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Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Homicide for the Holidays

Looking for a last-minute stocking stuffer? Something for that crime-obsessed brother-in-law? A vicariously murderous read to get you through this pandemic-challenged festive day? Here's a non-exhaustive collection of recent crime novels that explore Western Canada's culture, climate, & geography. 

Starting from the West Coast, there's The Lost Ones by Sheena Kamal that follows Nora, a traumatized transient & former foster child, as she searches for her missing daughter from the drenched gray streets of Vancouver to the icy white mountains of the BC interior. Or explore Vancouver’s fabulously beautiful North Shore in R.M.Greenaway’s ‘River of Lies’ (Dundurn Press) along with three jaded RCMP officers as they investigate a baffling murder and a missing toddler.   

 If your taste runs to hard-boiled investigations on the gritty streets, tour the worst parts of Vancouver, BC with A.J. Devlin. Former pro wrestler "Hammerhead" Jed Ounstead encounters tent cities, wrestlers, roller derby, and plenty of human detritus on both sides of the law. ‘Rolling Thunder’ (Newest Press) is the series’ 2nd outing.  Another wise-cracking Vancouver PI is 29-year old Dave Wakeland. In “Invisible Dead" by Sam Wiebe, Dave’s dogging the cold trail of his hot ex... straight toward a showdown with a cabal of Vancouver’s most deadly and powerful. 

Far from the crowded streets of the Lower Mainland, Interior towns may look idyllic, especially under a blanket of pristine Christmas snow. But don't let the purity of all that white deceive you: every town has a dark interior life, and none more than in Roz Nay’s ‘Hurry Home’ (Simon & Schuster). Child protection officer Alexandra Van Ness is loving her life until her troublemaking sister breezes back into town. Their shared past threatens to spill over into the present, tangling Alexandra in long-buried terrors just when she most needs her calm professionalism to save a child from imminent peril. 

Another small town with a dark underbelly is historic Nelson, BC in the Kootenay Mountains, setting for Lucky Jack Road (Mosaic Press) by J.G. Toews. When Jack Ballard, an elite mountain biker with a mile-wide mean streak, is found at the bottom of a ravine with his mangled bike nearby, intrepid reporter  Stella Musconi teams up with RCMP Sergeant Ben McKean to determine whether it was unlucky chance that ended his winning forever, or willful murder by someone even meaner than Jack.  

Cranbrook author DaveButler’s ‘Full Curl’ (Dundurn Press) features Jenny Willson, a caustic warden from Banff National Park who considers poachers and bureaucrats equally repulsive. If animal protection and environmental conservation are on your Christmas list, you can’t go wrong with this anti-poaching procedural by an author who worked the front lines against poachers in Canada’s best-known National Parks. On the Eastern Slopes of the Rocky Mountains there's J.E. Barnard’s Why the Rock Falls (Dundurn), in which a burnt-out RCMP officer and a disabled art historian team up to tackle the wilderness disappearance of a Calgary oil baron and the inexplicable drowning of a fading Hollywood starlet. 

For a love song to the prairies’ people, places, and history, visit ‘The Ancient Dead’ (Dundurn) by Barbara Fradkin. Set partly amid the Drumheller hoodoos, the mystery starts with a dinosaur bone hunt and delves into the dusty secrets of a prairie farming community that, over the decades, have seeped deep into Calgary’s oil-company office towers. North of almost everywhere in Alberta (but still only mid-province) we come to The RedChesterfield, a genre-bending novel by Edmonton’s Wayne Arthurson. All I’ll say is that spotting a red chesterfield in a ditch changes a bylaw officer’s life in far more ways than you (or he) expect.

Eastward one more time, to Regina, Saskatchewan and Bone Black, a horror-glazed novel about a Cree woman’s search for her missing sister, the dark paths she is pulled along, and the devastating toll paid by all Indigenous families in the ongoing loss and murder of their women and girls. Author CarolRose GoldenEagle is Cree Dene with roots in Sandy Bay, Saskatchewan. 

To finish us off with a lighter note, visit any of the Russel Quant novels by multi-Lambda nominee/winner and longtime Saskatoon resident Anthony Bidulka. Whether globe-trotting or home on the snow-swept range, Russel solves crimes, wines/dines, and finds romance, backed up by a cast of delightful secondary characters I came to love as much as my own family. 

Enjoy!

Monday, December 14, 2020

Holiday Reads Old and New


In December, don't most readers' thoughts turn to Christmas? 

While my tastes run to murder and mystery, after a rough year like this one has been, I'm breaking with tradition and including some lighter and sweeter fare. So get ready for a smorgasbord of holiday reads.

My oldest favourite: Tied Up in Tinsel by Ngaio Marsh

Coming very late in her Roderick Alleyn detective series (#27, published in 1972) this novel has all the classic elements of a Golden Age mystery from the isolated English manor house to the arrogant owner and the small cast of suspects with a plethora of motives among them. It's also textured, theatrical, and (now) historical in the sense of exploring a few very old, very localized holiday traditions. If you're interested, check out this much more detailed write-up at 

https://www.classicmysteries.net/2016/12/from-the-vault-tied-up-in-tinsel.html

Leaping ahead to 1999 we visit an snow-dusted Cotswold village in 'Aunt Dimity's Christmas' by Nancy Atherton. Transplanted American Lori is barely settled into her marriage and motherhood when a stranger stumbles into her driveway and collapses into a drifted-over hedge. As the holiday season unfolds Lori juggles the domestic duties and decorations while visiting the unknown in hospital and trying to retrace the stranger's wanderings to learn his identity and his purpose in coming to her cottage. 

For more see https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/nancy-atherton/aunt-dimitys-christmas/

 A decade later and across the ocean to Canada, we stop off in Quebec for a bone-chilling tale of family secrets and snowstorms in 'Beautiful Lie the Dead' by Barbara Fradkin. Police Inspector Green is searching for a missing fiance amid the blizzard of the decade when a body turns up, literally, in the tumbled track of a snowplow's blade. 

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/7933224-beautiful-lie-the-dead

2019's entry is from the Alberta Rockies. 'Where the Ice Falls' by J.E. Barnard is set in the foothills hamlet of Bragg Creek, west of Calgary. Following the discovery of a dead intern at an elite private winter playground, a young ex-RCMP officer investigates oil company fraud while struggling with  PTSD and the question of whether the dead can communicate with the living.

More at https://www.vanessa-westermann.info/barnard-where-the-ice-falls-review

Stocking Stuffer Suggestion


CRIME WAVE 

by Sisters in Crime Canada West

This sassy little collection by crime authors from the prairies to Vancouver Island includes police procedurals, comic gems, a diamond heist, some extreme winter sporting, and a holiday hot tub homicide.

http://ow.ly/A1M450CKG7a  

 

Now to a new crop of novels for 2020, all thanks to #Netgalley:

 Mrs. Morris and the Ghost of Christmas Past by Traci Wilton is a gentle cosy mystery set at a B&B in Salem, Massachussetts .It has pretty decorations, a resident ghost, tourist highlights, and some romance. Very low-conflict if this year's held more than enought troubles for you already. The title character's spats with her mom seem more contrived than credible, and neither advance nor detract from the plot. #MrsMorrisandtheGhostofChristmasPast

The Christmas Swap by Sandy Barker is an expanded angle on the movie 'The Holiday' with Kate Winslet & Cameron Diaz. This cheery tale has three house swappers, all friends: one in an Oxfordshire village, one from an Australian beach town, and one high in the Colorado mountains. Great escape in this armchair-travel-only year, following Lucy, Chloe, and Jules as they learn about life, love, and friendship. #TheChristmasSwap

An Ivy Hill Christmas by Julie Klassen offers a Christian romance against a sketched-in Regency backdrop. The pace is leisurely and the 'rake's redemption' plot unfolds with credible slowness, filled with increasingly good deeds and frequent reflections on bible verses and the true meaning of Christmas. Be prepared to find Our Hero exceedingly annoying at first, the better to appreciate his transformation. Acquaintance with series characters could be useful. #AnIvyHillChristmas

Winter Wishes at Swallowtail Bay by Katie Ginger follows Nell, proprietor of Holly Lodge, as she scrambles to stage the perfect wedding for guests while a fancy new hotel is stealing most of her business. Her best friend is in love with her but will she see it in time? #WinterWishesatSwallowtailBay

 A Christmas Carol Murder by Heather Redmond lays credible claim to Victorian Christmas in this re-imagining of Dickens' famous tale. We follow Charles Dickens himself through the sooty streets and aged alehouses as he follows up an abandoned baby along with several suspicious deaths. There's a cast list, much needed to sort out the historical characters, those lifted from Dickens' fiction, and those newly-created by Redmond. #AChristmasCarolMurder

 
Bonus content: 

Possibly the most decorative Hallmark movie of 2020

 A Timeless Christmas with Erin Cahill and Ryan Paevey