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Showing posts with label Headhunters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Headhunters. Show all posts
Wednesday, 19 July 2017
Spook Street - Mick Herron
I hadn't come across Mick Herron before. Had I noticed the blurb from the Mail on Sunday I would never have picked Spook Street up, which would have been a shame because, though the Mail on Sunday has no sense or taste whatsoever, this really is an excellent, fresh take on contemporary British spy fiction.
For a start, it's sardonically comic. Jackson Lamb, our team leader, is an appalling slob. The team he leads at Slough House are known elsewhere in MI5 as 'slow horses'. They are, in short, the unmanageable ones. They have initiated disaster at some point in their career but MI5 dare not sack them in case they go to the Press, in which case some officers who still have prospects might end up in the adjoining prison cell.
Still, even slow horses have their day. Sometimes a case arises which is inescapably their province. Here, the proper domestic spies are fully engaged with a suicide bombing in a shopping mall. River Cartwright, one of Lamb's team, goes to visit his grandfather who is suffering dementia. Only someone claiming to be River has already shown up. The old man, who is not so senile that he can't vaguely remember his own grandson, shoots him dead - because David Cartwright was once also an habitue of Spook Street, by no means a slow horse but a candidate for First Chair. Who has sent an assassin to kill him? Is the old man as gaga as he seems? And how come the assassin and the suicide bomber travelled on papers of British citizens who never existed but who were created by MI5 back in David Cartwright's day?
That is a plot that would suffice for any straightfaced spy novel. Herron is able to deliver more because his spooks are comic and to be able to laugh at or with them we have to know something of who they are. Thus Herron's misfits end up being more rounded than many leading characters in mainstream series (Spook Street is itself the fourth in a series). Drink and domestic problems are not enough to give the slow horses their edge. Thus we have Roddy Ho, deluding himself that he has a proper girlfriend; the homicidal Shirley, and J K Coe who, his colleagues conclude, is "either PTSD or a psychopath."
The bad guys are equally conflicted, equally well-drawn. The prose style is exactly right throughout and there is a twist about 80% of the way through that is as devastating as anything by the master of such things, Jo Nesbo (see, for example, the mighty Headhunters.
I hugely enjoyed Spook Street in every way - intellectually, artistically, and sheer laugh-out-loud. I'm off down the library tomorrow to hunt out more.
Thursday, 18 August 2016
Blood on Snow - Jo Nesbo
Given that Midnight Sun is billed as Blood On Snow 2, it comes as no suprise that Blood On Snow itself is the precursor of Midnight Sun - the reason Olav runs away to the deep north. The set up is ingenious, worthy of James M Cain. Olav, whose only talent is as a fixer, is ordered by his gangster boss to kill the boss's much younger wife. Olav, of course, falls for the wife, which means doing a deal with his boss's rival, the Fisherman (who ultimately pursues him to the deep north in Part 2). The twists are obvious in hindsight, but Nesbo's great gift is the ability to slide them past you, unnoticed, as you read. Olav is a much more interesting character here than in Midnight Sun - a psychopath whose heart is in the right place. It sounds bizarre but it works.
Again, a very slim volume in which irrelevant detail is pared to the bone. I liked it better than Midnight Sun. It is not a patch on Headhunters and inferior to perhaps half the Harry Hole Oslo series.
Sunday, 10 July 2016
Midnight Sun - Jo Nesbo
This is, I believe, Nesbo's latest novel. It came out last year. Headhunters was the first Nesbo stand-alone novel. This is the fourth. I raved about Headhunters here on my Biblioblog but got a little bored with the more recent Harry Hole novels. The reprints of the early Hole novels, long delayed in the UK, were delayed for a good reason - they were rubbish. I was beginning to lose faith. Then came the TV series Occupied, with a storyline by Nesbo, and I was tempted to try again. So, having missed The Son and Blood on Snow, I picked up Midnight Sun.
OK, it is not as good as Headhunters. The characters are more traditional, the twist is not as jaw-dropping, the cringe scene is nowhere near as hideous, but at least at barely 200 pages it doesn't outlive its story. The story is, as I say, fairly basic: hero runs away from big city to wilderness with a dark secret - he has done a very bad thing, which turns out not to be so bad after all and is kind of justified. He pitches up in the wilds with an assumed name and falls for the preacher's daughter.
The big difference, of course, is that this is Norway. The wilderness is extremely wild. The locals are not rednecks but Sami (Laplanders) and this is Nesbo telling the tale. He does so expertly. It's secondary Nesbo (which is not the same as second-rate Nesbo) but it's a cracking read and therefore a welcome return to form.
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A blast from the past. My review of Headhunters from March 2012:
How annoying for those of us who write - the best contemporary Nordic author of series crime fiction, quite possibly the best full-stop, turns out to be just as good at stand-alone first-person psychological thrillers. No wonder this has been snapped up for the first Nesbo movie, which opens in the UK and Ireland on April 6.
Thank goodness it's a Norwegian movie, not some hopeless Hollywood mess. Unfortunately, I suspect that means it won't get shown much outside major cities.
However, back to the book...
I have simply never read such a masterful riff on the twists and turns essential for the genre, nor the untrustworthy narrator device which, when done right, raises the typical to the exceptional. For example, most thriller writers return to their prologue at the end. Not Nesbo; he picks it up in the middle and makes it his key turning-point. As for the final twist ... it was so unexpected, so stunning, that I had to flip back to the relevant passage to make sure Nesbo hadn't cheated. And he hadn't. Wonderful - more than worthy of Hitchcock or Patrick Hamilton.
But the world of books would be a dreary old place if we all agreed...
I found a slightly different opinion on Beattie's Book Blog (unofficial homepage of the New Zealand book community), which is an excellent, highly-informed site:
I have to say I didn't rate the stand-alone Headhunters, (although I reckon it will make a great movie); no give me the Harry Hole titles any day and on that note the good news is that the next one is due soon.Phantom – the thrilling follow-up to The Leopard……….Synopsis:Summer. A boy is lying on the floor of an Oslo apartment. He is bleeding and will soon die. In order to place his life and death in some kind of context he begins to tell his story. Outside, the church bells toll.Autumn. Former police inspector Harry Hole returns to Oslo after three years abroad. He seeks out his old boss at Police Headquarters to request permission to investigate a homicide. But the case is already closed: the young junkie was in all likelihood shot dead by a fellow addict. Yet, Harry is granted permission to visit the boy's alleged killer in jail. There, he meets himself and his own history. What follows is the solitary investigation of what appears to be the first impossible case in Harry Hole's career. And while Harry is searching, the murdered boy continues his story.A man walks the dark streets of Oslo. The streets are his and he has always been there. He is a phantom.Yay, bring it on, can't wait to read it................
Me neither. Actually, I don't have to. It is published in the UK today and Harvill Secker have done a vid.
What I want to know, though, is what has happened to the first two Hole books, The Bats (1997) and The Cockroaches (1998), neither of which are available here? I can't think of another series, which has established a reputation and sales in another country, that hasn't started from the beginning here. Decidedly odd.
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Really, really wish I hadn't asked that last question. Do you suppose it provoked them?
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Here are all the Nesbo books I've reviewed on this site.

Sunday, 30 August 2015
In the Darkness - Karin Fossum
Karin Fossum is one of the leading lights of Nordic Noir. She has won all the prizes and is up there with Mankell and Nesbo in Scandinavia. It is such a shame that she is so poorly published in English. You never find her books in major bookshops and the product itself looks cheap and frankly manky.
In the Darkness dates from 1995 and is ostensibly an Inspector Sejer novel (her other protagonist Skarre hardly features). In fact Sejer appears to do very little - until everything falls into place at the end and you realise just how clever a book this is. The final twist came out of nowhere but, for me, was just perfect. In many ways I was reminded of Nesbo's standalone novel Headhunters, which I've raved about before on this blog (I still haven't plucked up the courage to watch the movie for fear of disappointment). It's no secret that Nesbo is a Fossum fan - the endorsement on the moon above is, for once, genuine. Indeed he pays homage in Headhunters to one of the more startling moments here. I won't go into detail, because the last thing I want to do is give any plot away, but toilets are involved. Nesbo's cyclical structure, so different from the linear arrangement of the Hole novels, is surely also influenced by In the Darkness.
A magnificent achievement. My interest in Nordic Noir, which was slipping a bit after a couple of imported duds on TV, is reinvigorated.
Saturday, 5 October 2013
Phantom - Jo Nesbo
As it says on the cover, the new Harry Hole thriller, and the best yet in my view. Harry gets into the story good and early and there's no need for him to opt out of the official police investigation as he is no longer a policeman and the real cops have already closed their investigation.
Harry's excesses are understandable because the case is the only case that conceivably drag him away from his sober new life in Hong Kong.
I particularly admired the way Nesbo is prepared to take risks. Who is this talking at the beginning and indeed all the way through. Then we realise. Then we realise who he is talking to. Superb craftsmanship. I can't think of anyone else who could pull it off so successfully. The only comparison I can think of is Nesbo's standalone, The Headhunters, which is probably the best Nordic Noir novel ever.
After the disappointment of The Bat, which was juvenilia best left untranslated, Phantom came as a huge relief. Nesbo on top form - unbeatable. And the next Harry Hole, Police, is already out. Let me at it!
Harry's excesses are understandable because the case is the only case that conceivably drag him away from his sober new life in Hong Kong.
I particularly admired the way Nesbo is prepared to take risks. Who is this talking at the beginning and indeed all the way through. Then we realise. Then we realise who he is talking to. Superb craftsmanship. I can't think of anyone else who could pull it off so successfully. The only comparison I can think of is Nesbo's standalone, The Headhunters, which is probably the best Nordic Noir novel ever.
After the disappointment of The Bat, which was juvenilia best left untranslated, Phantom came as a huge relief. Nesbo on top form - unbeatable. And the next Harry Hole, Police, is already out. Let me at it!
Wednesday, 7 August 2013
Whisper Town - Judson Phillips
I was sorting out my bookshelves (more a cull than a rearrangement) and found several books I didn't know I had, of which this was one. I have no idea when I acquired it and, having now read it, I'm pretty sure I didn't read it at the time of acquisition.
What a treasure! Phillips 1903-1985 wrote mystery thrillers for sixty years. Under his real name, and the pseudonym Hugh Pentecost, he is said to have turned out a hundred novels. If they're all as good as Whisper Town, he is ripe for rediscovery.
This is classic American noir - a small town where everyone knows everyone else but each only knows a little of the other's secrets. It starts with an accident, a drunk-drive hit-and-run, but becomes a witch-hunt into the teacher behind the high school's sex education programme, then it becomes a murder. It all takes place over a single week. Every element is fully resolved, but the device by which Philips delivers the final denouement is breathtaking - every bit as good as the twist in Nesbo's Headhunters. I really should have spotted it, especially as the character has my mother's maiden name, which is also my stage name, but I didn't and I like to think that is because of Phillip's mastery of his craft rather than me not paying proper attention.
The writing itself is an object lesson of how these things should be done. No frills, no affectations, yet every sentence and every phrase refined to deliver the ultimate impact. As an example, check out the last half-page of Part One, page 70 in this edition.
I'm happy to say I also have another Phillips novel I didn't know I had, which I shall be reading imminently. But then what shall I do? I'm afraid - lightened bookshelves notwithstanding - I shall have to acquire more. I owe it to myself.
Monday, 29 July 2013
The Bat - Jo Nesbo
This is the first Harry Hole, published in Norway as far back as 1997 but not translated into English until 2012. When I first learnt The Bat existed, I wondered why hadn't they brought it out in America and the UK? Having read it, I know why. It isn't as good as whatever they started the English run with.
It's OK - better than OK and a good bit better than most other Nordic Noir thrillers that have been hurriedly published in the wake of Nesbo's success - but it is nowhere near as good as books like The Redeemer and The Leopard. It is a million miles from the mighty Headhunters. Frankly, I wish they hadn't bothered.
For starters, it isn't Nordic, it's Aussie with a guest Nord. Harry has been flown off to the southern hemisphere after a minor Norwegian TV personality is murdered in Sydney. This in itself is wholly implausible. It quickly becomes irritating that the Australians can't pronounce Hole the Norwegian way and take to calling him Harry Holy. Even Nesbo can't make a joke as thin as that last 374 pages. There are long, tedious tracts of Aboriginal folklore which have no connection with the story and are there to show off Nesbo's research. The red herring might as well wear a red herring hat it is so obvious he's not the killer and the real bad guy can be arrived at by the Agatha Christie method (i.e. who do we think is least likely to have done it?) I finished the book less than twelve hours ago and have already forgotten why he did it.
For all that, the story moves along at an engaging pace, you get a lot of Harry's backstory, and Nesbo is always worth reading. I believe there's another early Harry still to be translated. I'd like to say I'll give it a miss, but I probably won't.
It's OK - better than OK and a good bit better than most other Nordic Noir thrillers that have been hurriedly published in the wake of Nesbo's success - but it is nowhere near as good as books like The Redeemer and The Leopard. It is a million miles from the mighty Headhunters. Frankly, I wish they hadn't bothered.
For starters, it isn't Nordic, it's Aussie with a guest Nord. Harry has been flown off to the southern hemisphere after a minor Norwegian TV personality is murdered in Sydney. This in itself is wholly implausible. It quickly becomes irritating that the Australians can't pronounce Hole the Norwegian way and take to calling him Harry Holy. Even Nesbo can't make a joke as thin as that last 374 pages. There are long, tedious tracts of Aboriginal folklore which have no connection with the story and are there to show off Nesbo's research. The red herring might as well wear a red herring hat it is so obvious he's not the killer and the real bad guy can be arrived at by the Agatha Christie method (i.e. who do we think is least likely to have done it?) I finished the book less than twelve hours ago and have already forgotten why he did it.
For all that, the story moves along at an engaging pace, you get a lot of Harry's backstory, and Nesbo is always worth reading. I believe there's another early Harry still to be translated. I'd like to say I'll give it a miss, but I probably won't.
Thursday, 15 March 2012
Headhunters - Jo Nesbo
How annoying for those of us who write - the best contemporary Nordic author of series crime fiction, quite possibly the best full-stop, turns out to be just as good at stand-alone first-person psychological thrillers. No wonder this has been snapped up for the first Nesbo movie, which opens in the UK and Ireland on April 6.
Thank goodness it's a Norwegian movie, not some hopeless Hollywood mess. Unfortunately, I suspect that means it won't get shown much outside major cities.
However, back to the book...
I have simply never read such a masterful riff on the twists and turns essential for the genre, nor the untrustworthy narrator device which, when done right, raises the typical to the exceptional. For example, most thriller writers return to their prologue at the end. Not Nesbo; he picks it up in the middle and makes it his key turning-point. As for the final twist ... it was so unexpected, so stunning, that I had to flip back to the relevant passage to make sure Nesbo hadn't cheated. And he hadn't. Wonderful - more than worthy of Hitchcock or Patrick Hamilton.
But the world of books would be a dreary old place if we all agreed...
I found a slightly different opinion on Beattie's Book Blog (unofficial homepage of the New Zealand book community), which is an excellent, highly-informed site:
I have to say I didn't rate the stand-alone Headhunters, (although I reckon it will make a great movie); no give me the Harry Hole titles any day and on that note the good news is that the next one is due soon.
Phantom – the thrilling follow-up to The Leopard……….
Synopsis:
Summer. A
boy is lying on the floor of an Oslo apartment. He is bleeding and will soon
die. In order to place his life and death in some kind of context he begins to
tell his story. Outside, the church bells toll.
Autumn. Former police inspector Harry Hole returns to
Oslo after three years abroad. He seeks out his old boss at Police Headquarters
to request permission to investigate a homicide. But the case is already closed:
the young junkie was in all likelihood shot dead by a fellow addict. Yet, Harry
is granted permission to visit the boy's alleged killer in jail. There, he meets
himself and his own history. What follows is the solitary investigation of what
appears to be the first impossible case in Harry Hole's career. And while Harry
is searching, the murdered boy continues his story.
A man walks
the dark streets of Oslo. The streets are his and he has always been there. He
is a phantom.
Yay, bring it on, can't wait to read
it................
Me neither. Actually, I don't have to. It is published in the UK today and Harvill Secker have done a vid.
What I want to know, though, is what has happened to the first two Hole books, The Bats (1997) and The Cockroaches (1998), neither of which are available here? I can't think of another series, which has established a reputation and sales in another country, that hasn't started from the beginning here. Decidedly odd.
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