Awesome!
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Friday, November 20, 2009
Censorship Rears Its Ugly Head Again
Two library workers in Kentucky decided Alan Moore's The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: The Black Dossier was unfit for library patrons. Read about the ongoing incident here and here.
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Ransom Game (1981)
Ransom Game by Howard Engel
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
"Ransom Game" was recommended to me by the owner of an independent book store in Stratford, Ontario. I was surprised to find that there are a number of good Canadian authors that aren't easily available or known in this country. Howard Engel is one of them.
His Benny Cooperman series is referred to "as an institution of Canuck crime writing" by NOW (Toronto).
Set in Grantham, near Niagara Falls, in the early 1980s, Benny is a Jewish boy in a Protestant town. An unassuming, laid-back private investigator, he doesn't stop until he gets to the bottom of a problem.
Author Howard Engel has a way with words and can turn a descriptive term on a dime. There are twelve titles in this series and it looks like Penguin Canada has begun to re-release them.
The author suffered a small stoke in 2000 that left him with "a rare disorder that rendered him able to write but unable to read". He had his PI Benny Cooperman suffer the same ailment in his 11th book in the series "The Cooperman Variations".
View all my reviews >>
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
"Ransom Game" was recommended to me by the owner of an independent book store in Stratford, Ontario. I was surprised to find that there are a number of good Canadian authors that aren't easily available or known in this country. Howard Engel is one of them.
His Benny Cooperman series is referred to "as an institution of Canuck crime writing" by NOW (Toronto).
Set in Grantham, near Niagara Falls, in the early 1980s, Benny is a Jewish boy in a Protestant town. An unassuming, laid-back private investigator, he doesn't stop until he gets to the bottom of a problem.
Author Howard Engel has a way with words and can turn a descriptive term on a dime. There are twelve titles in this series and it looks like Penguin Canada has begun to re-release them.
The author suffered a small stoke in 2000 that left him with "a rare disorder that rendered him able to write but unable to read". He had his PI Benny Cooperman suffer the same ailment in his 11th book in the series "The Cooperman Variations".
View all my reviews >>
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
The Old Wine Shades (2006)
The Old Wine Shades by Martha Grimes
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
An unusual entry in the Richard Jury series seems to have incensed many readers and left them wondering what Martha Grimes was thinking. I was totally taken by surprise since I found it a clever, fascinating, and well plotted story worthy of the series. The ending may not be what readers were looking for but it was probably more realistic than we would like to think.
View all my reviews >>
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
An unusual entry in the Richard Jury series seems to have incensed many readers and left them wondering what Martha Grimes was thinking. I was totally taken by surprise since I found it a clever, fascinating, and well plotted story worthy of the series. The ending may not be what readers were looking for but it was probably more realistic than we would like to think.
View all my reviews >>
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