Best of 2007
This year, while I usually stick to just ten titles, I have chosen eleven because I just couldn't cut it down any
further! I also have an "honorable mention" section - it was hard to pare this group down. Whatever your taste there
should be something for every type of reader to enjoy on this list.
The Song is You, Megan Abbott, Simon & Schuster, $14.00.
"She's not interested in
me, he reminded himself. Sometimes, with these actresses, after a cavalcade of getting-to-know-you drinks, he'd forget.
Barbara Payton, for example, had two tastes: dull-eyed muscle men and flush, faux-ivy debonairs. He was a long way from
either."
- from The Song is You
Megan Abbott is a truly original voice in mystery fiction. This noir novel is set in 50's Hollywood, and exposes
a very seamy side of the movie business. We follow slick PR man Gil "Hop" Hopkins through the novel as he unravels the
secret of starlet Jean Spangler's disappearance. No-one is free of corruption in this book; everyone is touched by it,
and I think one of the more interesting things about this novel (along with the lovely prose) are the various reactions
of the characters to both the corruption and the glamour that surrounds them. Brilliantly taking the tiny shreds of a
true story (there was a Jean Spangler, and she really did disappear) Abbott takes the pieces and makes her own delirious,
almost hallucinogenic reality, along the way filling in the dreamy details of the 50's.
The Conjurer, Cordelia Frances Biddle, St. Martin's Minotaur, $23.95.
"The two dogs stare down into the river. In their intense concentration, they neither move nor whimper,
while their brown fur, wet and bemired with hunting, appears all of one color with the earth like two animate objects
formed from the flinty Pennsylvania soil. The older dog shivers and finally relinquishes his post..."
- from The
Conjurer
I admit it, I picked this book up for its gorgeous cover, but there's so much more inside. Biddle is a writer of
great complexity and surprising darkness. She paints a picture of 1842 Philadelphia, using as her focal point the
innocent Martha Beale, whose father has vanished and who is presumed dead. Martha is completely believable as a denizen
of 1842; she's never anachronistically out of period in her behavior. This is a wonderful recreation of the time with
many plot threads that are neatly tied up by the end of the novel. The way this woman writes makes me think of two
other very gifted historical authors, Kate Ross and Bruce Alexander. Even better, it makes me remember in December what
I enjoyed about this book back in February.
Yesterday's Fatal, Jan Brogan, St Martin's Minotaur, $24.95.
"The road narrowed, and the trees grew fuller to form a canopy that blocked out the sky. The only source of
illumination came from the weak headlights of my Honda and I knew that the Wendy's I'd remembered was nothing more than
a wishful thought, a bladder mirage."
- from Yesterday's Fatal
Jan Brogan hasn't had quite the career her talent deserves; this is her third novel and third publisher. Hopefully
St. Martin's will provide a happy home for journalist Hallie Ahern and her creator. Set in a richly detailed Providence,
R.I. ( reminiscent of Estleman's Detroit or Lippman's Baltimore), Hallie is a journalist on the edge. She's on the edge
of recovering from a gambling problem; she's on the edge of being laid off as the paper downsizes; and she's teetering
on the edge of a relationship. The book starts off with a bang as Hallie witnesses a car accident, and her subsequent
investigation leads her into a tangled web of insurance fraud and high level political corruption. This is a very dark
book and it's also a very well written one. Brogan deserves the same mention that some of her male brethren are
receiving, because she's walking the same territory as they are. This book is a delightful discovery.
Her Royal Spyness, Rhys Bowen, Berkley Prime Crime, $23.95.
"There are...disadvantages to being a minor royal...one is expected to behave as befits a member of the ruling
family, without being given the means to do so."
- from Her Royal Spyness
When I first saw the cover of this book and heard the concept behind it I was very put off - I wasn't so sure I
even wanted to read it. I shouldn't have doubted Bowen for a minute; one of the very best pure narrative storytellers
in the business, she takes the slightly fluffy premise of a very minor royal, makes her work for her income, takes her
to tea with Queen Mary (this is set in London in the 30's), and makes it totally original. It's funny, the characters
are great, the social history is light but solid, and the story is terrific. It avoids the first-in-a-new-series
feeling of being a set up for further books and stands nicely on its own, while still making you look forward to the
next installment. A complete delight.
The White Corridor, Christopher Fowler, Bantam, $24.00.
"My dear chap..everyone is younger and fitter than us. What have we got on our side? Decrepitude,
mid-afternoon narcoleptic attacks, and ill-timed lapses of memory."
- from The White Corridor
I think all of Christopher Fowler's books, featuring the Peculiar Crimes Unit in a decayed and forgotten building
in London, are ridiculously enjoyable. His obvious love for the genre allows him to build on the conventional tropes
with a great deal of wit and intelligence. I found this entry particularly enjoyable as it features not just one, but
two, locked room mysteries. One of the deaths occurs in the locked morgue; the other in a line up of cars stuck in a
blizzard. Unfortunately for the murderer, two of his / her fellow stranded motorists are the heroes of the series, the
elderly Bryant and May. Bryant and May are in communication with the unit back in London, giving them help with their
case, while the London unit in return supplies Bryant and May with necessary information. The whole enterprise is made
far more enjoyable by the looming visit of a particularly unpleasant and minor royal who is due to inspect the unit
and perhaps give an unfavorable report back to the higher ups that it should be shut down. As always in a Fowler novel,
nothing that is expected actually happens. Settle in for a wonderful read.
The Mortal Groove, Ellen Hart, St. Martin's Minotaur, $25.95.
"...you know that saying I hear people use every now and then. About ‘getting their groove on,' or getting
their ‘groove back.' It was like we were in our own kind of groove over there - a mortal groove. Death...was our
reality."
- from The Mortal Groove
Ellen Hart's skill sets are so varied it's hard to know where to start. One of course is her talent as a pure
mystery writer, from the point of view of a tricky plot, fair clues, and even the occasional red herring. One is her
talent with creating character; all of her characters are memorable and even better, she makes you care about them.
This novel encompasses so wide a canvas it could almost be called an epic, though clocking in at just 350+ pages it's
simply a ripping good story that's hard to put down. This Jane Lawless installment deals with Jane's father, Ray, who
is running for governor, and some of the unsavory things his campaign manager and friends got into back in 1971 after
returning from Vietnam. That experience created an unbreakable bond between the three disparate men, but it's a bond
that's tested to the limit when the most unsavory of the three turns up in Minneapolis for a "visit". As the plot
deepens in complexity, it takes in Jane's friend Cordelia's grief at losing her niece Hattie to her sister; and her
brother Peter's struggles as he loses his job and looks for a lost child. Peter's struggle is the most meaningful, as
it's actually his struggle to find himself. As Peter's story becomes entwined with the story of the three Vietnam
vets, Hart ratchets up the suspense and tension. This is a remarkable novel, full of emotion, depth and a complexity
of plot that shouldn't be missed by any devotee of the contemporary traditional mystery. There are really few, if any,
better practitioners than Ellen Hart.
Thunder Bay, William Kent Krueger, Atria, $24.00.
"The biggest word in the human vocabulary has only four letters and no definition that's ever been adequate.
We love our dogs. We love our children. We love God and chocolate cake. We fall in love and fall out of love. We
die for love and we kill for love. We can't spend it. We can't eat it when we're starving or drink it when we're dying
of thirst. It's no good against the bitter cold of winter, and a cheap electric fan will do more for you on a hot
summer day. But ask most human beings what they value above all else in this life and, five'll get you ten, it's
love."
- from Thunder Bay
I keep thinking I shouldn't include Krueger on this list every year, but I guess he would have to stop writing
such great books. Thunder Bay is actually one of the strongest books in a brilliant series; Cork O'Connor goes
on a search for his friend Henry Meloux's son, and meanwhile we as readers learn about Henry's life, making it
absolutely unnecessary to have read any of the previous novels to appreciate this one. Henry's past life, full of
surprising violence and affections, is told with the typical Krueger skill in drawing the reader in to the world of his
characters and also placing the reader into a fully realized, and beautifully portrayed, setting. He may be one of
the best writers about nature working at the moment. Included is a subtheme about the various parts love plays in all
our lives; there's a paragraph toward the very end that's so lovely I re-read it frequently (and one of my customers
told me she has it laminated and on her refrigerator).
What the Dead Know, Laura Lippman, William Morrow, $24.95.
"You're only as happy as your unhappiest child."
- from What the Dead Know
Laura Lippman is such a good writer she makes the complex look easy. This book is so smoothly written and goes
down so well you won't notice until you finish it that its plot is complicated and the characterizations are exquisite
- they just feel so "right" it's almost like reading about real life. The story is about two sisters who disappear in
the 70's, and when one of them reappears in the present, Lippman details so perfectly the ripple effect the girl's
absence has had in the lives of everyone they touched that you won't be able to look away. This is the only book on
this list that actually made me gasp in surprise when I got to the end - but Lippman had set the whole thing up so well
I really shouldn't have. This book is entering Ruth Rendell / Barbara Vine territory in terms of its psychological
astuteness - though Lippman has more of a heart. She's not as bleak - and that's a good thing. This is a book you
won't forget for a long, long time.
Maiden Rock, Mary Logue, Bleak House, Cloth, $24.95, Tradepaper, $14.95.
(Cloth)
(Paperback) "The moon was blastingly bright and she could easily see her way. She felt powerful, with that cool
night vision where everything was clear, in focus. The heart of the earth pulsed. Everything connected to her, moved
through her. There was nothing she couldn't do."
- from Maiden Rock
This is the sixth novel by Logue about Deputy Sheriff Claire Watkins of tiny Pepin County, Wisconsin. Claire left
the Twin Cities to escape the crime that killed her husband, and has raised a daughter and met a new man in the form of
pheasant farmer Rich. This book really is about Claire's teenage daughter Meg, who is dealing not only with the
uncertainty and turmoil of simply being a teenager, but with the sudden death of her best friend. This is a horrifying
look at drug use in rural America, as well as a deep and complex look at family loyalty, friendship, and just plain
growing up and the issues of trust that come with it. It's a completely rocket powered read - I was unable to put it
down. There are few writers better than Logue at creating memorable characters, and this is one of her very best books.
Bloodshot, Stuart MacBride, St. Martin's Minotaur, $24.95.
Aberdeen is where "we murder more people, per head of population, than the whole of England and Wales
combined."
- Stuart MacBride
MacBride doesn't miss a beat in Bloodshot, the latest entry in his excellent Aberdeen, Scotland based
series featuring Detective Sergeant Logan McRae. In the beginning of the book Logan's girlfriend Constable Jackie "Ball
Breaker" Watson lives up to her nickname while busting a suspected serial rapist. When that suspect turns out to be a
popular football star with a seemingly unshakeable alibi who calls upon the services of a despicable solicitor and the
sympathies of a gullible public, things, as usual, get complicated. McRae's personal life gets complicated too, as a
misunderstanding with Jackie causes him to finally act on his long suppressed attraction for Rachael Tulloch, the
deputy Procurator Fiscal. MacBride combines the mundane, the horrific and the ridiculous skillfully to produce another
enormously satisfying read. Along with Ian Rankin, Val McDermid and Denise Mina, MacBride is a leading figure in a
Scottish crime wave that's producing some of the best mysteries in the world. The writing in this series is always
great and the weather in Aberdeen is always awful.
A Fatal Grace, Louise Penny, St. Martin's Minotaur, $23.95.
"Crie knew from long experience that it was always the things you didn't see that were the scariest.
And what Crie didn't see broke her heart." - from A Fatal Grace
I admit it, I'm smitten by Louise Penny. I absolutely loved her first novel Still Life and was just as
taken by the second, the story of the death of the world's nastiest woman and most horrible mother in a freak curling
accident. The setting is again the idyllic Three Pines, with all its wonderful inhabitants, and the police work is once
again carried out by the wonderful Armand Gamache, a re-visitation in contemporary form of Inspector Maigret. I have
talked with many, many readers about these books; we all wish that we could actually live in Three Pines. Far from
painting herself into a corner, Penny has been able to change up the formula from the first book to make the second
quite different from the first, but just as terrific. A bravura sophomore effort from a very talented and welcome
addition to the mystery world. And, as a bonus, her prose is pure poetry.
Also Notable:
Donna Andrews' funny, completely delightful The Penguin Who Knew Too Much; David Ellis' twisty, edge of your
seat, intelligent thriller, Eye of the Beholder; the always excellent P.J. Parrish turns in another exciting
thriller, A Thousand Bones, this time set in Michigan; and Jeff Cohen's affectionate and funny look at the
movies, Some Like it Hot-Buttered. Cohen's is the first in a new series.
Staff & Customer Picks
Common titles on these picks: The Virgin of Small Plains, Nancy Pickard; A Fatal Grace, Louise Penny;
The Song is You, Megan Abbott; Jar City, Arnaldur Indridson; The Cold Dish, Craig Johnson; and
Her Royal Spyness, Rhys Bowen, with the talented Megan Abbott perhaps getting the most (and most passionate)
votes.
Marty, Ace Assistant: Thunder Bay, William Kent Krueger; Island of Exiles, I.J. Parker;
Silence of the Grave, Arnaldur Indridson; Never End, Ake Edwardson; What's So Funny?, Donald E.
Westlake.
Linda, Ann Arbor: The Virgin of Small Plains, Nancy Pickard.
Bennet, Ann Arbor: Pursuit and Nightlife, Thomas Perry; The Cold Dish, Craig Johnson;
Total Chaos, Jean Claude Izzo
Vicki, Ann Arbor: The Tale of Hawthorn House, Susan Wittig Albert; Murder with Peacocks,
Donna Andrews; Her Royal Spyness, Rhys Bowen; Jar City, Arnaldur Indridason; Tonight I Said Goodbye,
Michael Koryta; The Railway Viaduct, Edward Marston; We Shall Not Sleep, Anne Perry; Dissolution,
C.J. Sansom; The Case Against My Brother, Libby Sternberg (this is a YA title); and Find Me Again,
Sylvia Warsh.
Roxie, Ypsilanti: Bad Luck and Trouble, Lee Child; Wheel of Darkness, Douglas Preston
& Lincoln Child; Sweet Revenge, Diane Mott Davidson; A Thousand Bones, P.J. Parrish; A Fatal Grace,
Louise Penny; The Conjurer, Cordelia Frances Biddle; and A Welcome Grave, Michael Koryta.
Maria, North Carolina: End in Tears, Ruth Rendell; Diamond Dust, Peter Lovesey;
The Blade Itself, Marcus Sakey; The Chalon Heads, Barry Maitland; The Secret Hangman, Peter
Lovesey; The Companion, Ann Granger; Silent in the Grave, Deanna Raybourn; The Various Haunts of
Men, Susan Hill; Cold Granite, Stuart MacBride; and Red Leaves, Thomas Cook.
Catie, Grand Rapids: Still Life & A Fatal Grace, Louise Penny, "new favorite author";
The Song is You, Megan Abbott, "great noir"; The Burnt House, Faye Kellerman, "main characters standing
the test of time"; Thunder Bay, William Kent Krueger, "learning about Henry Meloux in depth is great"; Night
Work, Steve Hamilton, "a great new character - I didn't even miss the series".
Patti, Arizona: A Deeper Sleep, Dana Stabenow; The Song is You, Megan Abbott; The Cold
Dish, Craig Johnson; Shell Game, Sarah R. Shaber; Queenpin, Megan Abbott; A Fatal Grace, Louise
Penny; and Trunk Music, Michael Connelly.
Angel, Jackson: A Fatal Grace, Louise Penny; Her Royal Spyness, Rhys Bowen; Jar City,
Arnaldur Indridson; The Virgin of Small Plains, Nancy Pickard; Still as Death, Sarah Stewart Taylor; The
Tomb of Zeus, Barbara Cleverly; The Song is You and Queenpin, by Megan Abbott.
Tori, Ann Arbor: The Virgin of Small Plains, Nancy Pickard; Dead Midnight, Marcia Muller,
"good to read one of hers after a long hiatus"; Dissolution, C.J. Sansom, "so well written"; and Hunting the
Witch, Ellen Hart.
"But Bosch thought it didn't really matter if you died cornered in a butcher shop or on an overlook glimpsing
the lights of heaven. You were gone and the finale wasn't the part that mattered. We are all circling the drain, he
thought. Some are closer to the black hole than others. Some will see it coming and some will have no clue when the
undertow of the whirlpool grabs them and pulls them down into darkness forever.
The important thing is to fight it, Bosch told himself. Always keep kicking. Always keep fighting the
undertow."
-from The Overlook, by Michael Connelly
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