
Crime fiction: Megan Abbott, Elmore Leonard, Luke Beirne, Paul Vidich, Karin Slaughter and K Anis Ahmed
El Dorado Drive
(Virago, £22) is a dark, satisfying delight. Abbott's
writing
has always been hypnotic, projecting a powerful sense of women's inner lives and desires through the prisms of noir and suspense.
El Dorado Drive – her first novel explicitly set in her hometown, the archetypal old-money
Detroit
suburb of Grosse Pointe, where 'Eisenhower was still president' – anchors that strength in a newly intimate sense of place. Abbott also has some new razor-edged fun here with American suburbia's satire-ready pathologies as they break through the patina of country club life.
The three Bishop sisters take centre stage: Pam's ex has stolen their kids' college funds; Debra's helping her husband through chemo; and Harper's coping with a break-up. Born into comfort, these three 'never thought about money until it was gone and then it was all any of them thought about'.
Heavily indebted and newly evicted, Harper's crashing with Pam, who tells her about the Wheel. Ostensibly a women's support group, each meeting of the Wheel concludes with a woman receiving a pile of cash from the newest members. Although one character unconvincingly insists the Wheel's 'not a pyramid … It's a triangle,' Harper recognises it means 'selling the women you knew. Even the ones you loved,' by capitalising on their economic vulnerability. Struggling with her own secrets and debts, Harper sets aside her unease to join the group.
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As the scheme plays out, a narcotic mix of regret, fear and love drives Abbott's characters forward, until someone winds up dead. The local cops, used to 'toilet paper vandalism and DUIs', are quickly out of their depth, leaving Harper to push for answers. As Harper tries to piece it all together, Abbott subtly moves her characters through slyly crafted surprises to a satisfying conclusion that betrays none of this book's intoxicating depth.
Another great Detroit-area writer, Elmore Leonard – one of America's most distinctive crime novelists – gets some well-designed reissues from the Penguin Modern Classics: Crime and Espionage list.
Like Abbott, Leonard has a gift for giving characters their own voices, his spare prose doing so as concisely as possible, even when – as in the lead reissue,
Rum Punch
(Penguin, £9.99) – describing extravagantly dramatic things like Nazi killing, gun running and money smuggling.
Elmore Leonard in Detroit, Michigan, in 1992. Photograph: Michael Brennan/Getty
Three of Rum Punch's main characters return from another welcome reissue, The Switch, where the kidnapping of a Detroit developer's wife very much fails to go as planned. Ordell, Louis and Melanie haven't grown noticeably luckier, smarter or kinder since then, but Rum Punch gets a different spark from airline steward Jackie, who's entangled in their schemes. Both more complex and easier to root for, Jackie is drawn as vividly as anything in Leonard's best work, and she makes Rum Punch sing.
Irish-Canadian journalist Luke Beirne's third novel, the quietly moving
Saints Rest
(Baraka Books, CAD$24.95), is set around St John, Newfoundland, an atmospherically drawn landscape that's key to the story.
Narrator Frank Cain is the junior member of a small PI agency, weighed down by a job that too often involves 'helping the rich stay rich and the poor stay hungry'. Warily, he takes on a new client, Malory Fleet, whose son Jason, a low-level dealer, was murdered exactly a year ago. Now, Jason's girlfriend Amanda has disappeared, and Malory, who sees her as a daughter, wants her back.
Immersing himself in the case, Frank soon loses his moorings, uncertain even whether Amanda fled or was taken. As he tries to find Amanda without losing himself along the way, Saints Rest unfolds quickly to a short, sharp shock of a conclusion.
Paul Vidich's
The Poet's Game
(No Exit, £18.99), an espionage thriller set in 2018 Washington and Moscow, is a worthy follow-up to his memorable Beirut Station. Vidich details political gamesmanship with an exactitude in the tradition of John le Carré, whose influence he ably honours.
A former CIA operative, Alex Matthews now runs Trinity Capital, a financial firm in Moscow, a city he knows well from his days as the CIA station chief. When the CIA director asks Alex back to help extricate an asset he recruited – code name Byron, the last remaining agent of his old network – Alex agrees.
His sense of duty lingers, though his commitment to the CIA had long been diminishing 'like a slow dusk' because of the agency's growing hypocrisy, leading to his marginalisation and early retirement. As Alex soon discovers, that institutional hypocrisy has endured: it looms large here, resting uneasily alongside his own love, guilt, and grief.
A tragic personal backstory reverberates throughout the novel, adding depth to Alex's character without overwhelming the central plot. The action moves ahead at an elegant pace and concludes on a pitch-perfect note.
Hugely popular bestseller Karin Slaughter starts a new series with
We Are All Guilty Here
(HarperCollins, £22). Although some of the seams show – this is a long book, full of plot twists and more than enough characters to populate several titles – Slaughter's clearly a real pro who's very, very skilled at what she does.
The propulsive first third captures the pressure between being a teen in a small town and the often naive helplessness of the adults struggling to love them. Desperate to be adults, Madison Dalrymple and Cheyenne Baker find themselves dangerously out of their depth. When they disappear, the community rushes to find them.
While trying to ensure that fear doesn't make neighbours 'tear each other apart', Deputy Emmy Clifton-Lang and her father Sheriff Gerald Clifton quickly find damning physical evidence, but their interrogations provide the leads that matter most.
Twelve years later, another girl disappears in disturbingly similar circumstances. This case throws its shadows over Emmy's own family, leaving bruises that will surely linger through the series. Embedded in its small Georgia town, We Are All Guilty Here stands out for often being as invested in these families as in the crimes they encounter.
Spinning a tale of hubris, Bangladesh memories, and exotic meats, K Anis Ahmed's
Carnivore
(HarperCollins, £16.99) is an energetic romp through a moneyed world that stops at nothing to feed its ego.
Bangladeshi emigrant Kash Mirza opened an exclusive Manhattan restaurant in the summer of 2008, when 'alpha-nerds with PhDs in stochastic mathematics or God-knows-what had no clue … markets would tank …everyone would be a millionaire.' Kash rode this wave as blindly as the rest, never anticipating the imminent crash. By the fall, though, those financial sharks 'turned into broken relics' and Kash faces being broken too, by Boris, a gangster from whom he borrowed a bit too much a bit too often. Trying to figure out how he landed in such a precarious situation, Kash summons the ghosts of his childhood and of his fellow ex-pats.
As Boris presses for repayment, cutting off Kash's pinky along the way, Carnivore follows Kash's increasingly inspired efforts to survive. He soon double-talks his way to a meeting with an international group of billionaire gastronomes, selling them an 'Evening of Danger' to appease their ennui.
As the novel moves to its culinary climax and Kash's rationalisations accumulate, Ahmed surrounds him with a vivid secondary cast, making this a charmingly gruesome depiction of his race for survival.
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Irish Times
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Séamus O'Reilly: I'm so sorry for my role in encouraging Netflix
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There are your standard attention-seeking microinfluencers, some New Age hippie types, a solid contingency of tactical-gear-wearing conspiracy cultists, and several varieties of stoner burnout adrenaline junkies – one of whom is good enough to make that appellation charmingly literal by explaining that he was attracted to the cause because he reckoned 'there was probably going to be a lot of adrenaline at this event'. [ Irish actor Pauline McLynn joins Coronation Street Opens in new window ] The one thing they all have in common – and I can say this with authority, having watched two hours of their adventures in the desert in 2019 – is that they're dumb as rocks. Watching them mount their charge on Area 51 is at times like watching pigeons trying to work the Large Hadron Collider, a diverting event rendered meaningless by the fact that it takes place without purpose. Or even, one sometimes worries, without sentience. 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Irish Times
21 hours ago
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Belfast Bride - Frank McNally on the Irish wife of man who dropped US atomic bomb on Nagasaki
The name of Kermit Beahan might sound comical to modern ears, or at least to those of us raised on the Muppets. But his role in history was far from funny. Eighty years ago this week, he was the bombardier who dropped the device known as 'Fat Man' on Nagasaki , killing 70,000 people then and later. He was nicknamed 'The Great Artiste' by colleagues in the US air-force, for his accuracy. They even had a plane so called in his honour which, with him in the crew, had also been part of the back-up at Hiroshima. It was said that he could 'hit a pickle barrel … from 30,000 feet'. His name may have been doubly Celtic. Kermit is a Manx version of MacDermot. As for Beahan, that looks like a variant of the surname more usually anglicised as Behan. READ MORE But his wife, Teresa (aka Tess) Lavery was certainly Irish. And via both her husbands (Beahan was the second) - she became a footnote to history, literally or otherwise. Belfast-born of a dynasty that included the well-known publicans and the painter Sir John, Tess Lavery first wed the future historian Shelby Foote (1916 – 2005). They met when he was stationed at Kilkeel, Co Down, in the later years of the war. In 1944, he borrowed an official vehicle without clearance to visit her in Belfast. That earned him a court martial and dismissal from the army, before he had seen any action. The pair married in New York soon afterwards, despite mutual misgivings. On the way to the church, according to his biographer C Stuart Chapman, Foote began whistling Cole Porter's hit, Don't Fence Me In. The couple's obvious worries about each other led the priest to comment: 'I have never seen two people getting married look so solemn'. For the bride, this only made things worse: 'On two separate occasions, the service had to be stopped because she cried so violently'. A replica of the atomic bomb code-named Fat Man, dropped over Nagasaki, 9 August 1945. Photograph: History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images It need hardly be added that the marriage didn't last long. Anxious to get back to the war, Foote soon afterwards enlisted for the Marine Corps, who was desperate enough for recruits to ignore his previous misdemeanours. In the event, he never saw combat with them either. But he was a man who didn't want to be married, really. The condition 'galled' him, he later admitted. Lavery filed for divorce in early 1946. Her husband didn't contest. And as Stewart Chapman notes: 'If Foote lost a wife, he gained a vocation'. Having reluctantly given up on war, he became a journalist and wrote a first novel, published in 1946, earning enough from it to make him a full-time writer. A few years later again, he embarked on a 20-year project that became a three-volume, 3,000-page history of the American Civil War. Its narrative style drew praise and criticism and established him as one of the best-known historians of the 20th century, although he continued to see himself primarily as a novelist. Lavery's marriage to Beahan is less well documented but lasted until his death in 1989 and produced two children, Kermit Jnr and Patrick. Her new husband was lucky to have survived the war. [ Atomic bombings anniversary: Japanese politicians consider a once-unthinkable question Opens in new window ] Survivors moving along the road after the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, Japan, in August 1945. Photograph: EPA/US national archives In 1942 alone, planes in which he was a crew member were shot down or forced to crash-land four times. But for good or bad, Beahan would be forever defined by his role in the two atomic bomb missions of August 1945 . He was part of a support team for the first. For the second, he was the man charged with dropping the bomb on the city of Kokura, the original intended target. In a bleak irony, Kokura was saved by smoke and dust from an earlier, conventional US air-bombing, which prevented Beahan from recognising a target. The crew settled instead for Nagasaki, although that too presented problems. It was at first clouded over and the crew were reluctant to rely on radar, which could be notoriously inaccurate. The plane's fuel was running dangerously low, meanwhile. It looked for as if they might have to ditch the bomb at sea. [ 'As survivors of these weapons, we all agree that they can never be used again' Opens in new window ] Then Beahan spotted a sports stadium through a gap in the cloud cover. Moments later, according to Stephen Walker's book Shockwave: Countdown to Hiroshima: 'he yelled, 'Bombs away' – then corrected himself: 'Bomb away'." He and the others had no idea where exactly it had fallen until later. 'In fact,' writes Walker, 'in one of the most bizarre coincidences of the war, Fat Man had detonated almost directly over the factory that once made the torpedoes used in the attack on Pearl Harbor'. It also killed 40,000 people, with many more to follow. Beahan had mixed feelings in later years about his involvement in the missions. He was neither proud nor inclined to apologise, believing the bombs had saved lives in the long run. Japan's surrender followed within days, and a minor side effect was to end the hopes of Teresa Lavery's first husband that he would ever see military action. According to Stuart Chapman: 'Foote was devastated that World War II was over'.