Review by New York Times Review
WALTER MOSLEY breaks every rule in the private-detective-story stylebook in his new mystery featuring Leonid McGill, AND SOMETIMES I WONDER ABOUT YOU (Doubleday, $26.95). His New York sleuth's disorderly domestic affairs keep threatening to overwhelm the crime elements, and a vital piece of the plot isn't introduced until midway through the book. And when Mosley does wrap things up, he makes no effort to connect any of the multiple subplots. So why the devotion? To begin with, McGill is one of the most humane (and likable) P.I.s in the business. He's a short man, and every time a male character is introduced McGill automatically estimates his height. ("Just a centimeter or two north of six feet"; "Standing face to face, we were the same height" ; "Medium-sized. ... but with bad posture.") Although he hesitates to call himself a family man, he's dedicated to his clinically depressed wife and the brood of grown children he considers his own. And despite being a hard man with a rough past, he does his best by his clients, even taking on the posthumous case of a despondent man he regrets turning away: "I could afford to do a good deed for some poor schlub down on his luck." Like his messy personal life, McGill's casebook is totally disorganized. The job that most interests him (once he begins an affair with his client) concerns a femme fatale being pursued by the rich fiancé she ditched after selling his engagement ring. The most bizarre plot thread involves a Fagin-like villain who runs a criminal network of child thieves from an underground lair by the Hudson River. But Mosley's strengths have less to do with plot than with the colorful characters he puts in his protagonist's path, like the retired hit man McGill advises to take up meditation (as a way of resisting the itch to kill), or the gunman he personally hires over a game of chess. With Mosley, there's always the surprise factor - a cutting image or a bracing line of dialogue. McGill is about to bid farewell to a woman he loves when: "It struck me that we'd not discussed literature." He's also gratified to trace a clue to a 13th-century edition of Herodotus' "Histories." As a final treat, the story ends with a wedding in a boxing gym. SHARON BOLTON has tried her hand at police procedurals and supernatural thrillers, among other genres, but her sharpest skills are in play with her suspense novel LITTLE BLACK LIES (Minotaur, $25.99). The story takes place in a small community on one of the remote Falkland Islands, a harsh and beautiful setting that she views with the keen vision of a naturalist. Her crafty plotting produces an intricately detailed mystery about the disappearances of three little boys that can't be chalked up to the usual distressing deaths of children who fall off cliffs or wander into boggy marshes. And her deft characterizations respect the psychological complexities of the three islanders who serve as narrators. Catrin Quinn, whose two sons died in a dreadful accident three years earlier, plans to kill the person responsible for their deaths. ("After all, I come from a long line of murderers," she explains, referring to the Nantucket whalers who were her ancestors.) Rachel Duncan was Catrin's best friend in childhood but is now the object of her hatred. Callum Murray tries frantically to save both women, but his own emotional instability holds him back. The tension of their interplay fuels the suspense, but in the end - literally, on the last page - it's the plot that thrills. NEW YORK, NEW YORK. It's always been a helluva town. When Lyndsay Faye's latest historical novel, THE FATAL FLAME (Putnam, $26.95), opens in 1848, the docks are swarming with human cargo from the great ships putting into port. But Timothy Wilde, a proud "copper star" with the newly established police force, has eyes only for the scoundrels who entrap immigrant Irish girls and set them to laboring in brothels and shoddily built "manufactories." When an arsonist begins torching these sweatshops, the police action unnerves Timothy, who bears a disfiguring scar from the great fire of 1845. But together with his swashbuckling brother, Valentine ("a man of appetites"), he rallies to defend a radical named Sally Woods, who's accused of the crime. Sally's crusading stance for the rights of downtrodden women is simplistically presented, but, as always in this series, the research is impeccable and the period ambience dazzling. "NO WAR WAS ever won on sarcasm," Colin Cotterill reminds us in SIX AND A HALF DEADLY SINS (Soho Crime, $26.95), another bizarre adventure for Dr. Siri Paiboun, the retired coroner for the Lao People's Democratic Republic. Ever since the Communists took over, Dr. Siri and his misfit friends have relied on caustic humor to stay sane. But on Dec. 25, 1978, Vietnam invades Cambodia - and China, another of Laos's bellicose neighbors, isn't at all pleased. It's hardly a good time for Dr. Siri to finagle a trip to the unsettled north, but he's determined to find out who sent him a human finger sewn into the hem of a pha sin, a traditional skirt worn in that region. Dr. Siri is so busy searching for the weaver, he doesn't realize that China has invaded Vietnam until it's too late to head for home. The question is: Can his cynical sense of humor get him out of this jam?
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [May 10, 2015]
Review by Booklist Review
Sin here is a play on pha sin, a hand-woven, traditional skirt worn in Laos. Sins figure prominently in this mystery set in 1979, starring the retired National Coroner of Laos, Dr. Siri Paiboun, who receives an unmarked package containing a pha sin. Paiboun examines it and finds that the hem hides a severed human finger. He is intrigued by this covert message, which comes at a time when he is terminally bored with retirement. It's fascinating to watch the ex-coroner work against the repressive regime by using all his considerable savvy and old contacts to figure out the origin of this finger. Dr. Siri and his nearly crippled wife embark on a strenuous journey to a remote province in the north. By chance, the cop husband of Siri's former assistant in the morgue is there, investigating the murders of two village headmen. Both investigations link into a disturbing conspiracy, played out against the backdrop of impending war. Dr. Siri's iconoclastic spirit and caustic wit are a delight to witness in this, the tenth in the series. Recommend to followers of Timothy Hallinan's Bangkok-set Poke Rafferty series.--Fletcher, Connie Copyright 2015 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
"On December 25, 1978, the concrete public-address system pole in South That Luang's Area Six unexpectedly blew itself up, a Lao skirt with a severed finger sewn into the hem passed through the national postal system unchallenged, and Vietnam invaded Cambodia." This opening sets the tone perfectly for Cotterill's 10th mystery featuring retired Laos national coroner Siri Paboun (after 2013's The Woman Who Wouldn't Die). Siri discovers the finger, and he's determined to learn how it ended up in the garment. His canny wife, Madame Daeng, helps him identify the skirt's likely place of origin, an area in the north run by drug-dealing warlords. To short-circuit the bureaucratic process of getting approval to travel there, Siri must exonerate the head of Public Prosecution from charges of sexual assault. His inquiry coincides with a sensitive murder investigation that may implicate Chinese nationals at a time when the country is on edge because of the Vietnamese invasion. Cotterill neatly combines humor, detection, and politics. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Cotterill's tenth entry (after The Woman Who Wouldn't Die) in his quirky and always fascinating series opens with the elderly Dr. Siri Paiboun, the former national coroner for Laos, eating lunch with his old friend, Comrade Civilai Songsawat. It is 1978, and Siri has received an unmarked package containing a traditional Laotian pha sin, a skirt woven in a particular pattern, with a finger stitched to the lining. He goes north to the province where the garment was made to investigate. His entourage includes his wife, Daeng, as well as Civilai, and Ugly, the dog. They are given more weavings, each providing extra clues and leading the group on a scavenger hunt of sorts. Murders, drugs, mysticism, thefts, and misdirection soon follow. -VERDICT -Besides presenting an intriguing mystery set in an unfamiliar culture, Cotterill compellingly portrays an ancient country in the midst of great transition. Readers who enjoy the Asian mysteries of Eliot Pattinson, Tim Hallinan, and John Burdett will also savor this title. © Copyright 2015. 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.