Thursday, December 04, 2008

Let the Good Stuff Roll

2008 isn’t over yet, but already the 2009 crime novels are surging in. I’ll keep you posted on what looks best. My initial recommendations:

Among the Mad, by Jacqueline Winspear. Winspear’s much-awarded and acclaimed Maisie Dobbs series, about a servant who goes to Cambridge, becomes a World War I battlefield nurse and then a psychologist-trained detective, returns with a story which is set in 1931 England but has loud resonance in our lives today. Maisie and her assistant Billy Beale witness a man blowing himself up--which is closely followed by a threat to the prime minister and demands that include Maisie’s involvement. Among the Mad is out in February.

The Tourist, by Olen Steinhauer. Few crime books have been as greatly anticipated as this one--Steinhauer’s first standalone spy thriller (after Bridge of Sighs and four additional novels set in an Eastern European country very much like Romania, where the author studied on a Fulbright fellowship). This tale moves to New York City, where a former CIA covert ace named Milo Weaver has been reduced to shuffling papers because of an operation that went very bad. Look for it in March.

The Renegades, by T. Jefferson Parker. Parker has many fans and two Edgars, but he still hasn’t achieved the stardom he deserves--the Michael Connelly kind. The Renegades is a follow-up to 2008’s L.A. Outlaws, in which a young rookie cop named Charlie Hood crossed the path of a determined female bank robber. Hood is now out in the boonies and driving alone on the night shift, which he prefers. But the murder of his unwanted partner puts Hood up against some really nasty cops. A February release.

Roanoke, by Margaret Lawrence. Lawrence first caught my attention with a wonderful mystery series about a midwife in post-Revolutionary War New England (Hearts and Bones, Blood Red Roses). Now she moves back in time to 1585, beginning in London where a “spider” (a Royal spy) named Gabriel North saves Queen Elizabeth I’s life in an assassination attempt--one of many; she has lots of enemies--and as a bleak reward is sent off to Virginia. North, an experienced seducer, is charged with romancing a Secota Indian princess, and in the course of his work he finds out what really happened to the English settlers on Roanoke Island, who apparently disappeared without a trace. Due out in January.

A Quiet Flame, by Philip Kerr, opens in 1950. Falsely fingered as a war criminal, German private eye Bernie Gunther has booked passage to Buenos Aires, lured, like the Nazis whose company he has always despised, by promises of a new life and a clean passport from the Perón government. But Bernie doesn’t have the luxury of settling into his new home and lying low. He is soon pressured by the local police into taking on a case in which a girl has turned up dead, gruesomely mutilated, and another--the daughter of a wealthy German banker--has gone missing. Both crimes seem to connect to an unsolved case Bernie worked on back in Berlin in 1932. To be published in March.

And then of course there’s the Big Enchilada, or maybe we should call it the Gold Swedish Meatball:

The Girl Who Played with Fire, by Steig Larssen, the second book he left behind at his death. This time it is Lisbeth Salander, the troubled, wise-beyond-her-years genius hacker, who is the focus and fierce heart of the story. Mikael Blomkvist, crusading journalist and publisher of the magazine Millennium, has decided to circulate a story exposing an extensive sex-trafficking operation between Eastern Europe and Sweden, implicating well-known and highly placed members of Swedish society, business, and government. On the eve of publication, the two reporters responsible for that story are brutally murdered. But perhaps more shocking for Blomkvist: the fingerprints found on the murder weapon belong to Lisbeth Salander. Now, as Blomkvist--alone in his belief that she’s innocent--plunges into his own investigation of the slayings, Salander is drawn into a murderous hunt in which she is the prey, and which compels her to revisit her dark past in an effort to settle with it once and for all. Due out in August.

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