P.I.

Mark Arsenault
§ Speak Ill of the Living
Linda Barnes
§ Heart of the World
Michael Bartoy
§ The Devil's Only Friend
Cara Black
§ Murder in Belleville
Sean Chercover
§ Big City, Bad Blood
Michael Connelly
§ The Narrows
John Connolly
§ The White Road
Robert Crais
§ The Forgotten Man
§ The Last Detective
§ The Watchman
Barbara D'Amato
§ Hardball
Loren D. Estleman
§ American Detective
§ Nicotine Kiss
§ Poison Blonde
§ Retro
§ Sinister Heights
Steve Hamilton
§ A Stolen Season
Libby Fischer Hellmann
§ Easy Innocence
Lynn Hightower
§ Fortunes of the Dead
Naomi Hirahara
§ Snakeskin Shamisen
David Housewright
§ Madman on a Drum
§ Pretty Girl Gone
§ Tin City
D. Daniel Judson
§ The Poisoned Rose
Jonathon King
§ The Blue Edge of Midnight
§ Shadow Men
§ Visible Darkness
Michael Koryta
§ Sorrow’s Anthem
§ Tonight I Said Goodbye
§ A Welcome Grave
William Kent Krueger
§ Blood Hollow
§ Thunder Bay
Laura Lippman
§ By a Spider's Thread
§ Charm City
§ Every Secret Thing
Lisa Miscione
§ The Darkness Gathers
Sara Paretsky
§ Blacklist
P.J. Parrish
§ A Killing Rain
§ South of Hell
§ A Thousand Bones
§ An Unquiet Grave
Steven Sidor
§ Skin River
Lono Waiwaiole
§ Wiley's Lament
§ Wiley's Shuffle

 


Skin River, Steven Sidor, St. Martin's Minotaur, $6.99.

When Steve Hamilton talks, people listen. He always goes out of his way to support other writers and after his signings there's always a rush to pick up the books he's mentioned. He usually likes authors like Denise Mina whose work is a little darker than his (though, believe me, I’ve read the forthcoming Alex McKnight and it is plenty dark), but I'm no different than the crowd - when he touted a guy named Steven Sidor in a recent interview I had to seek Sidor out, and I'm glad I did.

Skin River, Sidor's first book, features Buddy Bayes, a protagonist who, like many created by the new wave of guy writers like Hamilton, Jon King and Craig Johnson, is a middle aged man with a problematic past who, mostly by choice, finds himself isolated and alone in the middle of nowhere, in Buddy's case the past being criminal and the nowhere being rural Wisconsin. When he discovers a severed hand in the Skin River he is drawn into the horrors surrounding a local serial killer who calls himself the Goatskinner. It becomes even more personal when the Goatskinner goes after one of the few people close to Buddy and the clueless sheriff becomes convinced Buddy is the culprit.

It's not a perfect effort - there's too much focus on the not quite credible and very icky villain (Hannibal Lecter has a lot to answer for) and Sidor, though his prose is lyrical and smooth, tends to over-describe at times (we know how to light a cigarette, thanks), but Skin River draws the reader in masterfully and delivers a great ride all the way to the slam bang ending. There's not much mystery, but a lot of suspense and action and even a jolt of a coda.

Although Buddy would seem to be an ideal series character who could stand to be developed further, Sidor's second novel Bone Factory features different protagonists, which, take my advice, is no way to succeed in the mystery game. All in all, though, Sidor is yet another example of why we should always listen to Steve Hamilton. (Jamie)

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