About Me

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Melfort, Saskatchewan, Canada
I am a lawyer in Melfort, Saskatchewan, Canada who enjoys reading, especially mysteries. Since 2000 I have been writing personal book reviews. This blog includes my reviews, information on and interviews with authors and descriptions of mystery bookstores I have visited. I strive to review all Saskatchewan mysteries. Other Canadian mysteries are listed under the Rest of Canada. As a lawyer I am always interested in legal mysteries. I have a separate page for legal mysteries. Occasionally my reviews of legal mysteries comment on the legal reality of the mystery. You can follow the progression of my favourite authors with up to 15 reviews. Each year I select my favourites in "Bill's Best of ----". As well as current reviews I am posting reviews from 2000 to 2011. Below my most recent couple of posts are the posts of Saskatchewan mysteries I have reviewed alphabetically by author. If you only want a sentence or two description of the book and my recommendation when deciding whether to read the book look at the bold portion of the review. If you would like to email me the link to my email is on the profile page.

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Kim Stone and Harry Bosch

As I read crime fiction with a sleuth that is new to me I think about which other fictional sleuths this sleuth reminds me. 

Angela Marsons fine book, Silent Scream, features Kim Stone, a 34 year old police detective with an obsessive drive to solve murder.

As I reflected I thought of Michael Connelly’s sleuth, Harry Bosch.

Both had childhoods with mothers who should not have been parents.

Stone’s mother is a schizophrenic and has been institutionalized for decades. She so neglected her children that Stone was barely alive when she was removed from her mother. Her brother died from the horrific maternal neglect.

Bosch’s mother was a prostitute. She was murdered when Bosch was 11.

Stone was initially placed in foster care and subsequently put in a care home at 6 years of age. She continued to spend time in foster homes and care homes into her teenage years.

With his mother gone Bosch was taken into the California children’s care and was also in an institution.

The odds are against children from such homes but Stone and Bosch succeeded.

As adults each became police detectives who cared deeply about the victims of murder.

Bosch’s motto is:

Everybody matters or nobody matters.

In Silent Scream, Stone cannot abide that 3 teenage girls, one of whom is pregnant, are found buried near the care home they had supposedly ran away from a decade ago and are only identified as numbers. She says to a team member:

“I can’t keep referring to these victims by number; victim one, victim two. They had enough of that when they were alive. We have three bodies and three names and I need to match them up.”

In Stone’s first care home she was Bed 19.

Neither Stone nor Busch respect authority, especially within police departments.

They constantly clash with superiors.

Orders are guidelines for Stone and Bosch. They will follow an order as long as it does not interfere with their investigations.

Their insubordination is always related to moving their investigations ahead. 

They work the longest hours of any detectives in their respective units.

Each abandons sleep in the midst of an investigation. 

Because of their demanding abrupt personalities, not many other officers want to work with them.

Other officers also know that working with Stone and Bosch they will be as consumed by the investigations.

For those who can meet the standards of Stone and Bosch there is a mutual respect, even affection.

Bosch is famed for studying murder books for what is missing from the paperwork and then investigating what should have been done.

Stone equally searches out the details of evidence. An urgent call from a crime scene occurring at the same time as an urgent call by her supervisor to return to the station sees her heading to the crime scene.

Neither shies from confronting the wealthy and powerful.

Stone aggravates Nina, the wife of Richard Croft. He is the local MP and she defends terrorists in court. Upset with Stone, she has prominent authorities badger Stone’s supervisor to have her removed from the cases. The superior refuses.

I have lost track of the number of clashes Bosch has had with administrators and city councilors in the city of Los Angeles.

Their focus on work, ill-developed personal communications and minimal interests outside solving murders mean neither has a spouse. Who could maintain a relationship with Stone and Bosch? Their intensity is exhausting. Their bluntness of speech drives away thoughts of a personal relationship.

To my frustration each is quite willing to break the law to move ahead with investigations and act as lone wolf investigators.

Yet, were they to exist in real life Stone and Bosch are exactly the detectives you want investigating the murder of a loved one. They will not rest until they have found the killer.

Stone and Bosch would be an amazing detecting duo if they did not kill each other.

****

Marsons, Angela - (2024) - Silent Scream

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Silent Scream by Angela Marsons

(46. - 1229.) Silent Scream by Angela Marsons - Detective Inspector Kim Stone is a hard woman.

Kim knew she had a reputation for being cold, socially inept and emotionless. This perception deflected banal small talk and that was fine by her.

Her expectations of her team are high:

The shift didn’t start until eight a.m. but she liked them all in early for a briefing, especially at the beginning of a new case. Kim didn’t like to stick to a roster and people who did lasted a very short time on her team.

Stone has had a hard life.

She works in the Black Country area in the West Midlands near Birmingham, England.

Teresa Wyatt, forty seven, is killed in her bathtub by being pushed under the water. A fire is set outside her home moments after the murder.

Wyatt was single with no children. She was the “highly respected principal of a private boys’ school in Stourbridge”.

All but one interview at the school portray her as “a real-life saint”. English teacher, Joanna Wade, describes Wyatt as rigid and out-dated in her approach to education.

As they explore Wyatt’s interest in an archeaological dig they find Professor Milton, the archaeologist, has been missing for over 48 hours.

Professor Milton believed there might be a trove of ancient coins to rival the Staffordshire hoard of over three and half thousand pieces of gold worth over three million pounds. 

There is more murder.

The dig is the former site of the Crestwood Children’s Home. Someone wants no digging done.

Stone’s impatience and disregard for protocol is legendary. When a magnetometer finds anomalies she starts digging without authorization. She finds a body.

A psychopath lurks reflecting on childhood:

The death of three animals brought an embargo on pets …. My condition was not a curse, but a blessing. The sacrifice of my sister finally set me free. Since that day I have been liberated to take what I want and destroy what I don’t, without the restraints of guilt or remorse.

Her supervisor, DCI Woodward, “Woody”, is furious. He is concerned over defending her actions in court. He warns her that “when the day comes that your reckless actions endanger the career or even the life of those around you, it won’t be me or even the police force to which you will have to answer”.

Stone clashes with everyone. Her bluntness and intelligence and wit keep all on edge. 

The dialogue is remarkable, direct and credible. Social niceties are an irritation to Stone. Her only vulnerability appears to be another woman whose childhood was in government care.

Stone can recognize anguish. A young girl is sitting on a wall outside a crematorium. She is ill-dressed for the cold. It is her nan being cremated. Stone asks why she is still sitting there:

The girl looked up at the chimney of the crematorium. Thick smoke funnelled out and dispersed. “I don’t want to leave her until …. I don’t want her to be alone.”

There is more murder.

The psychopath recounts how he or she (we do not know) killed in brutal detail.

Stone’s team member, Bryant, beyond being unaffected by her caustic tongue, is usually with her to provide an alternative in her aggressive interviews. She recalls:

“.... a valuable piece of advice offered to her by Woody. If you can’t play nice … let Bryant do it.”

Bodies keep coming and Stone’s frustration level is stratospheric.

Those treated cruelly as children can be just as cruel or even more cruel as they mature.

The psychopath observes the investigation and adds comments reflecting a deeply deeply disturbed mind with a total absence of empathy. When will the psychopath intervene for self-protection?

It is a rare ending that is both predictable and unpredictable. As I neared the end of the book I was feeling a touch smug about figuring out the killer when Masons turned me upside down. I can see why Silent Scream has been a bestseller and appreciate Marian at Sleuth of Baker Street for recommending it to me.

Sunday, December 8, 2024

Clothes in Books Blog Awards

In my post yesterday I wrote a letter to my friend, Moira Redmond, from the blog, Clothes in Books, about the dress Eden Tong wore in Lies and Weddings by Kevin Kwan. She kindly responded. My reply is below her email.

****

Dear Bill,

I may have to institute a Clothes in Books awards season!

We both very much enjoyed Kevin Kwan's Lies and Weddings (and his other books too) and both of us did posts about the book. 

Clothes feature a lot there, and, as I usually do, I tried to find some nice pictures to give an idea of the dresses.

Lies and Weddings by Kevin Kwan (a link to Moira’s post on her blog)

It's what I do on my blog, and I very much enjoyed (as ever) trying to find good pictures.

But you have outclassed me this time! Your research to find the original was so clever and so perfect. Kevin Kwan always uses real brands and names in his books, so you set out to try to find the dress/designer/print that he intended - and you succeeded big time!

I loved seeing that perfectly-described dress and fabric, and it was so interesting to learn more about the designer and his connection with Hawaii.

I can only say - wow!

You have always been a supporter and friend to my blog, and your comments on clothes are always funny and on point.

In the past you have often talked about practicality in clothes - when a heroine is wandering around outside unsuitably clad you will have a pithy comment about how better to dress for a cold climate (all that Canadian experience). You always made me laugh when a heroine in a flattering but flimsy outfit was sternly told by you to put on a more suitable hat (one that keeps her warm and won't blow away), a scarf and a down jacket!

But you also always had an eye for something stylish, striking and unusual.

And this time you have surpassed yourself.

I hereby declare you the winner of the inaugural Clothes in Books awards

Best Original Research 

Best Supplied Photographs

Please feel free to use this email on the blog!

All best wishes

Your friend

Moira 

****

Moira

Thank you for the kind words and the Awards!

I am humbled and excited to be honoured by the inaugural Clothes in Books awards.

My appreciation of books has been enhanced by your blog which prompts me to consider the clothes of characters in every book I read.

I will continue to be available for thoughts on winter apparel.

All the best from your friend.

Bill 

****

Saturday, December 7, 2024

The Dress That Stole the Wedding in Lies and Weddings

Early in the fall my blogging friend, Moira, from the wonderful blog, Clothes in Books did a review of Lies and Weddings by Kevin Kwan. My last post has my review of the book. After writing my review and re-reading her review I wrote to her as follows:

Dear Moira,

As I indicated in my comment on your review of Lies and Weddings I enjoy Kevin Kwan’s books. Sharon and I are on a cruise off the coast of Africa and I just finished reading the book. I raced through it. A link to my review is below.

As with you I was captivated by the description of the dress Eden chose to wear to the wedding of her friend, Lady Augusta (Augie).

Instead of the “peach organdy and lace Dolce & Gabbana halter neck gown that Bea had lent her” with the £4,700 price tag still attached Eden goes to the resort boutique to buy “a dress she loved”.

Kwan describes the dress as follows:

It was a black floor-length dress printed with a gold fan pattern on a voluminous skirt created by the Hawaiian designer Manaola.

To finish her look she pins fresh hibiscus blossoms in her hair “and did something she had never done before: she put on red lipstick”.

The hibiscus flowers in her hair would have been so striking.

While the dresses you showed on your blog are wonderful, I decided to look online for the dress described by Kwan as he listed the designer’s name.

I believe I found the dress. A photo is above.

The dress is from the 2017 collection of the Hawaiian designer, Carrington Manaola Yap. 

The website for his high school, Parker School, states:

Yap, a self-taught designer, shared with students details and video from his New York Fashion Week debut in 2017 when he became the first Native Hawaiian designer to present Hawaiian culture and fashion during this internationally esteemed fashion event. The following year, Yap also became the first Native Hawaiian designer to present an exclusive collection for Saks Fifth Avenue.

A link to his fascinating video address to the students during Covid is below.

The dress features a Pe’ahi Niu print. On his website he states:

The Pe’ahi is a primitive print honoring the crescent-shaped Hawaiian fans reserved for Hawaiian royalty. Made of intricately woven coconut pandanus leaves, these fans are often depicted in lithographs by high-ranking monarchs for both practical and ceremonial use. These native artifacts are now highly revered for their royal association and preserved in the likes of Hawai’i’s Bishop Museum, as well as a special collection of Pe’ahi Niu in London’s British Museum.

Manaola pays homage to these heirlooms with an ethnographic print that blends his affection for Hawaiian traditions and modern fashion in unexpected formations.

If the the dress at the top of the post is not the dress, I found a powerful photo of a model from the show wearing a voluminous print skirt. It is spectacular.

I can see why Eden drew the eyes of everyone at the wedding despite the abundance of haute design gowns around her. 

I expect Eden would have paid a few hundred dollars for her dress. Most clothes on Manaola's website are priced under two hundred dollars.

If you have any comments on my posts please let me know and I will include them on the blog.

All the best.

Bill 

****

https://www.parkerschoolhawaii.org/news/2021/05/03/hawaiian-fashion-designer-manaola-yap-speaks-at-high-school-alma-mater/

Lies and Weddings

Kwan, Kevin - (2019) - Crazy Rich Asians and China Rich Girlfriend and Rich People Problems  

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Lies and Weddings by Kevin Kwan

(59. - 1242.) Lies and Weddings by Kevin Kwan - A spectacular opening in 1995. Henry Tong, having just won $7.4 million playing poker in Macau, returns to Hong Kong with an 11.68 carat diamond where, in the most spectacular nightclub at the Peninsula Hotel, he proposes to Gabriella Soong. As she enthsiastically accepts, an upset Roger Gao charges at Henry. Attempting to get away Henry falls over a low railing and is impaled 20 feet below on a crystal candelabra.

In the present day, Countess Arabella Leung Gresham, is planning every detail of the fabulous wedding of her daughter, Lady Augusta Leung Gresham, to Prince Maximillian zu Liechtenburg (Maxxie), at a super-luxe boutique eco-resort - for those who need a palace lifestyle when they travel - in Hawaii. She has designed and owns the resort. Unfortunately, a volcanic fissure destroys the exact wedding site. Fortunately, the volcanic eruption has meant cancellations at other luxe resorts. The show must go on.

Dr. Thomas Tong and his daughter, Dr. Eden Tong, live in a Jacobean cottage (a lovely four bedroom home) on a grace-and-favour lease adjacent to Greshamsbury Hall (43 rooms). Dr. Thomas tends to the frequent medical consulations needed by the Countess. He is the younger brother of the deceased Henry.

Everyone private jets to Hawaii.

Thus begins another saga of rich Asians dominated by imperious matriarchs. 

The Countess has a scheme to matchmake her son, Rufus, with a suitable spouse, Solène de Courcy (an artist, daughter of a family owning a chic French hotel chain, a lineage back to the French and Italian aristocracies). She is also appropriately beautiful.

Eden, who is Rufus’ best friend since they were 5, is entangled in the plot.

Not all is as it seems in paradise. Facades are being maintained.

Everything is fabulously fabulous. From the accommodations to the venues to the clothing. Photo shoots are under way every day before the wedding with the best fashion magazines. A whole fashion show could be undertaken with the haute designer clothing in the closets of the guests. 

The wedding is a dazzling comedic event for the reader. 

The consequences of her lifestyle confront the Countess when she returns home. “No” is probably the most difficult word in the world for her.

Yet the Countess continues to be relentless and cruel and vicious and oblivious as she pursues dynastic opportunities for her children. I was reminded of Disney’s Cruella de Vil.

She is aided by Aunt Rosina who takes off with Rufus to find a wealthy spouse saying it is his duty to help the family. She takes him to a wedding of new wealth. Not an ancient European aristocrat is in sight.

In the soap opera of her life a reckoning awaits the Countess.

With the world the playground of the super rich, the book bounds from country to country.

Kwan is a master of the social machinations of a Chinese (in and out of China) aristocracy. I find his books fun reads.

****

Friday, November 29, 2024

Shanghai by Joseph Kanon

(48. - 1231.) Shanghai by Joseph Kanon - 1939 was a desperate time to be a Jew in Germany. Nazi laws were steadily eliminating their rights within the country. More and more Jews were being sent to concentration camps. With connections Jews could get out of Germany. They had to leave behind family, possessions, money. Destinations were shrinking but Shanghai still admitted Jews.

Daniel Lohr leaves Germany with 10 Reichsmarks in his pocket and a modest suitcase of clothes. His Uncle Nathan arranges a first class ticket for him on the Raffaello,  a Lloyd ship. Uncle Nathan has underworld connections. There is a favour to be done for the ticket.

Lohr meets the lovely Leah Auerbach and her mother, Frau Clara Auerbach. They have fled with little more than Lohr after the family business is sold to its German manager.

On board class and racial distinctions are maintained. The Jews are grouped at a table for meals. They are uncomfortable with Colonel Yamada, a member of the Kempetai, the Japanese Military Police, in Shanghai.

In Shanghai there is constant tension over the Japanese presence.

Lohr connects with his Uncle Nathan who has a nightclub. Their reunion is poignant. There is no one left in their family.

In business there is constant “squeeze” to be paid to the Japanese. Lesser “squeeze” is paid to the Chinese.

Lohr must decide whether he wants to join his uncle in the club business or try to make a living as a journalist.

The Jewish community has a strong presence in the nightclubs of the International Settlement.

As he ponders, Lohr starts making stops at night at the clubs to pick up gossip for the Merry-Go-Round column of Selden Loomis in the North-China Tribune

Lohr finds his past is never far behind him. There were issues for him with the Nazi regime beyond being Jewish. Life experiences have hardened Lohr. He is ready to be ruthless to survive in a world at war.

Lohr and Leah connect.

Uncle Nathan, with others, owns the Gold Rush, a grand Tudor style home, converted to a nightclub on the ground floor, public rooms for roulette and blackjack on the second and private gaming rooms on third. A broad staircase makes for dramatic entrances and exits. Elegance and champagne all around.

The interactions between Westerners, Chinese and Japanese are fraught with tension.

Lohr is adept but not infallible at working out the odds on the amounts of “squeeze” to be paid and when to say “no”. 

While business disputes may ultimately be resolved by words but only after bodies have fallen. No one relaxes in Shanghai.

Lohr goes to see Xi, a Chinese businessman with a gang. Xi speaks and Lohr replies:

“So you’ve come to see me. You think I can guarantee that. There are no guarantees in life.”

“No. But there are promises.”

With WW II underway in Europe anxiety pervades Shanghai. The wise know the war is coming. When and how will the war come to China? Life is about to change.

Morality shrinks when war dictates life. There is precious little rule of law in a war. People do what they need to survive.

Can there be a touch of honour amidst the brutality? 

Kanon is skilled at exploring what men and women will do in the maelstrom of WW II. Is Lohr a good German? I was reminded of his book, The Good German, which I read 20 years ago. 

Kanon comes near Philip Kerr in examining the moral issues facing those who want to be good in a world where evil strives for supremacy.

****

Kanon, Joseph – (2004) - The Good German; (2012) - "K" is for Joseph Kanon