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SUMMER OF THE DEAD

In her powerfully written third appearance, Bell (Bitter River, 2013, etc.) emerges as a compelling heroine with an...

Even though her life seems to be spiraling out of control, Bell Elkins still has to care for her family members and do her job as a West Virginia county prosecutor.

Bell’s sister, Shirley, has finally been released from prison after serving a long sentence for killing their father before he got around to molesting Bell. Unfortunately, Shirley, who’s living with Bell, has been overwhelmed by alcohol-fueled attacks of rage against Bell, who’s eagerly awaiting the arrival of her daughter, Carla, for the summer. Bell is furious when her ex-husband arranges for Carla to spend the summer as an intern in London and has trouble controlling her rage when a man who’s molesting his stepchildren is freed because none of them will testify. Bell’s hometown of Acker’s Gap is dirt-poor and beset by drug and alcohol use and high unemployment. When two people are brutally murdered, Bell and Sheriff Nick Fogelsong have little to go on. The big draw for the summer is the arrival of former governor Riley Jessup, a native son who’s donating an MRI machine to the new hospital. After growing up poor, he went into politics and made a fortune, but all his money can't save his beloved, sickly grandson. In the meantime, Lindy Crabtree can barely cope with the deterioration of her father, a former coal miner who’s slowly losing his mind. Lindy, who loves to read, works nights at a gas station. To soothe her unstable father, she’s fixed the cellar of their decrepit house to resemble a coal mine. While Lindy worries that her father may be the killer, Bell traces a telltale business card to a company owned by Jessup but is stonewalled by the politician.

In her powerfully written third appearance, Bell (Bitter River, 2013, etc.) emerges as a compelling heroine with an especially vexing mystery to solve.

Pub Date: Aug. 26, 2014

ISBN: 978-1-250-04473-0

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Minotaur

Review Posted Online: July 12, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2014

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THE CUCKOO'S CALLING

From the The Cormoran Strike Novels series , Vol. 1

A quick, fun read. Rowling delivers a set of characters every bit as durable as her Potter people and a story that, though...

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    Best Books Of 2013


  • New York Times Bestseller

Murderous muggles are up to no good, and it’s up to a seemingly unlikely hero to set things right.

The big news surrounding this pleasing procedural is that Galbraith, reputed former military policeman and security expert, is none other than J.K. Rowling, who presumably has no experience on the Afghan front or at Scotland Yard. Why the pseudonymous subterfuge? We may never know. What’s clear, and what matters, is that Galbraith/Rowling’s yarn is an expertly written exercise in both crime and social criticism of a piece with Rowling’s grown-up novel The Casual Vacancy (2012), even if her hero, private detective Cormoran Strike, bears a name that wouldn’t be out of place in her Harry Potter series. Strike is a hard-drinking, hard-bitten, lonely mess of a man, for reasons that Rowling reveals bit by bit, carefully revealing the secrets he keeps about his parentage, his time in battle and his bad luck. Strike is no Sherlock Holmes, but he’s a dogged pursuer of The Truth, in this instance the identity of the person who may or may not have relieved a supermodel of her existence most unpleasantly: “Her head had bled a little into the snow. The face was crushed and swollen, one eye reduced to a pucker, the other showing as a sliver of dull white between distended lids.” It’s an icky image, but no ickier than Rowling’s roundup of sinister, self-serving, sycophantic characters who inhabit the world of high fashion, among the most suspicious of them a fellow who’s—well, changed his name to pull something over on his audience (“It’s a long fucking way from Hackney, I can tell you...”). Helping Strike along as he turns over stones in the yards of the rich and famous is the eminently helpful Robin Ellacott, newcomer to London and determined to do better than work as a mere temp, which is what lands her at Strike’s door. The trope of rumpled detective and resourceful girl Friday is an old one, of course, but Rowling dusts it off and makes it new even as she turns London into a setting for her tale of mayhem as memorable as what Dashiell Hammett did with San Francisco in The Maltese Falcon.

A quick, fun read. Rowling delivers a set of characters every bit as durable as her Potter people and a story that, though no more complex than an Inspector Lewis episode, works well on every level.

Pub Date: April 30, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-316-20684-6

Page Count: 464

Publisher: Mulholland Books/Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: July 19, 2013

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TURNING ANGEL

Lively scenes pop up here and there, but 500-plus pages will transmogrify most thrillers into a relentless march of...

Another parboiled offering from the poster boy of southern gothic thrillers (Blood Memory, 2005, etc.).

Natchez, Miss., a town that has seen rosier days, is about to get kicked while it’s down. Kate Townsend, shining light of her senior class—valedictorian, gorgeous, a double state champion (tennis and swimming) with a full scholarship to Harvard—has drowned. Her death is being linked to a pillar of the community, the estimable, beloved Dr. Drew Elliot, a husband and father who is 23 years Kate’s senior. Among the locals most seriously affected is upright, unselfish Penn Cage, Drew’s lifelong friend. A former prosecutor now considering a run for mayor, he’s asked to represent Drew, who confesses to an affair with Kate, which will surely place him in the vanguard of suspects if her death turns out to be foul play. Penn is shaken and thinks fleetingly of distancing himself from a situation that is certainly messy and potentially ruinous. He knows Natchez, and he knows how quickly its citizens can turn if they feel betrayed. Drew, however, is loyal, and a good guy’s got to do what a good guy’s got to do. As Penn pursues an investigation on Drew’s behalf, he discovers things about his friend, about Kate, about his town and about himself that will darken his view of civic responsibility.

Lively scenes pop up here and there, but 500-plus pages will transmogrify most thrillers into a relentless march of predictable events.

Pub Date: Dec. 27, 2005

ISBN: 0-7432-3471-5

Page Count: 512

Publisher: Scribner

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2005

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