Monday, July 6, 2020

Review of "A Better Man: A Chief Inspector Armand Gamache Mystery" by Louise Penny




In this 15th book in the 'Chief Inspector Armand Gamache' series, the detective is once again set to become Head of Homicide of the Sûreté du Québec. The book can be read as a standalone but familiarity with the series is a plus.

*****



Armand Gamache, who resides in the Canadian village of Three Pines, was Chief Superintendent of the Sûreté du Québec until he engineered a risky drug operation. The plan succeeded, but at a terrible cost. As a result, self-serving politicians suspended Gamache for 9 months, demoted him to Chief Inspector, and offered him his old job as Head of Homicide.



It was assumed that Gamache would resign rather than submit to this 'humiliation' but no such luck for the vile politicos. Gamache happily accepts the offer to be Head of Homicide, and as the book opens, it's his first day back at work.

As it happens Gamache's former mentee (and current son-in-law) Jean-Guy Beauvoir is currently Head of Homicide, but Jean-Guy and his family are moving to Paris in two weeks. Until then, Beauvoir and Gamache will run the department together.



As Gamache returns to work, vicious Twitter trolls gleefully put him down, call him filthy names, and practically call for his assassination. And Gamache isn't the only resident of Three Pines under attack. Tweets about artist Clara Morrow, who recently produced a set of (unpopular) miniatures, are saying she's a no-talent hack whose previous success was a fluke.



When Gamache arrives at the Sûreté for his first day of work, he knows the homicide detectives have been reading the hate-filled Tweets, and joking and gossiping about him, but he brushes it off.



And it's a good thing, because a new case comes in almost immediately. During the morning briefing, Agent Lisette Cloutier's cell phone buzzes away with texts from her friend Homer Godin, saying his pregnant married daughter Vivienne is missing.



Gamache and Cloutier hurry over to Vivienne's house to look around and interview her husband Carl Tracey. It's immediately obvious that dirty, disheveled, foul-mouthed Tracey is a nasty scumbag who abuses his wife, and the detectives suspect he did SOMETHING to Vivienne, though it's not clear what.



While the detectives are searching for Vivienne, an environmental crisis is developing. Spring thaws and moving chunks of ice are filling the rivers to record high levels, and massive floods will be the inevitable result.



Drastic measures are needed, and Gamache's suggestions are quickly lampooned by the politicians who want to take him down. Regardless, government agencies and private citizens take measures to deal with the water situation, like dynamiting dams and arranging sandbags.

The investigation of Vivienne's disappearance turns up additional persons of interest, and the case has overtones of adultery, unrequited love, and domestic violence. Still, Gamache and his colleagues are almost certain that Carl Tracey harmed his wife, and a good part of the book follows their maneuvers as they try to prove it.

In the meantime, Vivienne's father Homer Godin threatens to kill Tracey himself. Gamache is anxious to keep this from happening, so he invites Homer to Three Pines, hoping his wife Reign-Marie will look after the grieving father and keep him calm.



This doesn't quite work out, and at one point Homer is arrested while Carl Tracey walks free - which is the height of irony. 😏

Meanwhile, Clara Morrow sadly laments her current reputation as an artist who's lost her spark, and wonders what to do next. Some Three Pines residents try to cheer up and/or help Clara, including innkeepers Olivier and Gabri;



bookstore owner Myrna;



and irascible, dirty-mouth poet Ruth.



Their efforts have mixed results, but do introduce us to a quirky African American art critic from Brooklyn, called Domenica Oddly.



It's always entertaining to visit the locals in Three Pines, including Ruth's duck Rosa, whose 'quack quack quack' sounds a lot like 'f**k, f**k, f**k.' (Like mother, like daughter. LOL)


Vivienne's case is resolved eventually, but not before lives are endangered and surprises come to light.

For me, this is only a moderately successful addition to the Armand Gamache series. It's more of a legal procedural than a typical mystery, and the legal wrangling is more drawn out than necessary.

On a personal note, I'm tired of the theme of corrupt Sûreté officials, dirty politicians, and (now) disgusting Twitter trolls out to get Gamache. The 'war' against Gamache has been going on for years and years (in Penny's books) and it's time to put it to rest in my opinion.

That said, many reviewers love this book, and fans of the series would probably enjoy it.

Rating: 3 stars

Saturday, July 4, 2020

Review of "The Living Dead: A New Novel" by George A. Romero and Daniel Kraus




'Night of the Living Dead', a 1968 film written and directed by George Romero, is the progenitor of the ubiquitous zombie movies, TV shows, and literature so popular in modern culture.


Writer and director George Romero


Poster for the 1968 movie 'Night of the Living Dead'

After making a series of zombie flicks Romero embarked on a zombie novel, but died before it was completed. The mantle was picked up by best-selling author Daniel Kraus, a zealous, long-time Romero fan..... and the result is this novel.


Author Daniel Kraus

This 650+ page book is far from a quickie blood and guts horror tome that could be adapted into a two-hour movie. Rather the story, a sobering depiction of 15 years of a zombie apocalypse, would require a mini-series to do it justice.

*****

The story: On the night of October 23, early in the 21st century, recently deceased humans stopped staying dead. Instead they rose up, and craving 'food', became cannibalistic creatures variously called ghouls, biters, white eyes, things, demons, etc. Soon enough, zombies became the favored term for the undead beings.

There are myriad characters in the story, but the narrative's five main protagonists are:

- Etta Hoffmann - a dowdy Washington DC statistician who works for a division of the Census Bureau called the 'American Model of Lineage and Dimensions' (AMLD) - a unit that tracks U.S. births and deaths. Hoffman, who's probably on the autism spectrum, can't bear to be touched and "has always been AMLD's oddball.....full of leaden, blank-stare interactions."



- Charlene (Charlie) Rutkowski - a physician apprentice to San Diego's assistant medical examiner. Charlie, a shapely woman with "big, country-western blond hair and the swagger to go with it....is as out of place in a morgue as a cadaver would be at the Grand Ole Opry." Yet Charlie enjoys her job and is good at it.



- Greer Morgan - an African-American high school student who lives in a shabby trailer park in Bulk, Missouri. Greer often skives off school, and her teachers think of her as "recalcitrant, argumentative, lazy, and sluttish." Greer is clever though, and good with a bow and arrow. She likes "the creaking resistance of the wood. The smarting slap of the string against her armguard."



- Master Chief Boatswain's Mate Karl Nishimura - a gay, married, Japanese-American master helmsman aboard the aircraft carrier USS Olympia. Straitlaced Karl has earned the nickname 'Saint Karl', and his "studied hesitation has been dubbed the Nishimura Delay." Karl gives every question sober consideration, "whether asked about enemy attacks in the Persian Gulf or which brand of toothpaste to buy from the ship store."



- Chuck Corso - a barely capable but handsome news anchor - known as 'the Face' - on Atlanta's WWN all news network. The WWN news director says of the anchorman, "You may not think Chuck Corso is the crispiest chip in the bag. But goddamn it if he's not loyal. Goddamn it if he's not a team player. Which is something the rest of us should value a little more."



*****

In the lengthy first section of the book, we follow these five characters - and some of their co-workers, family members, friends, neighbors, etc. - as the zombie apocalypse begins. Like everyone else in the world, Hoffmann, Rutkowski, Morgan, Nishimura, and Corso are bewildered at first, with no idea of what's happening. It takes a while until the protagonists comprehend that the dead are reviving, with BIG appetites.



Once the main characters understand the enormity of the catastrophe they step up to the plate, using their particular skills to deal with the unfolding calamity.



As might be expected, psychotic and self-serving humans join the zombies in raising hell, and there are bloody fights, swinging axes, racing bullets, flying arrows, vicious bites, sexual assault, adroit maneuvers, and all manner of murder and mayhem. There also some spots of romance, which are touching and tender.





Eventually all the story lines converge, and we learn what happened between the beginning of the zombie apocalypse and a time fifteen years later, when a small colony of humans is assembled in Toronto, Canada. The intervening period had PLENTY of action, which is wisely presented in abbreviated form (or the book would be 3.000 pages long).





The entire book, including the climax, is a cautionary tale about human behavior. People's greed, violence, and indifference to the environment have dire consequences in the story, which is something people in the real world would do well to understand. (In my view, the poor stewardship humans exhibited on planet Earth resulted in the Coronavirus pandemic, and there are probably more catastrophes coming down the pike.)

In a unique aspect of the story, we see passages from the zombie point of view. We come to know the 'thoughts' of several zombies, especially an extremely decomposed zombie called the Chief.



It turns out zombies sometimes exhibit purposeful behavior and they have a hive mentality, something like the Borg in Star Trek (though the Borg are much smarter).

I got his book from Netgalley, and since it's on my Kindle, I didn't realize at first how long it is. I thought I was nearing the end of the story when I realized I was only at the 35% mark. It says something that I kept right on going, until I finished the entire manuscript AND the long postscript by co-author Daniel Kraus, which is a must read in my opinion.

I'd highly recommend the book to fans of zombie literature and films.

Thanks to Netgalley, the authors (George Romero and Daniel Kraus), and the publisher (Tor Books) for a copy of the book. 


Rating: 4 stars

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Review of "Fatal Passions: A Chilling Collection Of True Cases Where Love Turned Lethal" by Adrian Vincent




This book, which contains 16 true tales about gruesome and unusual murders, is just the ticket for true crime aficionados. Each story gives a brief profile of the people involved in the events, describes what led up to the crime (or crimes), and relates what happened afterward - usually a trial followed by imprisonment or hanging. But some people got away with murder.

These curious cases were often 'the talk of the town' when they hit the news, usually because of the dastardly culprits. Some examples follow.

*****

"The Love Bungalow" (England, 1924): Patrick Mahon - a married father - kills his lover, Emily Kaye, and hides her body in a bedroom of a rented bungalow.


Patrick Mahon


Patrick Mahon's victim Emily Kaye


Cottage where Emily Kaye was murdered


Room where Emily Kaye was murdered

He then calmly brings his new lover, Ethel Duncan, to spend Easter weekend at the same love nest....with Emily decomposing in the bedroom next to theirs. Ewww!


Patrick Mahon's lover Ethel Duncan

*****

"The Cupboard Lover" (United States, 1922): Walburga Oesterreich - a large, passionate woman - is married to overbearing, sexually inadequate Fred Oesterreich.


Walburga Oesterreich


Walburga Oesterreich's husband Fred Oesterreich

To satisfy her sexual needs Walburga takes a 17-year-old lover, a slim lad named Otto Sanhuber. Otto is Walburga's paramour for the next 19 years, usually living hidden in the attic of the Oesterreichs' home.


Walburga Oesterreich's lover Otto Sanhuber


Room where Otto Sanhuber was hidden

Otto spends his days reading books and writing stories in his eyrie, coming out for whoopee when Fred is away....until Walburga gets rid of Fred for good. Apparently Fred was a pretty unobservant guy!

*****

"A Mother's Tender Concern" (United States, 1958): Middle-aged Elizabeth Duncan enlists the help of an elderly friend to get rid of Elizabeth's hated daughter-in-law, Olga Kupczyk.


Elizabeth Duncan

Elizabeth - who wants her son Frank all to herself - warned Olga not to marry Frank, but Olga (being pregnant) paid no attention.


An affectionate moment between Elizabeth Duncan and her son Frank


Murder victim Olga Kupczyk

So Elizabeth and her accomplice head to the rough part of town where Elizabeth hires a couple of Mexican youths - Luis Estrada Moya and Augustine Baldonado - to knock off Olga.


Hitmen Luis Estrada Moya (left) and Augustine Baldonado

The inexperienced 'hitmen' get the job done (badly) after which Elizabeth pays them $120 rather than the almost $3000 she promised. Turns out Elizabeth is a murderer AND a scammer!

*****

"The Sausage King" (United States, 1897): Adolph Luetgert, who owns a sausage factory, is hugely overweight and drinks too much beer.


Adolph Luetgert


Sausage factory

Adolph is married but he's a profligate philanderer, going so far as to put a bed in his office for his extramarital liaisons. Wanting to be rid of his wife, Louisa, Adolph murders her.


Adolph Luetgert's wife Louisa Luetgert

He then puts Louisa's body in a sausage vat and dissolves her with caustic chemicals. Luckily for sausage lovers Adolph is bankrupt and the factory is being shut down forever. Whew!

*****

"A Brickbat For Mrs. Parker" (New Zealand, 1954): Two 15-year-old schoolgirls, Pauline Parker and Juliet Hulme, spend all their time together sharing secrets and fantasies.


Pauline Parker (left) and Juliet Hulme

The girls' parents disapprove of the relationship, which they find worrisome. Dr. Henry Hulme decides to move to South Africa with his daughter - who wants her buddy Pauline to come along. However, Mrs. Parker (Pauline's mother ) squashes that idea. So the girls invite Mrs. Parker out for a walk and smash her skull in with a brick - a feat that takes 45 blows.


Path where Pauline and Juliet walked with Mrs. Parker

The girls are convicted but spend only five years in prison because of their youth.


Pauline Parker (left) and Juliet Hulme

(Note: The book doesn't mention this but Juliet Hulme changed her name to Anne Perry and became a famous novelist. Perry is the author of the very popular 'Thomas Pitt' and 'William Monk' mysteries as well as other books. Some people refuse to read Perry's books because of her past....but I like them!)


Novelist Anne Perry (the former Juliet Hulme)

*****

"A Passion For Poison" (United States, 1954): Nannie Doss loves "True Romance" magazine and - inspired by the love stories - longs to find the perfect mate.


Nannie Doss

So Nannie marries one man after another, fatally poisoning each husband when he doesn't live up to her expectations. Nannie doesn't confine her murder spree to husbands though. By the time Nannie is arrested she has killed eleven people, including four husbands, her mother, her two sisters - and according to Wikipedia: two children, a grandson, and a mother-in-law. It's a bad idea to eat at Nannie's house!


Nannie Doss with some family members

All the stories, which span a wide array of crimes and perpetrators, are engrossing. And it's interesting to see how the justice system has changed over the years. At one time a person could be tried and hanged within a matter of weeks. Now multiple appeals can delay executions for years.

I enjoyed the book and would recommend it to readers who like true crime stories.

Thanks to Netgalley, the author, and the publisher for a copy of the book.


Rating: 3.5 stars