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Deadly Autumn Harvest
By Tony Mott
Translated by Marina Sofia
Corylus Books
This is the long awaited English debut by Romanian crime fiction author Tony Mott. Set in her home city of Brașov is a city in the Transylvania region, ringed by the Carpathian mountains. I believe this may actually be the second book in a series featuring forensic pathologist Gigi Alexis, yet was presumably chosen as her English language debut as it was seen as a good introduction by the publisher, Corylus Books.
Accessible it certainly is. After a heart stopping and short opening sequence, the novel quickly introduces Alexis. Having just returned from holiday it takes no time to begin to discover elements of her personal life, her work environment and her dark sence of humour. Having established the basics, our new protagonist is quickly called to a crime scene where ominously the investigating officer warns Alexis that the murder victim shares a strong resemblance to her. This crime is perplexing as there is no obvious motive and due to the unique placing of the corpse. It isn't long before it becomes clear to the reader that this is a police division under the pressure of a new chief and secondly that the views and opinions of a female civilian are judged secondary to those of male police officers
As further events including subsequent mystifying murders unfold it appears that Brașov could be facing the almost unique predicament of having a serial killer at large where Alexa will require to channel all her wits and experience, as well as her powers of persuasion in order to attempt to make these crimes stop and find the perpetrator.
Readers will find that Deadly Autumn Harvest is an absorbing introduction to Romanian crime fiction, although it also complements well previous novels already available to English language readers from the same publisher. It offers a fascinating insight into murder investigations in the former communist country and also is a very revealing introduction to Brașov and it's surrounding area which will appeal to many existing readers of crime fiction. I strongly recommend it and look forward to reading more novels by Tony Mott in the future.
Deadly Autumn Harvest
A series of bizarre murders rocks the beautiful Carpathian town of Braşov. At first there’s nothing obvious that links what look like random killings.
With the police still smarting from the scandal of having failed to act in a previous case of a serial kidnapper and killer, they bring in forensic pathologist Gigi Alexa to figure out if several murderers are at work – or if they have another serial killer on their hands.
Ambitious, tough, and not one to suffer fools gladly, Gigi fights to be taken seriously in a society that maintains old-fashioned attitudes to the roles of women.
She and the police team struggle to establish a pattern, especially when resources are diverted to investigating a possible terrorist plot. With the clock ticking, Gigi stumbles across what looks to be a far-fetched theory – just as she realises that she could be on the murderer’s to-kill list.
Author bio:
Tony Mott was born and bred in Braşov, which often forms the backdrop for her novels. She has worked internationally as a coach and HR professional, but her real passion remains writing. In 2022 she received the Romanian Mystery&Thriller Award. Deadly Autumn Harvest is the first novel in the Gigi Alexa series to be translated into English.
Translator bio:
Marina Sofia is a translator, reviewer, writer and blogger, as well as a third culture kid who grew up trilingual in Romanian, German and English. Her previous translations for Corylus Books are Sword by Bogdan Teodorescu and Resilience by Bogdan Hrib. She has spent most of her winters in Braşov skiing, so is delighted to translate a book set in her favourite Romanian town.
ISBN 978-1-7392989-1-3
£9.99
Many thanks to Corylus Books for an advance copy of Deadly Autumn Harvest and to Ewa Sherman for inclusion on the blog tour. Please check out the other reviews of this book on the blog tour as shown below.
#crime fiction#crimeintranslation#european literature#novels in translation#crime fiction in translation#crimefiction
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Winding Up the Week #187
Winding Up the Week #187
An end of week recap “Reading is an act of civilization; it’s one of the greatest acts of civilization because it takes the free raw material of the mind and builds castles of possibilities.” – Ben Okri This is a weekly post in which I summarise books read, reviewed and currently on my TBR shelf. In addition to a variety of literary titbits, I look ahead to forthcoming features, see what’s on the…
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#AusReading Month#Australian Reading Month#Bogdan Hrib#Books#Corylus Books#Joseph Schreiber#Novellas in November#Osip Mandelstam#Reading#Romanian Literature
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Resilience by Bogdan Hrib trns Marina Sofia
Today I'm delighted to share my thoughts on Resilience by Bogdan Hrib trns Marina Sofia @HribBogdan @CorylusB @MarinaSofia8
Today I am thrilled to join the blog tour for Resilience, the brand new novel from Romanian author Bogdan Hrib and Corylus Books. Until last year I’d not knowingly read any books by Romanian authors, but thanks to Corylus that is now changing and I’m very glad about that. I think we’ve all been missing out on a treat not having had these books translated into English before. My thanks to the…
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#Bogdan Hrib#Corylus Books#Crime Fiction#Crime Thriller#Geopolitical Fiction#Murder#Romanian Fiction
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Resilience by Bogdan Hrib
Resilience
By Bogdan Hrib
Translated by Marina Sofia
Corylus Books
Having enjoyed Sword by Bogdan Teodorescu at the end of last year, I was very keen to explore further crime fiction from Romania and thanks to Corylus Books, I have not had too long to wait.
It’s much too early to make generalisations based on two novels, but like Sword, there is also a political element to Resilience, one that is not too flattering to politicians. Perhaps I am sensing that Romanian writers have become somewhat jaded by the opportunists that have appeared in their political system.
This is Hrib’s first translation into English language and I read this book without any prior knowledge of the author’s writing. Midway through the book I came to realise that Resilience is part of a series however the story functions perfectly well as a standalone novel. The principal characters of the story are Stelian Munteanu and Tony Demetriade. It become evident while Corylus Books have chosen to start with Resilience as their first translation of Hrib as many of the issues explored within the book are very topical.
Resilience is set in 2019, the year in which Romania held the EU presidency; and the 30th anniversary of the Romanian Revolution which generated a large degree of international interest in a reflection of that time. Ana Coman is a young project manager at the Romanian Institute in the UK who is in Newcastle Upon Tyne to host an exhibition of images from the revolution.
When she is found dead beside the sea near South Shields, Munteanu - who is a former journalist, writer and amateur investigator - is approached by her father, Pavel Coman to investigate her death. He is a Romanian business baron, who is involved in various businesses in the naval sector. He does not hesitate to believe that the death of his daughter was not an accident. Coman is convinced that she has been murdered. Reluctantly Munteanu agrees - his wife Sofia lives in London and this allows him the opportunity to spend some time with her. Much to his distaste though, in England, he is paired with Coman’s right hand man, Jack King.
When a related death occurs back in Romania, Munteanu’s friend, the experienced policeman Tony Demetriade and his young assistant Anabella Paduraru are brought in to investigate. The British police then get involved when several female acquaintances of the original victim are targeted in London by an unknown gunman. The Romanian and British investigators must collaborate and share their information or risk the crimes and connections being unsolved. The story features a range of dubious characters including a member of the Romanian secret service, a Moldovan social media manipulator and an opportunist politician from a neighbouring country.
The story gradually evolves from a crime fiction novel to a geographical thriller which has so much relevance to the current age. The European Union has been impacted by the ill conceived departure of the United Kingdom and there are now different competing visions for its future. Romania is somewhat in the orbit of the Visegrád 4 which comprises Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia. These countries do not share the post-World War Two vision of the EU espoused by mainstream decision-makers in western Europe, in countries like Germany, France and Italy. Rather their vision for Europe is one where the nation state is strong and independent with a restrictive immigration policy particularly towards migrants from Africa and the Middle East. Indeed since this novel was written the governments in Viktor Orbán's Hungary and Andrzej Duda's Poland have made front-page news over the last few months for thumbing their nose at EU laws and lectures while Poland and now Romania have recently been chastised by Brussels over attempts to compromise the independence of their judiciary. When even press freedoms are being curtailed by so called mainstream politicians in Poland, it is clear that more extreme views must be held by fringe parties. Hrib explores this within Resilience.
Combined to this wider regional context is the historic anniversary of the Romania revolution, while the book makes regular references to significant dates such as 10th August which marks the date of previous political protests in 2018 as well as nationalist sentiments to a reunification of Romania with the neighbouring former Soviet Republic of Moldova. With part of the story taking place in the Moldovan capital Chișinău as well as the nearby Romania city of Iași - where an imposing statue of Stephen the Great is intended to face off Turkish invaders (surely to the approval of politicians like Viktor Orbán!). Very topically, can the onset of the fake news phenomenon and growing influence of conspiracy theorists be engineered to lead to mass political unrest? How resilience is the system, can the simultaneity factor be breached? Critical stresses of surveillance and corruption feature prominently and clearly relate to some of Romania's recent troubled history.
While most British crime fiction readers are unlikely to be acquainted with the politics of Eastern Europe, Resilience successfully taps into the political uncertainty and dubious narratives of the modern age. To use one example, remarkably a scene in the story sees a group of manipulated protesters appear at a television channel, something that occurred just last week in the UK!
British readers will feel a familiarity with the language used in Resilience. Superbly translated by Marina Sofia who has lived half her life in the UK, the vocabulary used is straightforward and uncluttered. There are numerous references to locations in both London and the North East of England which will resonate with many UK readers as well.
The most challenging aspect of the story is the changing perspectives and locations. The narrator follows many characters, often changing perspectives, so you always have to be careful to figure out who the story is centered on at some point. Several pages will relate to a particular character in one location, before a heading is provided for another location or date. More than once I had to reread a paragraph to figure out which character was being featured at a particular time. The realisation can come quite quickly but at times the vague beginning does demand attention. This is perhaps my weakness as I'm not always very attentative to headers. As the action is fragmented a degree of patience and attention are required when reading Resilience, yet these are rewarded. While the wider issues I've mentioned are explored through the story, there are satisfying conclusions to the investigative elements of the story. My first introduction to the writing of Bogdan Hrib was a revelation. I enjoyed the thriller aspects to the story and also feel there is a lot of modern day context to the stories he writes.
Bogdan Hrib was born in Bucharest, Romania in 1966. A former journalist, civil engineer by training and now professor at a Bucharest university, Hrib is the co-founder of Tritonic Books (1993). He has been instrumental in bringing foreign crime writers to a Romanian audience, but also introducing Romanian crime writers to the English-speaking world. He was the vice-president of the Romanian Crime Writers Club (2010-2012), and the director/organizer of the International Mystery & Thriller Festival in Râșnov (2011-2015), as well as the PR coordinator of the History Film Festival also in Râșnov. He is the author of the crime fiction series featuring Stelian Munteanu, a book-editor with a sideline doing international police work. Two of the previous books in the series have been translated into English language: Kill The General and The Greek Connection.
Marina Sofia was born in Romania but has lived more than half of her life in the UK. She was a reviewer for Crime Fiction Lover for more than seven years and has worked for Asymptote Literary Journal. Her previous translation for Corylus Books was Sword by Bogdan Teodorescu.
Many thanks to Ewa Sherman for inclusion on the book tour for Resilience and to Corylus Books for an advance copy of this book. Please see the other reviews of Resilience on the book tour as shown below.
Great to meet Corylus Books cofounder Jacky Collins today where we discussed this book:
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Unmissable International Crime Fiction Novels from August 2021
3 August: The Night Singer by Johanna Mo, translated by Alice Menzies, Penguin Books
Police detective Hannah Duncker didn’t expect to return to her native Öland. She fled after her father’s murder conviction and returns to make peace with her shame. She has a new job with the local police and a nosy new partner. A fifteen-year-old’s death catapults her into a murder investigation that resurrects ghosts from her previous life. As she hunts for the truth, she must confront the people she abandoned. Not all are pleased to see her back home, and she soon learns that digging through the past comes with consequences.
5 August: The Soul Breaker by Sebastian Fitzek, translated by Jamie Bulloch, Head Of Zeus
He doesn’t kill them, or mutilate them. But he leaves them completely dead inside, paralysed and catatonic. His only trace is a note left in their hands. There are three known victims when suddenly the abductions stop. The Soul Breaker has tired of his game, it seems. Meanwhile, a man has been found in the snow outside an exclusive psychiatric clinic. He has no recollection of who he is, or why he is there. Unable to match him to any of the police’s missing people, the nurses call him Casper. My review of Passenger 23:
Fiction From Afar
Passenger 23 by Sebastian Fitzek Passenger 23 By Sebastian Fitzek Translated by Jamie Bulloch Head Of Zeus “Every year on average 23 people
The Woman in the Blue Cloak by Deon Meyer, Hodder
The brilliant two-time-frame novella The Woman in the Blue Cloak has not appeared before in mass-market paperback. It is joined here by several shorter stories, published for the first time in book form.
The title story features Meyer's much-loved detective Benny Griessel at a key moment in his relationship with his new love, Alexa.
The Bucket List: An Agent John Adderley Novel by Peter Mohlin & Peter Nystrom, The Overlook Press
The Bucket List starts when undercover FBI Agent John Adderley wakes up in a hospital bed in Baltimore with extensive gunshot wounds. He knows he’s lucky to be alive. And just a few beds away is the man who 24 hours ago pointed a gun to his head.
10 August: Cold Sun by Anita Sivakumaran Dialogue Books
Bangalore. Three high-profile women murdered, their bodies draped in identical red saris. When the killer targets the British Foreign Minister’s ex-wife, Scotland Yard sends the troubled, brilliant DI Vijay Patel to lend his expertise to the Indian police investigation. Stranger in a strange land, ex-professional cricketer Patel must battle local resentment and his own ignorance of his ancestral country, while trying to save his failing relationship back home.
17 August: Velvet Was the Night by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Jo Fletcher Books
1970s Mexico City: while student protests and political unrest consume the city, Maite escapes from her humdrum life in the stories of passion and danger that fill the latest issue of Secret Romance. She is deeply envious of her neighbour, Leonora, a beautiful art student who lives the life of excitement and intrigue Maite craves – so when she disappears under suspicious circumstances, Maite jumps at the chance to uncover Leonora’s secrets.
No Honour by Awais Khan, Orenda Books
A young woman defies convention in a small Pakistani village, with devastating results for her and her family. A stunning, immense beautiful novel about courage, family and the meaning of love, when everything seems lost
19 August: Come Hell Or High Water by Christian Unge, MacLehose Press
The first in a new Swedish crime series featuring Tekla Berg – a fearless doctor with a remarkable photographic memory. With 85% per cent burns to his body and a 115% risk of dying, it’s a miracle the patient is still alive. That he made it this far is thanks to Tekla Berg, an emergency physician whose unorthodox methods and photographic memory are often the difference between life and death.
Bread: The Bastards of Pizzofalcone by Maurizio de Giovanni, Europa Editions
Sometimes it takes facing a formidable adversary to truly know one’s worth. The Bastards of Pizzofalcone may have found just that: when the brutal murder of a baker rattles the city, they are ready to investigate. There’s nothing they wouldn’t do to prove themselves to their community. But this time the police are divided: for the special anti-mob branch, the local mafia is doubtlessly responsible for the crime, but the Bastards are not so sure and think there may be another reason for the murder of the renowned artisan, whose traditionally baked bread attracted customers from far and wide. A rivalry between the policeman and the magistrate is formed, one that, in the end, will extend to more than just their work lives.
Of Fangs and Talons by Nicolas Mathieu, Sceptre
When a factory that employs most of a small town is scheduled to close - to the despair of the workers and disdain of the overlords - things start to fall apart. The disenfranchised factory workers have nothing left to lose. Martel, the trade union rep with innumerable tattoos and Bruce, the body-builder addicted to steroids resort to desperate measures. A bungled kidnapping on the streets of Strasbourg goes horribly wrong and they find themselves falling prey to the machinations of the criminal underworld.
End Of Summer by Anders De La Motte, trans Neil Smith , Zaffre
Summer 1983: Four-year-old Billy chases a rabbit in the fields behind his house. But when his mother goes to call him in, Billy has disappeared. Never to be seen again.
Today: Veronica is a bereavement counsellor. She's never fully come to turns with her mother's suicide after her brother Billy's disappearance. When a young man walks into her group, he looks familiar and talks about the trauma of his friend's disappearance in 1983. Could Billy still be alive after all this time?
Resilience by Bogdan Hrib, translated by Marina Sofia, Corylus Books
Stelian Munteanu has had enough of being an international man of mystery: all he wants to do is make the long-distance relationship with his wife Sofia work. But when the notorious Romanian businessman Pavel Coman asks him to investigate the death of his daughter in the north of England, he reluctantly gets involved once more in what proves to be a tangled web of shady business dealings and political conspiracies. Moving rapidly between London, Newcastle, Bucharest and Iasi, this novel shows just how easy it is to fall prey to fake news and social media manipulation.
31 August: My Name is Jensen by Heidi Amsinck, Muswell Press
Guilty. One word on a beggar’s cardboard sign. And now he is dead, stabbed in a wintry Copenhagen street, the second homeless victim in as many weeks. Dagbladet reporter Jensen, stumbling across the body on her way to work, calls her ex lover DI Henrik Jungersen. As, inevitably, old passions are rekindled, so are old regrets, and that is just the start of Jensen’s troubles. The front page is an open goal, but nothing feels right….. When a third body turns up, it seems certain that a serial killer is on the loose. But why pick on the homeless? And is the link to an old murder case just a coincidence? With her teenage apprentice Gustav, Jensen soon finds herself putting everything on the line to discover exactly who is guilty …
2 September: The Second Woman by Louise Mey, translated by Louise Rogers Lalaurie, Pushkin Vertigo
Missing persons don’t always stay that way. Sandrine lives alone, rarely speaking to anyone other than her colleagues. She is resigned to her solitary life, until she sees on TV a man despairing for his wife who has mysteriously disappeared. Sandrine is drawn to him and eventually the two strike up a relationship. When the man’s wife reappears, Sandrine is forced to confront the truth about him.
The Wrong Goodbye by Toshihiko Yahagi, translated by Alfred Birnbaum, MacLehose Press
In a nod to Raymond Chandler, The Wrong Goodbye pits homicide detective Eiji Futamura against a shady Chinese business empire and U.S. military intelligence in the docklands of recession hit Japan. After the frozen corpse of immigrant barman Tran Binh Long washes up in midsummer near Yokosuka U.S. Navy Base, Futamura meets a strange customer from Tran’s bar. Vietnam vet pilot Billy Lou Bonney talks Futamura into hauling three suitcases of “goods” to Yokota US Air Base late at night and flies off leaving a dead woman behind. My review:
The Wrong Goodbye
The Wrong Goodbye An Eiji Futamura Investigation by Toshihiko Yahagi #JanuaryInJapan The Wrong Goodbye An Eiji Futamura Investigation by Tos
FICTION FROM AFAR
28 September
The Ice Coven by Max Seeck, Berkley
Investigator Jessica Niemi is in a race against time to find the link between a body with strange markings that has washed up on a frigid shore in Finland and two mysterious disappearances in this terrifying new novel from the New York Times bestselling author of The Witch Hunter.
30 September
The Jealousy Man and Other Stories by Jo Nesbo, Harvill Secker
This outstanding collection of short stories showcases all the writing skill that has made Jo Nesbo the undisputed ‘king of all crime writers’ (Daily Express) and a repeat Sunday Times #1 bestseller. Filled with dark intrigue, twists and unforgettable characters, these page-turners will have you reading late into the night.
Wild Shores by Maria Adolfsson, Zaffre
One terrible truth will create a perfect storm. While her colleagues enjoy the seasonal festivities, DI Karen Hornby is called to investigate a suspicious death on the northernmost island of Doggerland. But how close to home is the truth of the case...
Night Hunters by Oliver Bottini, MacLehose Press
Over the course of several days one hot summer, a female student from Freiburg disappears, a father is murdered in a brutal attack, a teenage boy drowns in the Rhine in suspicious circumstances. It soon becomes evident to Chief Inspector Louise Boni and her colleagues at Freiburg’s criminal police that the three cases are connected – and that others are now in terrible danger.
The Antarctica of Love by Sara Stridsberg, MacLehose Press
A heartrending existential drama by the acclaimed Swedish writer Sara Stridsberg, The Antarctica of Love is an unfliching testament of a woman on the margins, a tale of family lost and found, and a report of a murder in the voice of the victim. This novel of life after death unfolds in brief vignettes, brimming with unexpected tenderness and hope.
7 October: The Stoning: Peter Papathanasiou, MacLehose Press
A small town in outback Australia wakes to a crime of medieval savagery.A local schoolteacher is found taped to a tree and stoned to death. Suspicion instantly falls on the refugees at the new detention centre on Cobb’s northern outskirts. Tensions are high, between whites and Aboriginals, between immigrants and the towniesStill mourning the recent death of his father, Detective Sergeant George Manolis returns to his childhood hometown to investigate.
Lemon by Kwon Yeo-sun House Of Zeus
Focusing on the unsolved murder of teenage girl, this literary crime novel offers insights into gender, class and religion. In the summer of 2002, my big sister Hae-on was murdered. She was beautiful, intelligent, and only nineteen years old. Two boys were questioned, but the case was never solved. Her killer still walks free.
The Survivors by Alex Shulman, Little Brown Dog
Three brothers return to the family cottage by the lake where, more than two decades earlier, a catastrophe changed the course of their lives. Now, they are here to scatter their mother’s ashes – young men, estranged but bound together by the history that defines them. Their lives have been spent competing for their father’s favour and their mother’s love, in a household more like a minefield than a home. What really happened that summer day when everything was blown to pieces?
12 October: The Corpse Flower by Anne Mette Hancock Crooked Lane Books
It’s early September in Copenhagen, the rain has been coming down for weeks, and 36-year-old journalist Heloise Kaldan is in the middle of a nightmare. One of her sources has been caught lying, and she could lose her job over it. And then she receives the first in a series of cryptic and ominous letters from an alleged killer.
14 October Riccardino by Andrea Camilleri, MacMillan
The long-awaited last novel in the bestselling Inspector Montalbano series “At eighty, I foresaw Montalbano’s departure from the scene, I got the idea and I didn’t let it slip away. So I found myself writing this novel which is the final chapter; the last book in the series. And I sent it to my publisher saying to keep it in a drawer and to publish it only when I am gone.” –Andrea Camilleri
The Lonely Ones by Hakan Nesser, MacMillan
Begins in 1969. Six young people arrive in Uppsala. Different circumstances push the three young couples together and, over the course of a few years, they become friends. Years later, a lecturer at Lund University is found dead at the bottom of a cliff in the woods close to Kymlinge. And chillingly, it is the very same spot where one of the Uppsala students died thirty-five years before
28 October The Hideout by Camilla Grebe, Zaffre
Inertia is an eerie psychological thriller from the award-winning Swedish bestselling author Camilla Grebe. When 18-year old Samuel finds himself at the centre of a drug deal gone wrong, he is forced to go underground to escape the police and an infamous drug lord.
The Commandments by Oskar Gudmundsson Corylus Books
On a cold winter morning in 1995, Anton, a 19-year-old boy, met a priest outside Glerárkirkja in Akureyri. After that, he was never seen again. Two decades later a priest is found murdered in the church in Grenivík. When the police investigate the case, they finds that a deacon has also been executed inside Akureyri.
Punishment of a Hunter: Yulia Yakovleva, Pushkin Vertigo
1930s Leningrad: As a mood of fear cloaks the city, Investigator Vasily Zaitsev is called on to investigate a series of bizarre and seemingly motiveless murders. In each case the victim is curiously dressed and posed in extravagantly arranged settings.
Hilde Vandermeeren: The Scorpion’s Head Pushkin Vertigo
Shortly after a fractious weekend away with her family, Gaelle wakes up injured in a psychological hospital in Berlin. Her son is is a coma and the police suspect her of attempting to murder him. With no memory what happened but convinced of her innocence Gaelle escapes and begins a determined hunt for the truth
28 October Cold as Hell by Lilja Sigurdardottir, Orenda Books
Icelandic sisters Áróra and Ísafold live in different countries and aren‘t on speaking terms, but when their mother loses contact with Ísafold, Áróra reluctantly returns to Iceland to find her sister. But she soon realizes that her sister isn’t avoiding her … she has disappeared, without trace.
Here is my review of Betrayal:
Crimes In Translation
Betrayal by Lilja Sigurðardóttir Betrayal by Lilja Sigurðardóttir, translated by Quentin Bates, Orenda Books 2020 This is the second book
The Rabbit Factor by Antti Toumainen, Orenda Books
What makes life perfect? Insurance mathematician Henri Koskinen knows the answer because he calculates everything down to the very last decimal. And then, for the first time, Henri is faced with the incalculable. After suddenly losing his job, Henri inherits an adventure park from his brother – its peculiar employees and troubling financial problems included. The worst of the financial issues appear to originate from big loans taken from criminal quarters … and some dangerous men are very keen to get their money back.
2 November Bricklayers: Selva Almada, Charco Press
Oscar Tamai and Elvio Miranda, the patriarchs of two families of brickmakers, have for years nursed a mutual hatred, but their teenage sons, Pájaro and Ángelito, somehow fell in love. Brickmakers begins as Pájaro and Marciano, Ángelito’s older brother, lie dying in the mud at the base of a Ferris wheel. Inhabiting a dreamlike state between life and death, they recall the events that forced them to pay the price of their fathers’ petty feud.
My review of Dead Girls:
Dead Girls — Charco Press
Dead Girls By Selva Almada Dead Girls By Selva Almada Translated by Annie McDermott, Charco Press Billed as journalist fiction, “Dead Gi
FICTION FROM AFAR
4 November The Night Will Be Long Santiago Gamboa, Europa Editions
When a horribly violent confrontation occurs outside of Cauca, Colombia, only a young boy is around to witness it. But no sooner does the violence happen than it disappears, vanished without a trace. Nobody claims to have seen anything. Nobody claims to have heard anything. That is, until an anonymous accusation catalyzes a dangerous investigation into the deep underbelly of the Christian churches present today in Latin America.
11 November The Shadows of Men by Abir Mukherjee Harvill Secker
When a Hindu theologian is found murdered in his home, the city is on the brink of all-out religious war. Can officers of the Imperial Police Force, Captain Sam Wyndham and Sergeant Surendranath Banerjee track down those responsible in time to stop a bloodbath? Set at a time of heightened political tension, beginning in atmospheric Calcutta and taking the detectives all the way to bustling Bombay presents Wyndham and Banerjee with an unprecedented challenge.
Turf Wars: Oliver Norek, translated by Nick Caistor, MacLehose Press
Since Capitaine Coste and his team’s last case, calm appears to have returned to the SDPJ93 – but not for long. The summary execution of three young dealers – one them shot in the head in full view of a police surveillance team – is the signal for hell to be unleashed in the suburb of Seine-Saint Denis.
The Lost and the Damned
The Lost And The Damned by Olivier Norek The Lost And The Damned Olivier Norek, translated by Nick Caistor, MacLehose Press Aside from th
FICTION FROM AFAR
16 November The Deathwatch Beetle by Kjell Eriksson, Minotaur Book
Four years have passed since Cecilia Karlsson disappeared from the island of Gräsö in Roslagen. When Ann Lindell receives a tip that she has been seen alive she cannot help getting involved, even though she is no longer with the police.
25 November Question of Guilt by Jorn Lier Horst, Penguin
In 1999, seventeen-year-old Tone Vaterland was killed on her way home from work. Desperate for a conviction the police deemed the investigation an open-and-shut case and sent her spurned boyfriend, Danny Momrak, down for murder. 20 years later William Wisting receives a puzzling letter. It suggests the wrong man was convicted for Tone’s death and the real murderer is still out there, and could kill again. . .
December Will To Kill: RV Rama Pushkin Vertigo
Aging and wheelchair-bound patriarch Bhaskar Fernandez has finally reclaimed his family property after a bitter legal battle, and now wants to reunite his aggrieved relatives. So, he invites them to remote Greybrooke Manor in the misty Nilgiris –a mansion that has played host to several sudden deaths; a colonial edifice that stands alone in a valley that is said to be haunted by the ghost of an Englishman. But Bhaskar has other, more practical problems to deal with.
Skin Deep by Antonia Lassa, translated by Jacky Collins, Corylus Books
The corpse of an elderly millionaire is discovered brutally scarred with acid burns. Her young lover is the chief suspect but the authorities admit they are baffled. It will take the intervention of private detective Albert Larten to explore all the complexities of desire, and ultimately reveal the truth.
Erin by Cyril Carrère, trans David Warriner
Erin Silva is struggling to get a grip. She’s young, naive, and has a deep connection to those she loves. But she’s not as fragile as she seems. As she prepares to take over the family business—in spite of some maternal reticence—she finds herself caught up in a chain of ill-fated events. It’s distressing for Erin to stir up the pain of the past, but she’s determined to find out the truth as she sets out to track down those responsible and make them pay. Even if it means letting go of the last illusions that remain of the life she once knew.
#crime fiction#crimeintranslation#european literature#nordicnoir#french noir#latinamericancrimefiction
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