Lets get one thing straight here...I think DI Thorne is a real "prick"
of a man. He is self centred, egotistical ,driven,and treats female
company in the most despicable manner. Louise his latest partner is
ignored by him, he is always working and likes to avoid conversation and
her compnay preferring to drink with his mates and refusing to
recognize that it is him and him alone that is the constant cause of his
relationship breakups. In this latest romp he has the company of a
young lady called Anna Carpenter and he actually believes that he could
have a relationship with her, that she really likes this super cool
egotistical cop this real man old enough to be her father!...well DI
Thorne get your act together and recognize that you have faults...lots
of them...and if not sorted soon you will be left a sad old man....there
I've got that off my chest and it is undoubtly down to the writing
talents of Mark Billingham that I can feel such a strong hate for Tom
Thorne. This is a first class detective story that starts with the
gruesome recalling of an old case that DI Thorne thought was "buried" in
the past. There are lots of surprises and a great action story that
takes place in both the UK and Spain but the real star is the
characterization of DI Tom Thorne this flawed copper with the bloodhound
ability to find his man...leaving misery and destruction in his path!
Great stuff.....look forward to the next outing!
Monday, 21 July 2014
Sunday, 13 July 2014
No Country for old men...sheer brilliance!
This book was a surprise and a revelation to me in its unexpected
brilliance! It was a Saturday morning here in downtown Bristol UK and as
was my want I was visiting the local library and browsing the books
they were trying to sell...clear the shelves of the used paperbacks
making way for the new...when perchance I happened upon No Country for
Old Men by Cormac McCarthy. I offered the librarian one English pound
and she gave me change...lots of change...”we just want rid of these old
books she said” I returned home happy and content with my purchase, I
had seen the movie and hoped the novel would be a good read....I was not
disappointed.....This book is a deep dark noir of greed,
corruption and the evil that men do. Llewlyn Moss discovers a large
amount of money, the result of a drug deal gone wrong, and he selfishly
decides that whatever happens...whatever the consequences he will keep
this money and make a better life for both him and his girlfriend Carla
cause that’s what he believed he could do. “You live to be a hundred, he
said, and there wont be another day like this one” Moss however had not
reckoned with the intervention of one of the greatest hired assassins
in the history of storytelling; Anton Chigurh played brilliantly in the
Coen Brothers excellent movie by Javier Bardem
However underneath this story, the real underbelly, and the message that McCarthy is trying to instill into the reader is the moral degradation of the American west. Sheriff Ed Bell is the lawman charged with making sense of all the killings and he together with his uncle Ellis lament the increasing violence in the region and the disrespect of a younger generation against those who fought and died for American values. “These old people I talk to if you could of told em that there would be people on the streets of our Texas towns with green hair and bones in their noses speakin a language they couldn’t even understand, well, they just flat out wouldn’t of believed you.”
It is the southern Texas language of this wonderful book that really shines through and gives such authenticity to the writing. As Moss is trying to evade his would be killer he gives a ride to a hitchhiker and over lunch...”She ate. She looked around. Can I get some coffee ? she said You can get anything you want. You got money. She looked at him. I guess I aint sure what the point is, she said. The point is there aint no point. No, I mean what you said. About knowin where you are. He looked at her. After a while he said: It’s not about knowin where you are. It’s about thinkin you got there without takin anything with you. Your notions about startin over. Or anybody’s. You don’t start over. That’s what it’s about. Ever step you take is forever. You cant make it go away. None of it. You understand what I’m sayin? .....I think so...I know you don’t but let me try it one more time. You think when you wake up in the morning yesterday don’t count. But yesterday is all that does count. What else is there? You life is made out of the days it’s made out of. Nothin else. You might think you could run away and change your name and I don’t know what all. Start over. And then one morning you wake up and look at the ceiling and guess who’s layin there?
There are some wonderful conversations that occurred between Bell and his Uncle Ellis that add such a poignant realism to the story. “What’s your biggest regret in life. The old man looked at him, gauging the question. I don’t know he said. I aint got all that many regrets. I could imagine lots of things you might think would make a man happier. I reckon being able to walk around might be one. You can make up your own list. You might even have one. I thing by the time you’re grown you’re as happy as you’re goin to be. You’ll have good times and bad times, but in the end you’ll be about as happy as you was before. Or as unhappy. I’ve knowed people that just never did get the hang of it”
If I was to tell you that I read this book in one sitting then you may come some way to understand both it’s importance and literary content...with just a little dark noir humour thrown in....
“We got another execution here Sherriff? No, I believe this one’s died of natural causes....Natural causes? Natural to the line of work he’s in.
“I’m like you. I aint sure we’ve seen these people before. Their kind. I don’t know what to do about em even. If you killed em all they’d have to build a annex on to hell”.....
A wonderful story by a literary genius that deserves to be read by all...and then read again!
However underneath this story, the real underbelly, and the message that McCarthy is trying to instill into the reader is the moral degradation of the American west. Sheriff Ed Bell is the lawman charged with making sense of all the killings and he together with his uncle Ellis lament the increasing violence in the region and the disrespect of a younger generation against those who fought and died for American values. “These old people I talk to if you could of told em that there would be people on the streets of our Texas towns with green hair and bones in their noses speakin a language they couldn’t even understand, well, they just flat out wouldn’t of believed you.”
It is the southern Texas language of this wonderful book that really shines through and gives such authenticity to the writing. As Moss is trying to evade his would be killer he gives a ride to a hitchhiker and over lunch...”She ate. She looked around. Can I get some coffee ? she said You can get anything you want. You got money. She looked at him. I guess I aint sure what the point is, she said. The point is there aint no point. No, I mean what you said. About knowin where you are. He looked at her. After a while he said: It’s not about knowin where you are. It’s about thinkin you got there without takin anything with you. Your notions about startin over. Or anybody’s. You don’t start over. That’s what it’s about. Ever step you take is forever. You cant make it go away. None of it. You understand what I’m sayin? .....I think so...I know you don’t but let me try it one more time. You think when you wake up in the morning yesterday don’t count. But yesterday is all that does count. What else is there? You life is made out of the days it’s made out of. Nothin else. You might think you could run away and change your name and I don’t know what all. Start over. And then one morning you wake up and look at the ceiling and guess who’s layin there?
There are some wonderful conversations that occurred between Bell and his Uncle Ellis that add such a poignant realism to the story. “What’s your biggest regret in life. The old man looked at him, gauging the question. I don’t know he said. I aint got all that many regrets. I could imagine lots of things you might think would make a man happier. I reckon being able to walk around might be one. You can make up your own list. You might even have one. I thing by the time you’re grown you’re as happy as you’re goin to be. You’ll have good times and bad times, but in the end you’ll be about as happy as you was before. Or as unhappy. I’ve knowed people that just never did get the hang of it”
If I was to tell you that I read this book in one sitting then you may come some way to understand both it’s importance and literary content...with just a little dark noir humour thrown in....
“We got another execution here Sherriff? No, I believe this one’s died of natural causes....Natural causes? Natural to the line of work he’s in.
“I’m like you. I aint sure we’ve seen these people before. Their kind. I don’t know what to do about em even. If you killed em all they’d have to build a annex on to hell”.....
A wonderful story by a literary genius that deserves to be read by all...and then read again!
Saturday, 5 July 2014
Brilliant writing from a brilliant author
Ten minutes ago I killed three of my neighbors...Four, if you
count the baby. What a start! to a fantastic rollercoaster of a ride the leaves
the reader breathless right to the last page. Andy Holland is a horror writer
(and we love horror writers!) living single at home from his estranged wife
Karen (who he found in an uncompromising position with her boss!) and daughter
Samantha. Andy is carrying a lot of heartache there’s just him now, and his
good old buddy his faithful dog Norman and one day whilst the faithful pair are
out walking they make the horrific discovery of the naked body of a dead child
and thereafter things are never the same...”Truth be told, I knew exactly what
was bothering Norman. Ever since that fateful morning, I could tell my dog had
not been the same. It wasn’t anything I could put a finger on, really, other
than a slight tension in the retriever’s haunches, a cautious twitch of his
ears every few minutes. Yet I knew he sensed the wrongness that had festered
within our neighbourhood these last few days. An ominous feeling lingered on
every breeze, like the ozone scent of a storm looming just seconds away. The
air around us crackled with a strange, electric quiet. Gone were the low,
rattling drone of skateboard wheels atop asphalt and the ticking of playing
cards in bicycle spokes and the carefree laughter of children which normally
echoed up and down our block......”
This is a delicious story that starts of slow with the horror and the reality of Andy’s situation building to a bloody crescendo and in the end Andy discovers that the good life he thought he had was in reality a myth and those he hoped he could trust disappeared and turned against
him.
There were three great characters of note Ronnie “Round Man” Miller proprietor of the 7th Avenue Stop-N-Shop and two of Andy’s neighbours: Mona Purfield “an obese senior citizen who dyed her hair the brightest orange I have ever seen. When the sun hit it just right, her head looked like it was on fire. She always wore three or four times more make-up than necessary for a woman her age, dressed in flowery muumuus and neon pink flip-flops wherever she went, and spoke in the most nasally, obnoxious voice you can imagine” and Ben Souther who always had a handy quote whenever and wherever he needed it. “Everyone is a moon” Ben Souther said, “and has a dark side which he never shows to anybody.”So will the killer be discovered?, will Andy ever have the good life again? And will he still be loved and revered by the good people of Poinsettia Lane? Dear readers you are in for a wonderful treat James Newman is one of the greatest living exponents of the the horror genre and this novel is truly brilliant...so read..and enjoy and be thankful for the support and love of good neighbours J
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