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BLOOD, SALT, WATER

Mina never stints on the criminal conspiracy or gallows humor, but some of her nightmare landscapes are molded more firmly...

DI Alex Morrow, whose fifth case takes her away from the depressing world of Mina’s Glasgow (The Red Road, 2014, etc.), finds life just as sordid on the shores of Loch Lomond, even for locals who aren’t getting murdered.

Since Roxanna Fuentecilla has already been a person of keen interest to Police Scotland, Morrow and DC Howard McGrain masquerade as Missing Persons officers so that they can snoop around when they call on Roxanna’s feckless live-in, Robin Walker, when Roxanna goes AWOL from the Glasgow home she shared with him. Nothing. Before she vanished, Roxanna used her cellphone to make one last call from a field outside Helensburgh. So Morrow and McGrain abandon their plans to fly to London to interview Roxanna’s highflying friend Maria Pinzón Arias and her husband, Juan, a Colombian attaché, and drive instead to Helensburgh, where they find her abandoned car but no further trace of its owner. Did the Spanish-born businesswoman, who always seemed to be reaching beyond the limits of the law for a big score, disappear on her own, or did she have violent assistance? While Morrow and her bosses are focusing on the missing woman, trouble arrives in other neighborhoods of Helensburgh. Someone burns down the Sailor’s Rest with its owner and his young daughter inside. Susan Grierson, a former Cub Scout leader who’s long been off in America, returns to raise all sorts of hell unbecoming a woman of her years. And a corpse that’s not Roxanna’s floats to the top of Loch Lomond. You’d wonder what else could possibly go wrong—but that’s a question Mina’s fans learned long ago never to ask.

Mina never stints on the criminal conspiracy or gallows humor, but some of her nightmare landscapes are molded more firmly than others. This one is sad and piercingly perceptive on small matters, but its big picture is less coherent.

Pub Date: Dec. 1, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-316-38054-6

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: Sept. 2, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2015

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GLASS HOUSES

A meticulously built mystery that follows a careful ascent toward a breaking point that will leave you breathless. It’s...

A dark, still figure, wearing long black robes and a hood, appears on the charming village green of Three Pines, a small Québec town; though at first it seems scary but harmless, it turns out to be something much more sinister.

The strange figure’s appearance coincides with a Halloween party at the local bistro, attended by the usual villagers but also four out-of-town guests. They are friends from the Université de Montréal who meet for a yearly reunion at the B&B in Three Pines. But this event actually happened months ago, and village resident Armand Gamache, now head of the Sûreté du Québec, is recounting the story from the witness stand in a courtroom suffering from oppressive summer heat. Gamache’s testimony becomes narrative, explaining how over the course of a few days the masked man grew into a fixture on the village green and morphed slowly into an omen. Gamache’s son-in-law and second-in-command, Jean-Guy Beauvoir, is asked to research the “dark thing’s” back story after one of the B&B guests, a journalist, mentions that the figure reminds him of story he did on an old Spanish tradition, that of the “debt collector.” It becomes clear, as Gamache relays the events leading up to murder, that “someone in the village had done something so horrific that a Conscience had been called.” But did the dark thing come for a villager or for one of their guests? Conscience is an overarching theme in Penny’s latest, seeping into the courtroom narrative as Gamache grapples with an enemy much larger than the dark thing, a war he took on as the new Chief Superintendent. His victory depends on the outcome, and the path, of this murder trial. While certain installments in Penny’s bestselling series take Gamache and his team to the far reaches of Québec, others build their tension not with a chase but instead in the act of keeping still—this is one such book. The tension has never been greater, and Gamache has sat for months waiting, and waiting, to act, with Conscience watching close by.

A meticulously built mystery that follows a careful ascent toward a breaking point that will leave you breathless. It’s Three Pines as you have never seen it before.

Pub Date: Aug. 29, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-250-06619-0

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Minotaur

Review Posted Online: June 5, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2017

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THE LAST DAYS OF NIGHT

The real-life events of the War of the Currents are exciting enough without embroidery. Still, readers who care more about...

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The great tech innovators of the '90s—that’s the 1890s—posture, plot, and even plan murder in this business book–turned–costume drama.

In the late 19th century, as Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse began wiring America for electricity, the titans locked horns over which electrical standard would prevail—AC or DC—in a struggle that came to be known as the “War of the Currents.” Novelist (The Sherlockian, 2010) and screenwriter (The Imitation Game, 2014) Moore chops up and rearranges a decade’s worth of events, squeezes them into two years, adds a few crimes, and serves the result up in a lively if unsurprising legal thriller. He tells the story from the point of view of Paul Cravath, the young attorney charged with defending Westinghouse against a potentially devastating patent suit brought by Edison. The key to winning, Cravath decides, is to get Nikola Tesla—the mad scientist to end all mad scientists—to invent a better lightbulb. Subtle this isn’t. A devastating lab fire! An inexplicable disappearance! A beautiful diva with a mysterious past! An attempted murder! An electrocuted dog! The characters mug and posture like actors in a silent film with dramatic captions: “She turned her glare to Westinghouse. 'You’re a co-conspirator in this villainy?' " Tesla, a Serbian, talks funny: “My accent is wide. Perhaps you have been noticing.” Eventually, inspired by the innovative business practices of Westinghouse and Edison, Cravath invents the 20th-century law firm and wins the hand of the lady.

The real-life events of the War of the Currents are exciting enough without embroidery. Still, readers who care more about atmosphere than accuracy will enjoy this breezy melodrama.

Pub Date: Aug. 16, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-812-98890-1

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Random House

Review Posted Online: July 2, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2016

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