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Recommended reading
The lurid world of pulp
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Tag Archives: Looking For Mr Goodbar
My top books of 2016
It’s that time of the year for my top 10 reads of 2016. As is always the case, my list is a mixture of new books, old books, fiction and non-fiction. In no order they are as follows:
The Rules of Backyard Cricket, Jock Serong
It took a while for this book to warm up, but about a third of the way through it just goes bang and never looks back from there. An incredibly dark tale of suburban crime set over several decades in Melbourne, as seen through the eyes of professional cricketers Darren Keefe and his older brother, Wally. Don’t let the publisher’s marketing of this book as literary crime fool you; this is as good an example of noir as you will find in Australian crime fiction today. Serong has a beautiful prose style and totally nails the period detail of growing up in seventies/eighties suburban Melbourne.
Old Scores, David Whish-Wilson
Old Scores is the third book by Perth crime writer David Whish-Wilson featuring Frank Swann, former petty criminal, disgraced cop and low rent private investigator.The story is set in the set at the beginnings of the cowboy capitalism that marked Western Australia in that decade. Swann’s peculiar mix of talents is in demand by the state’s newly elected Labour government.… Read more
Posted in Australian crime fiction, Australian noir, Crime Fiction and film set in Vietnam, Don Winslow, Eurocrime, Fawcett Gold Medal Books, Megan Abbott, Noir fiction, Non-crime reviews, Pulp fiction, Pulp fiction in the 70s and 80s, True crime
Tagged Cartel, Chris Offutt, David Whish-Wilson, Don Winslow, Frightmares, Graveyard Love, Ian Cooper, Jean-Claude Izzo, Jock Serong, Judith Rossner, Looking For Mr Goodbar, Megan Abbott, My Father the Pornographer, Nancy M West, Old Scores, Peter Docker, Scott Adlerberg, Sweet One, Tabloid Inc, The Rules of Backyard Cricket, The Sympathizer, Total Chaos, V Penelope Pelizzon, Viet Thanh Nguyen, You Will Know Me
2016 mid-summer reading report back
As has become my practice, it’s time for my annual mid-summer reading report back – short reviews of some of the books I have read so far over the summer holidays. Without further introduction, in no particular order they are as follows:
Total Chaos, Jean-Claude Izzo
I’d never heard of Jean-Claude Izzo, the founder of the ‘Mediterranean noir movement’, until a friend recommended him to me after the attacks in Paris last November. My friend claimed not only were his books good crime reads, they provided a unique insight into the Islamic community in France. I wasn’t disappointed. Total Chaos, the first of Izzo’s so-called ‘Marseilles trilogy’, combines crime fiction smarts with a fascinating examination of immigrant politics in the French port city.
Fabio Montale grew up on the streets of Marseilles with two close childhood friends, Ugo and Manu. Fabio become a cop whose career is going nowhere as a result of his unfashionable focus on preventing crime rather than just cracking heads. Ugo and Manu became criminals. When his two friends are killed in violent circumstances, Fabio investigates what led to their deaths. He discovers his friends where bound up in a complex web of criminal power plays that involve organised crime, the National Front and veterans of France’s various imperial entanglements abroad.… Read more
Posted in Crime fiction, Crime fiction and film from Cambodia, Eurocrime, Fawcett Gold Medal Books
Tagged Black Wings Has My Angel, Clarence Cooper Junior, Elliott Chaze, Fourth of July Creek, Jean-Claude Izzo, Judith Rossner, K. T Medina, Looking For Mr Goodbar, New York Review Classics, Peter Docker, Smith Henderson, Sweet One, The Scene, Total Chaos, White Crocodile