Review by New York Times Review
EVERY 16th-century savant and scholar and crackpot aspired to study in Prague under great minds like the astronomer Johannes Kepler and the court mathematician, Tycho Brahe. As a novice in the occult arts, Christian Stern, the young narrator of Benjamin Black's WOLF ON A STRING (Holt, $28), is desperate to extend his studies in that "capital of magic." But no sooner does he arrive in the city, in the winter of 1599, than he comes upon the corpse of a well-dressed woman, savagely murdered and dumped in the snow. Her grieving father warns Christian to travel on to Dresden or some other center of learning. "Prague is no place for you," he's told. "Here everything is tainted and sick." Because of his name, which, in the view of the learned if eccentric Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II, marks him as a messenger sent by Christ, Christian is invited to court and is even housed in the same room once used by Dr. John Dee, a master alchemist "steeped in the mysteries of the kabbalah." There's not much magic in this tale and Christian never gets a chance to study the occult arts, but he encounters plenty of intrigue, enough to convince this naive hero that he's landed at "the center of an intricately devised, immensely subtle and cruelly malicious game." He's introduced to Turkish coffee (which hits him like "a bolt of lightning") by the papal nuncio, seduced by the emperor's concubine and charged by the emperor with finding the murderer. John Banville's novel "Kepler" was published in 1981. Now, using the pen name he has adopted for his mystery novels, he returns to this exciting era when science and superstition were battling for supremacy He even gives the emperor and Christian an opportunity to discuss the "living, harmonious continuum" that connects "the countless parts of creation." The ornate style of Christian's narrative suits both this rich historical period and the courtly language of Prague, this "city of masks and make-believe." DON WINSLOW'S New York cop novel THE FORCE (Morrow/HarperCollins, $27.99) is a scorcher, and if his sources are on the level it's time for another Knapp Commission. Winslow's charismatic hero, who is also the chief villain, is Detective First Grade Dennis John Malone, proud leader of the Manhattan North Special Task Force, which has recently made the biggest heroin bust in memory They own the city these roughnecks whose minds are deep in the gutter and whose language is as ripe as rotten fruit. But they're also crooked, having taken 50 kilos of heroin and close to $2 million in cash from that same haul. Just because these detectives are crooks doesn't mean they can't police their turf. In fact, the task force handles quotidian misdeeds like regular gentlemen, and the way Malone deflects an all-out gang war is genius. Like so much else in the story (the Christmas envelopes of cash, the payoffs to the wiseguys, even the turkey giveaway), Malone's methods are thoughtful and inventive. They just aren't entirely lawful. ST. denis, the picturesque town in the French countryside where Martin Walker sets his enchanting mysteries, is blessed, and occasionally burdened, with a history that dates back to the early cave dwellers. In THE TEMPLARS' LAST SECRET (Knopf, $25.95), an unknown woman falls to her death while scaling the cliff to Commarque, a medieval fortress that was once a stronghold of the Knights Templar. Bruno Courreges, the chief of police, learns that the last master of this very rich order was burned at the stake in Paris in 1314, and legend has it that there's buried treasure at this local landmark. Meanwhile, excavations in search of prehistoric caves continue at the base of the cliff, and a medieval mystery will gum up the works at the dig, where a Venus fertility figurine has recently been found. It's Bruno's firm belief that food is "a village policeman's secret weapon," but with so much going on, he's hard-pressed for time to cook one of his fabulous feasts. As the current owner of Commarque observes, "Sometimes I wonder if we don't have too much history here in France." if you can pass up a mystery with a bookstore in the title, you have great willpower. Personally, I couldn't resist Matthew Sullivan's MIDNIGHT AT THE BRIGHT IDEAS BOOKSTORE (Scribner, $26), an appealing first novel featuring Lydia Smith, a kindhearted Denver bookseller with a soft spot for the homeless men who haunt the aisles. (BookFrogs, she calls them, since to her they resemble Jeremy Fisher, Beatrix Potter's lanky frog.) But Lydia's favorite, a "shattered young man," hangs himself in an alcove and leaves her all his earthly possessions, including a crate of books defaced in a way that sends her a message about himself - and her own horrid history The oddball characters and layered plot make this puzzle mystery both charming and challenging. Keep an eye out for a childhood friend of Lydia's who went to their fourth-grade Halloween party in a red dress with a fake knife in her chest, declaring that she was "Annie, only stabbed." Marilyn STASIO has covered, crime fiction for the Book Review since 1988. Her column appears twice a month.
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 25, 2017]
Review by Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Walker's Bruno, chief of police, mysteries are like the ideal European vacation: loaded with inspiring sights, good companions, and memorable meals (and there's murder, too!). Spend time with Bruno, his dog, horses, friends, and farmhouse in the tiny village of St. Denis in the Périgord region of rural France, and you feel as if your own life has been enhanced. The latest Bruno novel, the tenth in the series, serves up the usual heady flavors of mystery and setting but also explores the archaeology of the region, extending back to the famous Lascaux cave paintings. What drives the story into the past, including the history of the Knights Templar, is the discovery of the body of an archaeologist, a pregnant woman who either fell or was pushed from a wall of an ancient, ruined chateau. Bruno's investigation is aided and enlivened by the participation of a young Haitian magistrate from Paris. Together, they discover that the woman who died trying to scale the wall was probably murdered as she sought a religious artifact tied to the Middle East, the possession of which could have deadly repercussions. The latest Bruno features a complicated but enjoyable plot, a rich knowledge of archaeology, and the reliable pleasures of Bruno's region, including scenery, Bergerac wine, and knockout dining (Bruno himself will remind some readers of Robert B. Parker's Spenser, in his attentive cooking). Another feast for mystery and food lovers.--Fletcher, Connie Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In Walker's deftly plotted 10th mystery starring St. Denis, France, police chief Benoît "Bruno" Courrèges (after 2016's Fatal Pursuit), the small-town cop with a knack for stumbling onto big cases rolls into action when an unidentified woman takes a fatal fall from the ramparts of an ancient fortress, apparently before she could finish painting graffiti there that may relate to the medieval order of the Knights Templar. With a Ministry of Justice observer in tow, Bruno displays brisk competence and amiable perceptiveness as he investigates what becomes a murder case. Prehistoric cave art, Crusader tales, and modern Islamic terrorism all figure into the crime, with each getting expository treatment that can be a little labored, even when written crisply. Series fans will happily note Walker's customary appreciation for local wines, food, and culture, and his bemused explanations of French bureaucracy, though some readers may find the novel's climax, by the prehistoric painted caves of Lascaux, slightly rushed and overheated. Agent: Stephanie Cabot, Felicity Bryan Associates. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
In southwestern France, a woman's body is found at the foot of a cliff near the Château de Commarque; underneath the former Knights Templar stronghold lies a labyrinth of prehistoric caves. In his tenth outing (after Fatal Pursuit), St. Denis police chief Bruno, and young Amélie, who's shadowing Bruno's community policing, discover the dead woman is an archaeologist who was tracking a mysterious religious artifact that could aggravate tensions among Middle Eastern factions. When terrorists emerge to threaten the safety and sanctity of St. Denis, Bruno must join forces with both new and old friends to protect his community. VERDICT Bruno and the idyllic town of St. Denis continue to gain popularity with readers, thanks to the combination of a likable character, a vivid sense of place, and detailed descriptions of France's Dordogne region. Fans of Louise Penny's "Armand Gamache" series and Fred Vargas's "Commissaire Adamsberg" mysteries will enjoy another view of policing in a French community.-ACT © Copyright 2017. 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
The good life in the Prigord countryside is menaced by pedophiles, terrorists, torturers, and a visiting magistrate from Paris.Does he need to buy a new suit for the wedding of his 60-something friends, museum curator Dr. Clothilde Daumier and archaeological consultant professor Horst Vogelstern? St. Denis Police Chief Bruno Courrges (Fatal Pursuit, 2016, etc.) only wishes that were his biggest problem. But the newspapers are full of reports alleging sex abuse at the Mussidan orphanage 30 years ago, based on testimony obtained under hypnosis by psychologist Marie-France Duteiller, though the evidence has been questioned by Chief Detective Jean-Jacques Jalipeau. A more urgent report comes from the Chteau Commarque, a magnificent but half-ruined structure on the road to Sarlat. The body of an unidentified woman has been found beneath a wall she seems to have fallen from in the course of painting the letters I, F, T, I. The discovery that the dead woman is Leah Ben-Ari, an Israeli born in France as Leah Wolinsky, and the theory that her graffiti refers to the Testament of Iftikhar, a centuries-old document that purports to expose Muslim claims to Jerusalem as fraudulent, only deepens the mystery. Why had Leah come to this out-of-the-way place to make her statement? How to parse her long relationship with Palestinian Sad al-Husayni, and how is she connected to the terrorists who tortured noted Templar scholar Auguste Dumesnil to the point of death? What effect will the suicide of an elderly nun who pressed the police to investigate at the orphanage have on the Mussidan case? And how will Bruno ever find time in the midst of this swirling intrigue to wine and dine lovely Guadeloupe-born magistrate Amlie Plessis, who, sent by the Ministry of Justice to look over his shoulder, recommends that he set up a Facebook account? Just the thing for readers hungry for a banquet of epicurean pleasures, ancient history, international terrorism, and holy matrimony. More timid souls who crave a less incongruous mix may want to wait till next year. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.