Wednesday, December 30, 2015

From Doon With Death (Chief Inspector Wexford #1)

Author – Ruth Rendell
Genre – Detective, Crime, fiction
Source - Kindle
Rating - 4
Read - December 2015

Some of you would know that I am doing a series with a newspaper on detective fiction. I am glad, therefore, that I am getting to revisit writers that I am fond of, or read ones that I had not earlier. Ruth Rendell was a master of the detective fiction genre, and I am familiar with her work, as I am with Chief Inspector Wexford, the main protagonist of many of her books. This, the first in the series, I had not read earlier. 
And I am glad to have done so now. An expert police procedural, this is a must-read for fans of the sub-genre. I am fond of these village-green police procedurals as I call them - they have in them both the comfort of the cozies, and the rootedness of the hardboiled (although little of the grit and the grime). This is excellent - solid plot, crisp storytelling, no pretension or unnecessary flourish, precise character development, a main protagonist you can root for, and a finish that's gentle but not without surprises
Dated? Well, it does indeed read like it was written in 1964 (its year of publication). But that does not hamper the story at all. Has aged quite well.

Will review in greater detail sometime in the future.

Dwitiyo Innings - er Por

দ্বিতীয় ইনিংসের পর 
Author – Mati Nandi
Genre – Fiction, Bengali
Source - Print
Rating - 4
Read - December 2015

A fine novella; based on test cricket what's more, which doesn't diminish at all on re-reading. Not a classic, not among his greatest, but still a fine piece. Mati Nandi is an expert novelist. I am glad to have re-discovered him.

Nayaker Prabesh o Prasthan

নায়কের প্রবেশ ও প্রস্থান 
Author – Mati Nandi
Genre – Fiction, Bengali
Source - Print
Rating - 5
Read - December 2015

This is an extraordinary piece of work. Remember that piece in 'Interpreter of Maladies', the first one? A Temporary Matter? Of how a quasi-estranged couple speak with each other in the middle of a week-long power-failure? This story, by Mati Nandi, reminded me of that. This is a story of how an entire small lane in Kolkata changes, or just comes to terms with itself, while a celebrity steps in, and then steps out of a building in that lane. This is quite extraordinary storytelling. Needs translation.

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Baobab

বাওবাব 
Author – Mati Nandi
Genre – Fiction, Bengali
Source - Print
Rating - 4
Read - December 2015

Mati Nandi gave me sports. And I will be eternally grateful to him for that. 
But even beyond his sports-writing, he was an exceptional writer of novels and novellas. And here in Baobab is a master of the written word, at near his peak. Suneet, the chief protagonist of the story, is probably quite the most heinous, morally destitute main protagonist you will ever encounter in a story, and yet somehow, Nandi is able to humanize him. Not by glorifying him, that would be gangster simple and it is easy to love pure evil; but by etching out this disgusting, disgusting human being with a level of finesse that you eventually get it - this is nonetheless a human being. With human thoughts, human urges and human passions. You cannot look away. 
This book is the work of an utterly skillful artisan.
I have a theory as to why Mati Nandi is not as famous as say Shirshendu or Bani Basu as a writer. The minor, and oft-stated answer is that the snobbish literary circle cannot and could not take a former writer of mere sports books seriously. The major answer, I think is that the Bengali reader is an emotional reader, and most, nay all of her favorites are stylistically emotional - Nandi's staccato, journalistic style of prose is not her natural habitat.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Antarghaat (eng. The Enemy Within)


অন্তর্ঘাত
Author – Bani Basu
Genre – Naxalite movement, Mystery, Thriller
Source - eBook
Rating - 4
Read - November 2015

Very interesting book, this. If you take it solely as a murder mystery novel, it is somewhat predictable, albeit with the deftness, fluency, and that mix of readability and literary merit which is a preserve of only the best of writers (as I often insist, middlebrow literature in India is only found in regional literature). As a social commentary of the future of many Naxalites of Kolkata after the '70s, it in honest, bold and brutal, but perhaps lacks some answers, and more importantly, some questions. 
But as a book, standalone, it is excellent! 
Do note, I really, really rate Bani Basu as a writer, her Gaandharvi, for example, remains one of my favorite short novels. Interesting to note that this was written in 1987, and is one of her earliest works.
PS: I hear that there's a decent translation available - details of the translation here.

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Career Of Evil (Cormoran Strike #3)

Author – Robert Galbraith (J K Rowling)
Genre – Detective, Mystery, Thriller
Source - Audiobook
Rating - 4
Read - November 2015

So... interesting book, this. Very deeply researched, and it shows. Perhaps the most bloody and disturbing of all Cormoran Strike stories, and the violence does not seem out of place, there is a serial killer on the loose. So then, why do I reserve judgment? 
Look, there are a lot of good things in this book. First, Robin is excellent! This is the first strike book where Strike is not the lead protagonist, Robin is. And Robin is an excellent protagonist. Better, at a stretch, than Cormoran. Second, about the relationships. This is a seven-book series, and the narrative is held together by the chemistry between Strike and Robin, and this book is where JKR is pushing the envelop a little bit on the relationship front. Very interesting to see what happens. Perhaps she would want to rectify the Harry-Hermione mistake, as she calls it? We shall see. But let's say that this book has a better Robin, and in most parts a better Cormoran than the two previous ones. Third. the detection, the plot. Does it hold up? Is it innovative enough? Simple answer, yes. 
Then what doesn't work here? The ensemble. One of JKR's best traits has been creating excellent ensemble characters - something that's completely absent in this book. None of the other characters stay on in the reader's mind after the end. Even the serial killer seems like a prop. 
You do remember that both Cuckoo and Silkworm had excellent ensembles. As of course did Harry Potter, and Casual Vacancy was an ensemble piece anyway.
And so there you go. The first-ever less-than-perfect rating for a JKR book by a fanboy. 4/5.

My reviews of previous Robert Galbraith books:
The Silkworm;
The Cuckoo's Calling;

My review of other JKR Books:
The Casual Vacancy;


Monday, October 19, 2015

Still Life (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache #1)

Author – Louise Penny
Genre – Detective, Police Procedural, Mystery, Village Mystery
Source - Audiobook
Rating - 4
Read - October 2015

This is my first Louise Penny, and the first of the Armand Gamache series. It's an excellent book, comparable with (and in some ways similar to) Val McDermid. But while I read McDermid after the best of Flynn and Higashino, I read this after (excellent) non-fiction. And loved it more. Armand Gamache is just what a superb fictional detective should be, but often isn't. He is more a Byomkesh than a Holmes. More a Miss Marple than a Poirot. He is not quirky, but is sage and calm. and dignified. And a detective does not have to be quirky to be compelling. Gamache is proof. Superb insight into Francophone Quebec too. Complaint? The ending would read better than it sounds, I think. Good, satisfactory, but I have read better.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

100 Best Mystery Novels - The Mystery Writers' Association (MWA) 1995


Okay, here's another list to target.The Mystery Writers' Association (MWA)'s 1995 list of best mystery novels.


5.   Scott TurowPresumed Innocent (1987)
7.   Wilkie CollinsThe Moonstone (1868)
9.   Daphne du MaurierRebecca (1938)
15. Mario PuzoThe Godfather (1969)
27. Thomas HarrisRed Dragon (1981)
29. Gregory McdonaldFletch (1974)
42. John GrishamThe Firm (1991)
44. Vera CasparyLaura (1942)
67. Elmore LeonardStick (1983)
70. Bram StokerDracula (1897)
90. Josephine TeyBrat Farrar (1950)
91. Ross MacdonaldThe Chill (1963)
100.  Ellis PetersA Morbid Taste for Bones (1977) and Ira LevinRosemary's Baby (1967) (tie)