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Tag Archives: crime

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The Burglar by Thomas Perry (2019) – BR00161 (2019) – 🐸🐸🐸⚪⚪

The PolyBlog
July 10 2019

Plot or Premise

Elle is an old-fashioned cat burglar with updated methods to tell her when houses with valuables are likely to be sitting empty. And she happily liberates them, feeling no remorse because the people are rich and she mainly takes things that are insured. Cash, jewels, guns. Which is all fun and games until she walks into the master bedroom at an empty house and finds three dead people sharing a bed after sharing each other.

What I Liked

The initial premise is strong, and watching her case, enter and rob houses is exciting. The initial twist is that the murders were accidentally recorded on a nearby camera, and Elle has to steal it to wipe the memory of her entrance. Her sense of ethics requires her to edit the footage to remove herself and then return the camera before the police find the bodies. But somehow the killers are looking for her, they know she was there and maybe saw too much.

What I Didn’t Like

Elle is supposed to be young, hip, and in the criminal underworld…and then spends more than half the book thinking the rough crowd in suits following her are probably cops, even after it is clear there is only one group looking for her, not two, and somebody killed her friend and the friend’s boyfriend. Everything about them screams mercenaries / ex-military even down to their office location, but nope, she keeps thinking they might be cops. Right up until she sees them shoot two people. A little slow on the uptake. In the middle of the “case”, a hit man comes after her, but rather than kill her as he is supposed to do, he plays with her for days trying to get her alone. Which he could have done by force ANY day and moved on. Whatever. She then turns into super sleuth to ferret out who they are, document all the evidence she’ll need to turn over to the police (i.e., days of surveillance and note-taking). At the end, the entire motive for everything is revealed in page after page of exposition, just dumped on the page by the bad guy which she conveniently records. And then it ends with only the barest of explanations of what happens to people, and her looking for work after getting out of the burglary game. Like maybe being a private investigator in a sequel, perhaps? While dating a new boyfriend she didn’t even really like. 

The Bottom Line

Love Perry but this is not his best work.

Posted in Lilypad-Library | Tagged action, Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, B&N, book review, Chapters, crime, e-book, fiction, Good Reads, Google, Kobo, Library Thing, mystery, new, Nook, novel, OPL, PolyWogg, prose, Reading Challenge, sleuth, stand-alone, suspense | Leave a reply

Unlucky in Law by Perri O’Shaugnessy (2004) – BR00159 (2019) – 🐸🐸🐸⚪⚪

The PolyBlog
April 19 2019

Plot or Premise

Nina Reilly gets a call from her old mentor to sit second-chair on a murder case that started with a grave robbery.

What I Liked

The story that the client tells is surprisingly plausible…he was hired to rob a grave, which he did. Except when he’s caught, the cops go back and check the grave he robbed and find out that there’s now a fresh body in it so he’s charged with murder. It’s a simple twist but there is little doubt through the case that he’s not guilty and that there is “something else” going on. And just to complicate things, her mentor is basically dumping the case on her, has done almost no prep, is showing early signs of dementia, and the PI he hired did almost no work either. Nina has her hands full just as Paul proposes.

What I Didn’t Like

There are two threads running through the story that are less than optimal. First, the premise of the mystery is that the dead body that is stolen is tied to a society of Russian conspiracy theorists who suspect he was tied to the Romanoffs (hey, he’s Russian, he must be, right?). This is about the fourth book I’ve read in the last two years that threw in a Romanoff angle, and it’s not handled that well, although most don’t anyway. Second, the marriage proposal from Paul leads to a bunch of emotional drama and angst, and detracts heavily from the story. It reads more like a bad romance novel than a mystery.

The Bottom Line

Good story with the mentor, but the other stuff detracts.

Posted in Lilypad-Library | Tagged Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, B&N, book review, Chapters, crime, detective, e-book, fiction, Good Reads, Google, Kobo, legal, library, Library Thing, mystery, Nook, novel, OPL, PolyWogg, prose, Reading Challenge, Reilly, series, sleuth | Leave a reply

The Bookwoman’s Last Fling by John Dunning (2006) – BR00157 (2019) – 🐸🐸🐸⚪⚪

The PolyBlog
April 8 2019

Plot or Premise

Janeway is hired to appraise part of an estate, a collection of first-edition children’s books amassed by a woman who died 20 years before. Now the husband has died, and his children want to distribute the money, but first, everything has to be totalled up.

What I Liked

Early on, the case has some interesting bits including the discovery that someone has been slowly replacing some of the books with cheap duplicates, but not in any strategic way. Someone who knows something about value, but skipping some obvious choice books. It doesn’t take much for a daughter who also loves books to want Janeway to figure out if the mother was killed, and if so, by who. A bunch of brothers run around, and they’re all a little bit crazy, but who is the craziest? The dead husband was a horseman, and Janeway works for one of the brothers as a stable boy / horse walker to get in with the horse crowd. Reads a lot like a vintage Dick Francis book.

What I Didn’t Like

As with most Janeway novels, there are two mysteries interwoven — the death of the young wife 20 years before and the theft of the children’s books. Unfortunately, the story spends a LONG time with the horse crowd with not much happening. It read more like a personal diary than a mystery novel. Huge stretches of time with NOTHING RELEVANT to the mystery. Equally, neither of the mysteries are unraveled in an interesting way, just plodding in one case and almost happenstance in another. And one ending is so obvious yet it takes forever to get there. 

The Bottom Line

Slow book, too much about horses and not enough detecting.

Posted in Lilypad-Library | Tagged action, Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, B&N, book review, Chapters, crime, detective, Dunning, fiction, Good Reads, Google, Kobo, Library Thing, mystery, new, Nook, novel, OPL, paperback, police, PolyWogg, prose, Reading Challenge, series, sleuth | Leave a reply

The Sign of the Book by John Dunning (2005) – BR00156 (2019) – 🐸🐸🐸⚪⚪

The PolyBlog
April 8 2019

Plot or Premise

Cliff’s friend Erin asks him to go help an old girlfriend charged with murdering her husband. It seems like a strange request considering the woman stole Erin’s boyfriend aka the dead guy, and they haven’t spoken since.

What I Liked

I am a bit of a sucker for stories involving unresolved emotional issues, and the story has a bit of that rolling around in it. There are even BOOKS, gasp, BOOKS involved in the story (shocker, right? The guy had a lot of high-end signed copies of middle-of-the-road scarce books, too many for a small-timer). So of course there are two stories — the death of the husband and the mystery of the signed books.

What I Didn’t Like

There is a bent local sheriff’s deputy who is almost a caricature at times, and the sub-story of the autistic boy is handled a little manipulatively (shows his grandparents are evil, for no real purpose — they didn’t need to be in the story at all — and two other kids that are referred to but hardly seen) plus he isn’t just autistic, more like Rain Man with drawing, of course. And the ending for the murder mystery is written taut, and supposedly riveting, but I just found it ridiculous. 

The Bottom Line

Good book mystery, poor murder mystery.

Posted in Lilypad-Library | Tagged action, Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, B&N, book review, Chapters, crime, detective, Dunning, fiction, Good Reads, Google, Kobo, Library Thing, mystery, new, Nook, novel, paperback, police, PolyWogg, prose, Reading Challenge, series, sleuth | Leave a reply

The Bookman’s Promise by John Dunning (2004) – BR00155 (2019) – 🐸🐸🐸🐸⚪

The PolyBlog
April 7 2019

Plot or Premise

Janeway decides to use his finder’s fee from the Grayson affair (book #2) to buy one amazing book, paying almost $30K for it at auction. The mystery is not about the origins of the book itself, but more about the author himself, an explorer named Richard Burton (not the actor).

What I Liked

After buying the book, Janeway is contacted by an old woman who claims the book was hers once upon a time and subsequently stolen. Janeway believes her, and involves some other people in the story, one of whom ends up dead. There’s a killer chasing the book and it leads all the way to the same places the explorer visited in the American South before the US Civil War. Seedy bookdealers, a biographer with a familiar monkey on his back, a family friend with a similar but slightly different monkey. Everyone wants the book, the history, the story, and to own a piece of history.

What I Didn’t Like

There is a lot of exposition in the story. Some of it comes from a woman who did research using hypnosis and tape recordings to recover lost memories, and while it works as a plot device, it could have just as easily been done earlier in the woman’s life and without as much page time. In addition, there is a flashback to the people in the Burton story (just before the US Civil War), which happens about the 40% mark and runs about 10-15% of the novel. It’s engaging in the first person but makes for another really long exposition. Finally, the action scene at the end seems more like a cheap action movie, and it takes a LONG time to get to the actual action.

The Bottom Line

Good mystery, but a lot of exposition and a slow ending.

Posted in Lilypad-Library | Tagged action, Amazon.ca, Amazon.com, B&N, book review, Chapters, crime, detective, Dunning, fiction, Good Reads, Google, Kobo, Library Thing, mystery, new, Nook, novel, paperback, police, PolyWogg, prose, Reading Challenge, series, sleuth | Leave a reply

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