Appended to the story is an afterword in which Mankell reflects on the Wallander series, how it began and how he chose to end it. I never think about Kurt Wallander, the detective's creator declares. I don't miss him. Many of us feel rather differently.--Ott, Bill Copyright 2014 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Set in 2002, this compelling short novel chronicles an episode in the life of Kurt Wallander shortly before the Swedish detective ended his career in 2011's The Troubled Man. Wallander, who shares his Ystad flat with daughter Linda, decides to look take a look at a house in the country owned by a colleague's relative. He discovers an abandoned farmhouse and, shockingly, "the remains of a human hand, sticking up out of the brown clay soil." The crime scene professionals who take over eventually discover two bodies, their identities completely unknown but foul play suspected. The search for what happened to the victims baffles and consumes Wallander, who observes, "The past has closed all doors behind it." The search for their names and fates propels the book, which has much to say about aging, history, and justice. Mankell's insightful afterword about the genesis of his hero and his initial decision to write crime fiction (to combat racism in Sweden) is a plus. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Great news for fans who feared they'd see no more of Kurt Wallander: a characteristically melancholy novella whose events take place in 2002, just before those of Wallander's last appearance (The Troubled Man, 2011). The most beloved curmudgeon of the Ystad police is feeling his age, his temperament and his mortality. Would a change of scene help? His colleague Martinson offers him first crack at a country home he's selling for his wife's cousin, now grown old and senile. Although Wallander's skeptical about the place, it turns out to be absolutely perfect except for the skeletal hand he finds sticking up from the yard just as he's about to leave. His find is at least 50 years old, but it gives him pause. And the discovery of two equally old skeletons on the grounds effectively kills his appetite for buying the house. But now at least his life has been given new purpose: to figure out who killed these two victims, both dead by violence, and why no one in town ever reported them missing. A promising lead that turns out to be a red herring ends up providing a clue that leads to the murderer, whom Wallander confronts in a highly implausible but utterly satisfying sequence. Miraculously, nothing about the story's small scale prevents Wallander from casting a shadow as long as ever, and many readers will be less concerned with how he winds up the mystery than with whether he ends up purchasing that house after all. As a bonus, Mankell (A Treacherous Paradise, 2013, etc.) appends a reminiscence of Wallander's creation and a brief account of this tale's composition that includes its saddest sentence: "There are no more stories about Kurt Wallander." Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.