Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,210
|
Post by Confessor on Jul 13, 2023 9:34:10 GMT -5
King Solomon's Mines by H. Rider Haggard. It's been eons since I've read any Haggard. I'm pretty inured to the casual racism of the period but the old-fashioned prose tends to do me in at this point. I wonder how it would hold up for me. Myself, I normally have a pretty high tolerance of the casual racism of the era in fiction, but it's just so unrelenting in this book that it's hard to brush over it or not let it effect your enjoyment the book. That, coupled with the slow pace and overly-verbose prose in Haggard's writing, was just too much for me to overcome and enjoy the book regardless.
|
|
|
Post by EdoBosnar on Jul 16, 2023 14:59:03 GMT -5
Mad MoneyMax Allan Collins, 2023 This is the fourth – and last – of the Hard Case omnibus editions that collect the previously published novels featuring Collins’ master thief, Nolan. First up is Spree, which was originally published in 1987. As the story begins, Nolan seems to have finally settled down and gone completely legit: he owns and runs a restaurant and bar attached to a mall in the Quad Cities (specifically Moline, IL), he’s well-liked and respected by other businessmen in the area and he’s living in big, comfortable house with his lover, Sherry, who is also the hostess and the de facto co-manager of his place. However, the idyll is thrown out of kilter a bit when Jon, Nolan’s sidekick in many of his previous capers, shows up at his door needing a place to stay, as he got evicted from his apartment in Des Moines and has nowhere else to go (despite now earning a decent income publishing an indie comic book). And then things really go south when Sherry gets kidnapped by an old enemy of Nolan’s who wants him to organize the robbery of the entire mall – or else. The second book is the short novel Mourn the Living, which was first published in 1999 but – according to Collins’ introduction for this new edition – was not only the very first Nolan story, but also the first novel he ever wrote in the late 1960s. It’s set about ten years before the events in the first published Nolan novel, Bait Money. In it, Nolan is asked by an old acquaintance, who used to be the top bookkeeper for their former common employer, the Chicago mob, to go to the small college town in central Illinois to investigate the death of his daughter – who jumped from the top of a tall building while strung out on LSD. He thinks there’s more to it than that, because the Chicago boys are involved in selling drugs to the local college kids. This one is interesting in that it reads more like a detective story than the fast-paced heist thrillers that are the norm for the Nolan books.
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Jul 17, 2023 0:02:42 GMT -5
The Donut Legion Joe Lansdale
This definitely COULD have been a Hap and Leonard book... Charlie and Felix Garner definitely had a similar vibe. It very high on the bat-guano crazy scale, more so than most Joe Lansdale books, but it comes back down to reality in the end. It almost felt like a Christopher Moore book at times it was so over the top, but it totally fit the story.
He view of cults matches my own pretty well, so that probably helped my enjoyed of the book... and there's a chimpanzee in a red cowboy hat. I'm not sure the heroines of the story being named Cherry and Scrappy will endear anyone, but as long as you get past that, both characters are great.
I could have done with out all the 'alphabet' reference... that was a running gag that ran way too long, but the rest was great. But then again, I don't think I've found a bad Joe Lansdale book yet.
|
|
|
Post by berkley on Jul 17, 2023 1:00:28 GMT -5
Mad MoneyMax Allan Collins, 2023 This is the fourth – and last – of the Hard Case omnibus editions that collect the previously published novels featuring Collins’ master thief, Nolan. First up is Spree, which was originally published in 1987. As the story begins, Nolan seems to have finally settled down and gone completely legit: he owns and runs a restaurant and bar attached to a mall in the Quad Cities (specifically Moline, IL), he’s well-liked and respected by other businessmen in the area and he’s living in big, comfortable house with his lover, Sherry, who is also the hostess and the de facto co-manager of his place. However, the idyll is thrown out of kilter a bit when Jon, Nolan’s sidekick in many of his previous capers, shows up at his door needing a place to stay, as he got evicted from his apartment in Des Moines and has nowhere else to go (despite now earning a decent income publishing an indie comic book). And then things really go south when Sherry gets kidnapped by an old enemy of Nolan’s who wants him to organize the robbery of the entire mall – or else. The second book is the short novel Mourn the Living, which was first published in 1999 but – according to Collins’ introduction for this new edition – was not only the very first Nolan story, but also the first novel he ever wrote in the late 1960s. It’s set about ten years before the events in the first published Nolan novel, Bait Money. In it, Nolan is asked by an old acquaintance, who used to be the top bookkeeper for their former common employer, the Chicago mob, to go to the small college town in central Illinois to investigate the death of his daughter – who jumped from the top of a tall building while strung out on LSD. He thinks there’s more to it than that, because the Chicago boys are involved in selling drugs to the local college kids. This one is interesting in that it reads more like a detective story than the fast-paced heist thrillers that are the norm for the Nolan books.
Is that Lee Van Cleef as Nolan on the cover? That alone almost makes me want to read the series!
|
|
|
Post by berkley on Jul 17, 2023 1:10:22 GMT -5
King Solomon's Mines by H. Rider Haggard. It's been eons since I've read any Haggard. I'm pretty inured to the casual racism of the period but the old-fashioned prose tends to do me in at this point. I wonder how it would hold up for me.
As far as the prose style goes, I suspect it's largely a matter of habit: if you read Victorian or 19th century English writing pretty regularly it doesn't seem overly heavy or verbose - at least that's been my experience. In fact I sometimes have the opposite problem, with modern fiction at times feeling flat and lifeless in comparison.
|
|
|
Post by EdoBosnar on Jul 17, 2023 1:24:38 GMT -5
Is that Lee Van Cleef as Nolan on the cover? That alone almost makes me want to read the series!
Well, no, it's not actually supposed to be van Cleef. However, it's emphasized in pretty much every Nolan novel that the two bear more than a passing resemblance. You can see the covers to these latest Hard Case Crime reissues with Nolan presented in all of his van-Cleefy glory in my reviews of the previous editions upthread: Two for the Money, Double Down and Tough Tender.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Jul 17, 2023 13:46:21 GMT -5
The Donut Legion Joe Lansdale This definitely COULD have been a Hap and Leonard book... Charlie and Felix Garner definitely had a similar vibe. It very high on the bat-guano crazy scale, more so than most Joe Lansdale books, but it comes back down to reality in the end. It almost felt like a Christopher Moore book at times it was so over the top, but it totally fit the story. He view of cults matches my own pretty well, so that probably helped my enjoyed of the book... and there's a chimpanzee in a red cowboy hat. I'm not sure the heroines of the story being named Cherry and Scrappy will endear anyone, but as long as you get past that, both characters are great. I could have done with out all the 'alphabet' reference... that was a running gag that ran way too long, but the rest was great. But then again, I don't think I've found a bad Joe Lansdale book yet. I'm keeping my eye out for this to be discounted. I certainly haven't found a bad Lansdale book. I've found a few I didn't think were up to par for him, but they were still pretty darn good books.
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Jul 18, 2023 21:44:24 GMT -5
The Scourge Between Stars by Ness Brown
This got my attention at the library for being a short, stand alone but current book. I can appreciate the author writing a book in the 60s style (intentional or not, I'm not sure).
The problem was there really wasn't any message to make you think, or really much of a plot. There was just one high concept after another... If we have the story of a generational ship trying to overcome tech issues to get home, despite being chased by an overwhelming enemy (ala Battlestar Galactica).. then it turns into Aliens... finally we get the literal hand of god at the end.
Add to that the characters are all very... millenial and this definitely doesn't hold a candle to any of the classics. Not a terrible attempt for a first novel though... perhaps the next one will be better.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Jul 19, 2023 9:53:55 GMT -5
Razzmatazz by Christopher Moore Sammy "Two-Toes" Tiffen and the rest of the gang from Noir are back in Moore's latest novel. Sammy has his hands full as somebody is killing Drag Kings in the Foggy City and local club owner Jimmy Vasco wants Sammy to find out who's the culprit since she thinks she's on the list and the new moralistic police force don't have much interest in who is killing ladies who dress like men. At the same time Eddie "Moo Shoes" needs Sammy's help finding the Rain Dragon, a tong artifact, for his Uncle Ho to save him from the wrath of gangster The Squid Kid. All this while Stilton, aka The Cheese, Sammy's girlfriend, and her welder buddies are building a huge and very odd vehicle. It's as odd as it sounds (which is normal for Moore) and somehow Moore pulls it all off and pulls it all together. I liked, but didn't love Noir. It seemed like I should have loved it a lot more given it mashed up some of my favorite things. But it didn't wholly work for me. I liked this one just a tad better. Maybe I was just better able to go with the flow. Moore did give us some nice history of the Chinese influence in San Francisco, which tied in pretty nicely with my recent read of the comic book The Good Asian. Or maybe it was just that I realized that Moore wasn't really going to give us any real noir, but just a few of the trappings. It's a good read. Not up with Moore's best, but fun and fast.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Jul 22, 2023 11:40:02 GMT -5
Nobody's Perfect by Donald E. Westlake
John Dortmunder and his compadres are back in a fourth caper. This time Dortmunder is hired to steal an old master painting for the insurance money and then return it to the original owner for a significant cut of the take. As usual, Dortmunder's plan is pretty darn good. And, as usual, things go awry and the jinx that seems to haunt him rears its ugly head. Honestly these books are so plot intensive that almost anything more than that starts to get in to spoiler territory. A number of Dortmunder's pals are along for the job, including perennials Andy Kelp and Stan Murch. We're introduced to muscle-man "Tiny" Blucher. And Herman X makes a short guest appearance. These books are just fun capers. They're long on plot and very light on characterization. None of the characters personalities are deeper than worn-out rug, but that doesn't really matter because the point is the caper and, in Dortmunder's case, how it's going to go wrong and how he's going to fix it.
|
|
|
Post by EdoBosnar on Jul 23, 2023 12:14:31 GMT -5
Skim DeepMax Allan Collins, 2020 This is the last Nolan novel, written over 30 years after the preceding one, Spree (reviewed by me uphtread, just scroll up a bit) and it’s set about 6 months afterward – so some time in late 1987. Here, Nolan and Sherry travel to Las Vegas to get married and have a week-long honeymoon – because Nolan, now in his mid-50s, is taking the whole going legitimate and settling down thing quite seriously. They’re met in Vegas by Nolan’s best man and accomplice of many past capers, Jon, who’s been living there for a few months, still plugging away at his indie comic book while also making ends meet by playing keyboards for a night club band in a local casino. However, bits of Nolan’s past come back to bite him in the ass – both in Vegas in the form of an old acquaintance from his days with the Chicago mob who’s now a casino floor manager, and back in the Quad Cities, as he’s being stalked by the kid brother of two thieves he’s had dealings with in the past – both of whom met grisly ends as a result. (In preceding reviews, I avoided going into too much detail about the plots and characters, but these guys, the Comforts, show up in most of the Nolan books after the first two – they’re a family of mean rednecks who are involved in the lowliest types of thieving, like jacking parking meters, stealing and reselling food stamps and fencing stolen appliances and electronics, and they usually have no compunctions about double-crossing anyone they work with – one of them is the guy who kidnapped Sherry and forced Nolan to organize the mall heist in Spree). I’d say this is the weakest of the Nolan novels – in fact, it’s almost like two short stories or novellas jammed together and then padded a bit. Even so, I should say that Collins is such a good writer that even when he pads it’s not noticeable, so this book reads seamlessly and it’s definitely worth reading if you’ve read the other Nolans.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Jul 23, 2023 13:59:11 GMT -5
The Team-Up Companion by Michael Eury
I'm a fan of Twomorrows' various publications and have been happy with all of them. But this one was a little special, so I jumped on it when it was a bit less discounted than I usually would. Growing up my comic buying money was limited. And it was sporadic. So I wanted some bang for my cents. Team-up books gave me that with just a bit more meat than the normal team book. And since Batman and Spider-Man were my two favorite super-heroes, Brave & Bold and Marvel Team-Up made up a fair portion of my early comic book buying (Marvel Two-in-One made up a decent bit as well...I was a pretty big fan of Bashful Benjy Grimm). So there's a lot of nostalgia in my reading of Eury's look at the Team-Up Age of superhero comics. And yes, nostalgia is a trap, but sometimes you just have to put your foot in the noose. Eury covers not just the big books (Brave & Bold, Marvel Team-Up, Marvel Two-in-One, DC Comics Presents), but also the less successful and more obscure tomes. I loved the look at the ill-fated and poorly named Super-Team Family. The single issue of Western Team-Up. The Superman Vs. tabloids. Super-Villain Team-Up, a book that fascinated me as a kid. They're all there with more than adequate coverage, including such non-superhero fair as the New Scooby-Doo Movies and some Harvey books that may or may not have constituted team-up books. And there's a very nice eight page section devoted to Bob Haney who made Brave & Bold one of my favorite comics of all time. If I had a complaint, it's that most of the info here is gleaned from and re-worked from issues of Eury's Back Issue Magazine. So if you read that magazine faithfully you have most of this info already. But it's nice to have it in one place. If you like Twomorrows' books, you're going to like this one. And if, like me, you grew up in the 70s and 80s, the Team-Up Age of Comics, you're going to really love it.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Jul 24, 2023 13:41:57 GMT -5
Cats Prowl at Night by A. A. Fair (Erle Stanley Gardner) This is the 8th Cool & Lam mystery...but it's also the first Bertha Cool mystery. With the U.S.'s entry in to World War II Gardner had to decide what to do with his other mystery series (Perry Mason presumably being too old to serve). Donald Lam was pretty well of draft age and was unmarried and not in a necessary industry. So Donald joined the navy. In the previous novel Donald was able to solve the mystery via telegram and with the help of a three-day pass. But this time Bertha is on her own. And she's in way over her head. Bertha Cool is a great character. But she's a great supporting character. She unfortunately gets tiring if she's around too long. And that makes this one a hard go, probably my least favorite of the (roughly) half of the books that I've read. Before Donald came along Bertha was a small timer, taking garbage cases for garbage money. She never developed the skills necessary for big cases. And she doesn't have Donald's legal training to help keep her out of trouble. She does come through in the end. But it's due as much to luck and help from police detective Frank Sellers. The plus is that Gardner's writing is so solid that you just keep propelling forward in the book even while it's bugging the heck out of you.
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Jul 25, 2023 9:12:01 GMT -5
The Book of Koli M. R. (Mike) Carey
While the setting is pretty typical post apocalypse. There seems to be alot more tech arount than usual in these things, and at least a few people that know enough to try to use it and get the world up and running again. They also address some things that such stories never typically address.. like having a small gene pool and there NOT actually being lovely caches of useful things just lying around everywhere.
There were some inconsistencies though.. at first it was described that you basically had to hide behind walls in prepared ground or the fast growing 'choker trees' would kill you, but by the end Koli and his crew are just hanging out in the forest without much of an explanation, almost like when he left his village earlier he beat that level and it wasn't a thing anymore.
The AI of the Dreamsleeve (an imprint of a fictional Japanese pop star with a tragic story) is by far the most interesting character,and is almost worth reading the 2nd book for, we'll see.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Jul 29, 2023 10:49:26 GMT -5
Monk's Hood by Ellis Peters
There's been another murder in Shrewsbury and Cadfael feels he needs to find the culprit because one of his herbal concoctions was used. A manor-lord has retired to the Abbey with his wife and two servants leaving the manor and lands to the Abbey in return for food and board in his retirement. This would result in his step-son being disinherited. He also has a illegitimate son who cannot inherit by English law. But the paperwork to complete the transfer cannot be completed because Abbot Heribert is called to a Legatine Council that may replace him. When the manor-lord ends up dead there are a number of potential suspects, but the Sheriff's Sergeant keys in on the step-son and won't let go. So it's up to Cadfael to figure out if he really did it...or if it was one of the others. Another solid book in the series and one that raises some interesting distinctions between English and Welsh law (I'll just assume that Peters had them right) at the time. It also shows how intertwined the Marcher Counties of England and Wales were at the time even though they were separate countries. I also really liked the ending which is very different than your standard murder mystery. We also get a little deeper look in to Cadfael's back-story as the love of his youth, Richildis, shows up in this one. I'm really enjoying these books. Not my standard hard-boiled noir, but very solid stuff.
|
|