What We're Reading

Book Reviews by the staff of the Mendocino County Library

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

The Devil's Feather by Minette Walters


What do they say? "Torn from today's headlines comes a story of ... " Minette Walters sets the beginning of the Devil's Feather in Sierra Leone and Baghdad. Connie Burns, a war correspondent for Reuters, encounters a mercenary with a questionable past. Where he goes brutal, misogynistic murders follow. In war, though, how can she know which is the unfortunate cost of war and a destabilized economy and which is a deliberate act of a psychopath.

Burns goes to the mercenary's employer and to the police but the employer is protective and the police helpless. Then she's taken hostage for three days while in Baghdad. In the aftermath she moves to an isolated village in England to recover. That isn't the end and what happened to her in Baghdad is not the only mystery.

I like Walters. She's that odd writer who can write dark novels convincingly and still end in hope. However, it has been awhile since I've set everything else aside and buried myself in a book -- but I could not put this one down. The story is not that unusual, a riff on the woman-in-peril plot. Burns seems, on the surface, not much more than the standard issue heroine. But she's not. Readers, keep your eye on her. Even now, reflecting back, I wonder at Walter's writing and the clues I missed along the way.

Walters also manages to convey the chaos and violence of war in Baghdad and Zimbabwe, takes a shot at the modern day use of mercenaries and the "if it bleeds, it leads" news mentality. While not graphic, I found some scenes (especially the flashbacks to her captivity) uncomfortable.

There is as much mystery in Burns as there is in the plot and it makes for a compulsive read.

~mel

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Saturday, November 10, 2007

Sweet Revenge by Diane Mott Davidson

How can a Librarian not be drawn into a murder mystery where in the first chapter, there is an altercation in the library over a cell phone and then a murder. Diane Mott Davidson brings us another book of mayhem and delicious food and all the interesting characters of her Colorado neighborhood. This library has volunteer guards and a video camera and still patrons are grumbling over internet and cell phone use. Sounds just like home.

There are always complications of course. Goldy, our heroine and caterer extraordinaire, is sure she has seen a ghost. Goldy is positive that the person she saw leaving the library was the young woman who shot her former husband and then jumped into a forest fire to her presumed death.

The dead man is the town's former D A who leaves a grieving fiancee, a furious ex-wife and a business partner desparate to find the missing maps that this man had.

So come to dinner and a murder and enjoy the dessert.

Eliza

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