Friday, 23 August 2024

Mr Mercedes - great story telling!

Mr Mercedes by Stephen King is a disturbing crime novel told by an absolute master. The book opens with a group of people gathering in the early hours of one morning to try and secure a job. But just when we start to get to know a few of them ... WHAM ... a car ploughs into the crowd, killing eight people before driving off. The vehicle was found abandoned close by, but the perpetrator was never caught and was forever known as "Mr Mercedes" because of the vehicle he had been driving. The action moves forward in time to focus on Bill Hodges, the now retired cop who is tormented by this case, which he had failed to solve. He receives a letter from someone claiming to be the elusive Mr Mercedes and this triggers his investigative nature once again and sets him on a collision course with the incredibly chilling Brady Hartsfield, who wasn't lying when he sent that letter to Hodges and is preparing to kill again. Thus begins a bit of a cat and mouse chase as the two dance around each other - sometimes closer, sometimes further apart. Hartsfield is a deeply disturbed individual whose camouflage amongst society is his banality, but who is hiding a dreadful homelife with his mother. At times you may feel a little sympathy for him, but never for long. Hodges has his own issues, but now he's got the bit between his teeth, nothing is going to stop him finding justice for Mr Mercedes' victims. This is a real page turner, with fantastic characters and plenty of twists and turns and a climax which is exceptionally cinematic - a classic race against time to prevent massive loss of life. At times shocking ... Mr King doesn't hold back from killing off characters that you have grown to love ... but always thrilling, I only took a mark off because I didn't quite feel that the intimate details of Hartsfield's twisted relationship with his mother was necessary. Apart from that, masterful story telling. After I'd read this, I discovered that it is the first of a trilogy featuring Bill Hodges, so I may well have to plunge back into this world again at some point!

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 432 print pages.

Price I paid: £4.00.

Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, ebook. 


Tuesday, 20 August 2024

Odd and the Frost Giants - a new Norse myth!

Odd and the Frost Giants, by Neil Gaiman is the story of Odd, a 12 year old boy whose father was killed on a Viking expedition, and whose foot was crushed by a falling tree. After his mother remarries, he feels more and more like an outsider, so Odd decides to go into the woods to live in his fathers cabin - even though it's still winter ... a winter that shows no sign of ending. On the way there, he rescues a distressed bear, and the two are then joined by a fox. When these two animals start speaking, and meet up with an eagle with the same power, Odd feels like his luck is changing. It turns out that the three creatures are Norse gods (Thor, Loki and Odin) who have been trapped in animal form by the Frost Giant who is determined to make winter last for ever. Odd now has the chance to become a most unlikely hero and help restore the gods to their rightful place and save the world from endless cold. What a delight this book is - it is short, but it's a great read, taking you into another world and showing it through the eyes of a young boy who can hold his own against the gods! Fabulous characterisation and spiky dialogue (as you would expect from Gaiman), that definitely takes you into another world. It's very short, and if you chose to read the audio edition narrated by the author, you may find yourself entering an almost a dreamlike state. I would have preferred a few more twists and turns, but for anyone looking for a quick read full of feeling, then this could be the book for you.

My STAR rating: FOUR

Length: 144 print pages.

Price I paid: £4.00

Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, unabridged audio CD.


Saturday, 10 August 2024

The Marriage Portrait - an imagined life

The Marriage Portrait by Maggie O'Farrell is inspired by a young woman from the 16th Century - Lucrezia di Cosimo de Medici, who died shortly after her marriage to Alfonso, the Duke of Ferrara, aged just sixteen. We know this from the beginning so there really aren't many spoilers here. But we do see how Lucrezia gets to this point. We follow her childhood, where she was much more interested in her father's menagerie and spent more time with the servants in the kitchen than becoming a "lady" like her sisters. Lucrezia hadn't even thought about marriage, but then her elder sister, who had been promised to Alfonso, the Duke of Ferrara, suddenly died. Alfonso, keen that the link between these two powerful families would still happen, offers to take on Lucrezia instead, and she is prepared for the wedding. She enters into the marriage with some romantic notions, after all, Alfonso was very handsome, but as nobody really explained to her the full ramifications of what being a wife would really mean, her wedding night was a bit of a painful shock. This is no love match. Although Alfonso barely speaks to her, he visits her every night, desperate for her to produce an heir, which is all he really wants. So when one doesn't appear, his behaviour becomes increasingly erratic and when Alfonso takes her to a remote country villa, far away from her family, she begins to suspect that he is planning to kill her, so that he would be free to marry again... This is a very well written story full of character, action and emotion in a period setting. However, it is not always an easy read, as it vividly details the treatment of women at this time (1561), who are commodities to be bartered and discarded at the whim of men. I found the total lack of empathy for females appalling. Indeed, few of the male characters come out of this book with much to merit them. Lucrezia is full of vim and vigour and the reader totally roots for her to somehow escape what appears to be her destiny. There is a portrait of this young woman which has been the inspiration for stories and poems, and now this book. What really happened to Lucrezia may never be known, but it doesn't stop us wondering!

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 448 print pages.

Price I paid: £4.00.

Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, ebook.

Monday, 5 August 2024

The Secret - Reacher back on form!

The Secret by Lee Child and Andrew Child (the father and son team!). This is number 28 in the series featuring Jack Reacher, but is set a few years before the very first Reacher book, so we get to see a bit of his back story during the time he was still in the military police. The scene is set in Chicago where a hospital patient is shown a list of names by two strangers and is asked an impossible question. He can't and minutes later, he "falls" to his death out of the window. Surprisingly, this death raises a flag with the Secretary of Defence, who calls together a task force from a range of agencies, and Reacher is the Army's representative. Not known for his fondness for office politics, Reacher sets out to investigate, having to work with people he doesn't know if he can trust, and uncovers a secret that goes back 23 years. I read this book in three days - it romps along at a mighty fast pace and is a great holiday read, or for times when you don't want to be thinking too hard. It takes you out of yourself and into Reacher's world of 1992, when he is still a military cop. It is gripping and has all the elements you would expect from a Reacher book, but with a few little twists. Of course there is violence, but not a ridiculous amount. It is what it is. If you like a gripping thriller, with an edgy hero that is great to read on the page but who you really wouldn't want to meet in real life, then this could be the book for you. I don't think you need to have read another Reacher prior to this one to enjoy it and get a feel for the rest of the books in the series. I had been finding some a little on the violent side, but this strikes a better balance. I hope the father and son combo can continue in this same vein.

My STAR rating: FOUR

Length: 396 print pages.

Price I paid: free, borrowed from my brother-in-law.

Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, ebook.