Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Crime Fiction Aficionado Craig Sisterson looks at recent tiltes

Book Watch - Herald on Sunday - 19 February
Cold Wind
By CJ Box (Corvus, $24.99)
Renewable energy meets murderous motives in award-winning CJ Box’s latest tale starring Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett; another example of his impressive touch for thrillers set in America’s rural and wilderness areas. When a millionaire property developer is found murdered, hanging from a controversial wind turbine on his sprawling ranch, the prime suspect is his wife Missy – who also happens to be Pickett’s mother-in-law. Pickett finds himself caught between his bosses and his wife, who wants him to prove her mother’s innocence. Box mixes a gripping plotline with compelling characters, layered relationships, and well-evoked settings.
Red Mist
By Patricia Cornwell (Little, Brown, $39.99)
More than 20 years after shaking up crime fiction by bringing forensics to the fore, Patricia Cornwell and her fearless heroine Kay Scarpetta are still going strong, and in fact, are back to their best. Red Mist sees Scarpetta travelling to Savannah to meet a high-security prisoner. Drawn into a long-closed case, her sojourn to the sweltering South takes a truly deadly turn, threatening many lives. Red Mist contains plenty of intriguing forensics, but the highlight is Scarpetta and her perspective on the world, along with the interplay between characters.
A Man You Can Bank On
By Derek Hansen (Hachette, $37.99)
If you like your crime fiction laced with plenty of laughs, then this caper set in the Australian Outback could be just the ticket. Former bank manager Lambert Hampton helped transform the tiny town of Munni-Munni after stumbling across a robbery gang’s stash. Years later, the crims, the cops, a rogue investigator and two hit men are all chasing the money, converging on the town, causing shenanigans aplenty. Hansen, who grew up in New Zealand, creates an intriguing tale packed with eccentric characters and memorable moments that stay with you long after the final page.
Never Knowing
By Chevy Stevens (Allen & Unwin, $36.99)
Canadian author Stevens follows up her excellent debut Still Missing with another cracking story. Sara Gallagher has always wondered why she was given up for adoption. After months of research she locates her birth mother, only to face rejection, then discover an even more horrifying truth: she is a child of rape, her birth mother the sole survivor of a serial killer still on the loose. The killer contacts Sara after her story ends up online. Never Knowing is a layered tale that is as much about a woman’s search for herself, as the search for a murderer.
Reviewed by Craig Sisterson who helped establish the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel. He writes about crime and thriller fiction for several publications here and overseas, and blogs at http://kiwicrime.blogspot.com


First published in the Herald on Sunday 19 February, 2012


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