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Archive for January, 2023

Fantasy Review – The Angel of the Crows

Friday, January 13th, 2023

The Angel of the Crows by Katherine Addison

Review by Cyndi J. (cyndij)

In 1893, a British army doctor is wounded in Afghanistan. His leg injury is bad enough that he’s discharged and goes back to London. Unemployed, and with his pension unable to provide enough for both food and rent, he is in search of a flatmate.

If this all sounds familiar, I’m delighted to tell you that yes, it is familiar. And yet, not quite. Instead of Dr. Watson and Sherlock Holmes, we have Dr. Doyle (get it?) and Crow, the Angel of London.

In this London, supernatural beings are everywhere. Vampires, werewolves, and angels all walking around with humans. Especially angels. Not the Christian heavenly kind, these angels do have wings, but are beings mostly tied to a place. They need habitations – a place to belong to – or they become Nameless and just drift about.  Sometimes, horrifyingly, they Fall and become evil killers. And then there is Crow, the Angel of London. He is an oddity among the Angels, who calls all of London his place; an angel who investigates crimes and calls himself a “consulting detective”.  Most of the other Angels don’t trust him, as he doesn’t have a habitation but is not Nameless nor is he Fallen.  But he needs a flatmate.

Addison takes a number of very familiar Holmes stories and gives them just a little twist.  A Study in Scarlet is almost scene for scene. The others have a few more differences but any Holmes fan will recognize them instantly. Frankly I would have liked a bit more surprise, considering the new milieu. What I thought was really fun are the bombs she drops about Doyle and Crow.  Lestrade is still there and much the same. Moriarty of course makes an entrance but is not (maybe not yet) the enemy of the great detective. It’s also the same time period as Jack the Ripper, and the two get involved in that investigation as well.

Addison says in an afterword that this novel grew out of “wingfic”, fan fiction where familiar characters have wings. (I read a lot, but I don’t read fan fiction, and never even heard of wingfic)  There are gruesome bits. There are more than a few funny bits. The pacing…maybe just a tad slow, with the Holmes stories inserted into the Ripper framework. Doyle and Crow are both well-portrayed, and even though it’s Doyle’s POV we see, I thought Crow really stole the book. But Doyle is not the bumbling Watson from the original books and he plays a big role. I would have loved more about the angels themselves and how this society works. Again, I also would have liked bigger differences from the original canon, because I knew whodunit and why,  but these worked fine. If you have never read any of the original Holmes stories, they will be even better for you.

I don’t currently see signs that this is going to be a series, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it goes that way.

 

 

True Crime Review – The Doctor, the Hitman and the Motorcycle Gang

Thursday, January 12th, 2023

The Doctor, the Hitman, and the Motorcycle Gang: The True Story of One of New Jersey’s Most Notorious Murder for Hire Plots by Annie McCormick

Review by jjares

New Jersey locals woke up to the news that one of their famous radio personalities had been murdered in her home. Vivacious April Kauffman, an advocate for veteran’s issues, was found dead on the floor of her bedroom, shot twice. However, this appalling crime took six years to unravel in court. This turned out to be one of New Jersey’s most notorious murder-for-hire cases. Before it was all over, a highly-regarded physician and a motorcycle gang were brought down for April’s death.
It takes a bit to get involved in this story. The author sets the stage by explaining April Kaufmann’s life and how she got to the point where someone decided she needed to die. In the beginning, it looked like there could not be a more unlikely murder victim. April had it all; she was widely known for her philanthropic activities. She didn’t just move mountains for veterans; she assisted anyone who asked her for help. Yet, on May 10, 2012, locals learned that this famous advocate for many causes was dead.
After a whirlwind courtship, Dr. James Kauffman and April married. April was so caught up in Jim’s story about his military service in Vietnam that she turned her radio program’s focus to veteran issues. However, after some time, April learned that Jim was never a green beret in the service; April was devastated.
Due to how Jim’s story affected her, she had lined up many activities to help veterans. She knew that when veterans found out that Jim’s story was a fraud, she would be smeared with the same lies. At about the same time, April found out that her husband ran a pill mill through his office, using a local unit of the national Pagan Motorcycle Gang.
The doctor was clever; the paperwork in the office showed that these were actual patients with real needs for pain medications. He gave the patients scripts for 120 OxyCodone narcotic prescriptions, which the motorcycle gang members resold for $20+ per pill. They made so much money that the doctor added a lab scam. When April started to notice, she told Jim she wanted a divorce. Jim told her she wasn’t getting half of his “empire.” He would kill  April’s daughter (from another marriage) if April didn’t drop the divorce idea immediately. Unfortunately, April didn’t understand the depth of Jim’s rage. Dr. Kauffman was also angry that people called him Mr. April.
Most of the book is about how April got justice; it took six years. Because the Pagan Motorcycle Gang is noted for their deep-seated animus against betraying each other, it was hard to crack their bond to get anyone to talk. Finally, it became known that the doctor offered $50,000 and unlimited OxyCodone prescriptions to murder his wife.
Many people will be aware of this story because of ABC’s 20/20 investigative program. The author of this book takes the time to give the backstory of the main characters involved. She also gives credit to Atlantic County Prosecutor Damon Tyner. He reignited the case once he was elected. This is a fascinating, multi-layered story about a tragedy in New Jersey.

 

 

Mystery Monday Review – The Haunted Monastery

Monday, January 9th, 2023

The Haunted Monastery by Robert van Gulik

Review by Matt B. (BuffaloSavage)

 

Judge Dee is travelling back to his headquarters in Han-yuan with his three wives and his faithful assistant Tao Gan when sudden autumn storms compel the party to shelter in a Taoist monastery.

He is exhausted but eager to gather background information on the recent deaths of three young women in the monastery. However, as an official in a Confucian bureaucracy where observing etiquette is a big deal, he is forced to conduct hypocritically polite conversations, watch a mystery play and participate in a banquet of macrobiotic fare he can’t stomach.

Adding to the comedy is a poet who writes rude verses about the abbot and a vaudeville girl whose bear loves only her and is dangerously crabby with everybody else. In a funny scene with another entertainer woman, she asks Judge Dee for his advice on how to deal with Sapphic advances to which our judge gives advice more tolerant than we’d expect from a magistrate in the 670s.

More sobering, however, through a window, he sees a one-armed woman being assaulted by a soldier. And he notes an odd relationship among a young woman who wants to become a nun, her chaperone, and her brother. In a story that takes place in the course of only one night, Judge Dee is pitted against the most dangerous kind of crook: the smart guy who’s gone off the rails by thinking the rules don’t apply to him.

The perp is pretty easy to figure out in this story that depends mainly character and setting for its interest. I wonder, too, if Taoist monks in fact wore cowls, attended matins, or got promoted to be almoners and priors. At about 270 pages, the length is just right, with a fast last third of the mystery making up for the rather plodding first two-thirds.

 

 

 

Non-Fiction Review – The Great Penguin Rescue

Saturday, January 7th, 2023

The Great Penguin Rescue: 40,000 Penguins, a Devastating Oil Spill, and the Inspiring Story of the World’s Largest Animal Rescue  by Dyan deNapoli

Review by jjares

 

Disaster struck the coast of Cape Town, South Africa, on June 23, 2000, when the ship MV Treasure foundered. By pouring 1,300 tons of oil into the ocean and shore, the spill contaminated the habitat of 41% of the world’s population of African penguins. This is how local and world conservationists called for volunteers to save the oiled and traumatized penguins. Incredibly, over 12,500 volunteers came to South Africa, hoping to save the penguins.

 

This is the first-person story of Dyan deNapoli and the rush to save the penguins. Sometimes Dyan veered off the path to tell her own story, but generally, she told the daily activities of the work done. She also gave credit to grocery stores (who created imaginative ways to donate money to the penguin work), restaurants (donating prepared foods for the workers), hotels (low-cost rooms), and airlines (half-price flights). It showed that the world could step up and help the penguins and workers in many ways.

 

The description of the first day, when the workers saw the extent of their task, is particularly poignant. Penguins usually are constantly “talking” or moving around. The 19,000 oiled birds were silent and stunned (in one place). Twenty-thousand other penguins (that had not been oiled) had to be moved to new habitats, that were not oil-drenched.  The author’s descriptions of how hard it was to get the birds de-oiled were stunning. They worked 16-hour days for weeks without stopping for meals. She comments that everyone lost 10 – 20 lbs.

 

A surprise was learning that the birds needed more than to be de-oiled. They also needed to be fed (an arduous task), tested and medicated, watched for illnesses, checked that the penguin’s feathers regained their waterproof status, reintroduced to swimming, and so much more. Then, the penguins were tagged and transported to the water, so the penguins could swim to their habitat.

 

With a few exceptions, this was an enthralling story of people coming together to save a species from extinction. The fact that they cleaned and rehabilitated 19,000 birds in less than three months is a tribute to the honest concern of thousands of people working together. I learned so much about these birds, their biology, habitat, and the studies done after the cleaning of the birds. It was amazing how well the penguins returned to life as usual and continued to breed new chicks.

 

There have been many studies done about how the birds were impacted. The best result was that, when another oil slick came to the same area, the penguins were less traumatized and responded as if they remembered the human’s intervention before. The story of how many days the penguins took to swim back to their breeding grounds was moving.

 

This is an inspiring story of how people can gather together and do something remarkable, if only they try. — 4.5 stars

 

Fantasy Review – Just One Damned Thing After Another

Friday, January 6th, 2023

Just One Damned Thing After Another by Jodi Taylor

Review by Cyndi J. (cyndij)

 

JUST ONE DAMNED THING AFTER ANOTHER by Jodi Taylor is the first in a long series; as I write this there are about 14 entries.  This start is a very fun time-travel fantasy, with a minimum of technical jargon and a maximum of action-filled trips into the past.

Dr. Madeline Maxwell (Max) an historian who’s more than a little prickly, not inclined to trust authority, but very smart,  is recruited by her old professor to interview at St. Mary’s which is dedicated to historical research. But as they walk through on the way to her interview, Mrs De Winter repeats to everyone they see that Max “hasn’t had the interview yet”. Max is understandably confused. Why would that be so important? Why does a historical research university have – wait, blast doors? What’s going on?

It turns out time travel is a real thing, and that’s what St Mary’s does. And it’s a secret, of course. It’s understood that you can’t change the past. History won’t let you – should someone attempt, even inadvertently, to make a change that affects the future, history will drop a convenient rock on you.  At any rate, you can’t make changes and you can’t bring anything back. (Right. They always say that.) But Max is in, she’s hooked, no one is getting her out of there. This is a dream come true and she will do anything to be part of it.

It’s very dangerous though, there’s a wall of  honor for the historicans who have lost their lives on missions. As the book opens, St Mary’s is pretty short on historians as there have been a number of deaths, oops…mishaps. Out of each new class, only about 40% graduate, but Max is determined she’s going to be there. As it turns out – of course – there is more danger behind St Mary’s walls than she knows. Not everyone wants it to succeed.

Taylor has done a wonderful job building this world, I can see it in my mind’s eye. It moves at a breakneck pace. Max is a very engaging protagonist and the book is told from her POV. Not all the characters feel completely 3D, but most are good. Don’t think too much about the time-travel paradoxes, that’s not the point here, and Taylor winks at them in passing. There’s time travel, and romance and love and betrayal, and blasters, and dinosaurs! Very entertaining and I have already put the next on my reading list.

 

 

 

Mystery Monday Review – Death by Water

Monday, January 2nd, 2023

Death by Water aka Appleby at Allington by Michael Innes

Review by Matt B. (BuffaloSavage)

 

This 1968 whodunnit is as light as a feather. It finds series hero Sir John Appleby in retirement from Scotland Yard. He and his sculptor wife Judith trade witty observations, as if Nick and Nora Charles had aged into not drinking anything stronger than sherry.

Sir John has an odd dinner with a new neighbor who presses him to examine the elaborate electrical system that ran a recent outdoor lightshow on the grounds of the estate. This is 1968, recall, when psychedelic lightshows were all the rage for both the cheery squares and tripping hippies. Besides, who doesn’t like pretty lights?

Anyway, in the operations center they discover a corpse. This, however, does not stop the operations center turned crime scene from being dismantled for a charity fete to be held on the same grounds the next day. Nothing stops the traditional village festival on the estate, after all, lest the meaning of “this green and sceptered isle” be lost forever.

The action focuses on the-pain-in-the-neck family of the owner and unfolding of startling incidents. The families are genially satirized as athletic parents who are philistines worried that their bookworm children will develop imaginations and independent ways of thought. Innes is a writer for unapologetically bookish people.

Readers that like Patricia Highsmith, Nicholas Blake, Cyril Hare, and Josephine Tey will like the intelligent, deftly written, and short mysteries of Michael Innes. New readers of Innes would do better to test the early ones such as Hamlet, Revenge!, Lament for a Maker or Stop Press; fans of Innes – hardcore readers – will like this lesser, late-career work regardless.