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IN THE GALWAY SILENCE

A tough, tender, sorrowful tour of the Bruen aquarium, with all manner of fantastic creatures swimming in close proximity...

Bruen’s latest dip into the murky waters of Galway kicks off with alcoholic shamus Jack Taylor’s literal dip in Claddagh Basin to pull out a man apparently bent on suicide. Things don’t go well for either the rescued or the rescuer.

Walter Tevis may think that now that Jack’s saved his life, the man is responsible for him. But Jack hasn’t excelled in his responsibilities toward his ex-wife, Kiki, or his late girlfriend, Emerald (The Ghosts of Galway, 2017), or his present lover, Marion, and there’s no reason he’ll do any better by Tevis. Jack may have clicked with Marion, but he strikes out with her son, Joffrey, and the distance between them will become an issue when the boy’s targeted by defrocked pedophile Peter Boyne. Nor does Jack want the responsibility of looking into the murders of hedge fund scammer Pierre Renaud’s twin sons, Jean and Claude, tossed off a pier by a man in a wheelchair who added a sign saying, “The Irish can abide almost anything save silence.” Jack, as fans of this long-running series know all too well, has a gift for blarney, for plain speaking, for poetic melancholy, for downing shots of Jameson’s without ice, and for pregnant one-word paragraphs. But responsibility, as even Harley Harlow, the documentarian following him around in the hope of filming his life, knows, isn’t really in his wheelhouse, and when Kiki hooks up with sociopathic killer Michael Ian Allen, all sorts of disturbing new possibilities arise.

A tough, tender, sorrowful tour of the Bruen aquarium, with all manner of fantastic creatures swimming in close proximity and touching only the fellow creatures they want to devour. Just don’t get too attached to the supporting cast or read this installment just before a trip to Galway.

Pub Date: Nov. 6, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-8021-2882-9

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Mysterious Press

Review Posted Online: Aug. 20, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2018

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HI FIVE

Mystery and detection compete with a gorgeous swarm of supercharged personalities on their own wild rides.

Unlicensed, untrammeled, uncensored South Central shamus Isaiah Quintabe’s fourth case could be his toughest—and not because it’s so hard to figure out whodunit.

Nobody says no to arms dealer Angus Byrne, and he certainly doesn’t intend for IQ to be the first. So when East Long Beach’s premiere unofficial investigator, who’s been kidnapped and marched into the dealer’s presence after declining an earlier invitation from his goons, indicates in no uncertain terms that no, he’s not interested in clearing Angus’ daughter, custom tailor Christiana Byrne, from suspicion of shooting Tyler Barnes, Angus’ very best employee, Angus promptly turns up the heat, threatening to break the hand of IQ’s girlfriend, violinist Stella McDaniels, if Christiana is so much as arrested for murder. Not enough pressure for you? Well, IQ’s attachment to Stella is about to be seriously tested by the return of his lost love Grace Monarova, who took off for New Mexico with IQ’s dog in the wake of his last adventure (Wrecked, 2018). And Christiana turns out to be not one but five suspects, including homebody Pearl, seductive Marlene, adolescent Jasper, and guardian Bertrand, all fighting for attention and control inside Christiana’s tormented psyche. Figuring out which of the five personalities witnessed which events on the night of the murder and which of them can remember and describe anything about what really happened would be a tall order for any sleuth. But although he isn’t just any sleuth, IQ has to juggle a record number of subplots and distractions, from his buddy Thomas Kahill’s sudden yearning for true love to the maneuvering of Angus’ lieutenants for control of his arms empire to a series of increasingly intemperate skirmishes over a particular prize, a modern rendition of a Gatling gun.

Mystery and detection compete with a gorgeous swarm of supercharged personalities on their own wild rides.

Pub Date: Jan. 28, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-316-50953-4

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Mulholland Books/Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: Oct. 26, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2019

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THE COLDEST WARRIOR

A worthwhile thriller and a valuable exposé.

A CIA coverup slowly unravels.

In 1953, Dr. Charles Wilson either jumped or fell from a window of the Hotel Harrington. In 1975, at a Senate hearing, it was publicly revealed that he had been subjected to a CIA experiment involving LSD, but the fact that he had been a CIA employee and the details of his work for the agency went undiscovered. Internal records of the death were missing, and the director, himself unaware of the actual circumstances of Wilson's death, asks Jack Gabriel to investigate and report the real story if he can. Gabriel knew Wilson and that he worked in the germ warfare laboratories, and from that starting point he begins to explore the questions surrounding Wilson's death. As he works, potential witnesses die "accidentally," avenues of inquiry dry up, and a substantial coverup becomes apparent. Then an anonymous source offers a few tips, and Gabriel begins to understand the true extent of the CIA's crime: They murdered one of their own. There remain questions, though, and in the process of trying to assess who and why, Gabriel's own life becomes perilous. Overall, the novel's pace is a little slow and the plot one-dimensional, but the characters of Gabriel and his family and of Wilson's surviving family are vivid and sympathetic. Vidich (The Good Assassin, 2017, etc.) acknowledges that his novel is based on the story of Frank Olson, who "fell or jumped" from a New York City hotel room in November 1953, and fidelity to historical fact may account for the pace and plotting. But this fidelity also reveals a shameful instance of postwar conduct and the arrogance of the powerful.

A worthwhile thriller and a valuable exposé.

Pub Date: Feb. 4, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-64313-335-5

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Pegasus Crime

Review Posted Online: Dec. 22, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2020

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