Posts Tagged ‘Mysteries & Thrillers’

You Review: The Missing File by D. A. Mishani

Wednesday, May 15th, 2013

Reviewed by Marianne van der Wel

When a crime is committed in suburban Tel Aviv there is little need for a complex investigation. Police detective Avraham Avraham knows that, usually, the explanation is the simplest one. But when a sixteen-year-old boy vanishes without a trace, this theory is tested. The detective’s best lead seems to be the boy’s neighbour and tutor, Ze’ev Avni. He has information that does not only shed new light on the case, but could also make him a very likely suspect.

The Missing File is not a usual ‘whodunit’. The story isn’t really about the solution, it deals mostly with the relationships that develop during the course of an investigation and how there is no objective way of looking at the clues.

For this to work the author had to create human beings. They cannot be the standard all-knowing hero and quirky side-kick. With the minor characters D. A. Mishani did a good job, but when it came to the more complex main characters I think he just missed the mark. The detective’s mood swings faster than a pendulum and by the end of the book you still don’t know what kind of person he is. The teacher was slightly better crafted. It seemed like the author had given him more thought and knew what he wanted from him.

I don’t mind it too much when characters are not yet fully ‘developed’, personally, I can read past this. The thing that I couldn’t read past, and which kept throwing me off, was the way the story was told. First, the story is told in dual perspectives. This is not the problem. It keeps the reader on his toes and involved. But on top of these dual perspectives, parts of the story are told in flashbacks, that just seem to pop up whenever they feel like it. This disrupted the flow of the story somewhat and several times I had to reread a page to figure out when I was reading about.

Having said all of this, I do have to add that I did like the book. Because it is not a conventional ‘whodunit’, it reads very differently from other detective stories. It’s a bit like a ‘behind the scenes’ novel. The storytelling was a bit flawed, but this is the author’s first book. It did intrigue me and I look forward to the follow-up.

You Review: The latest releases, reviewed by ABC customers.

Bookbits for May 14th, 2013

Tuesday, May 14th, 2013

…and I’m back from holiday.  Hope you didn’t miss me too much.  ;-)

  • Did you celebrate Mother’s Day last Sunday? In case it all got a little too sugary for you, here are The 10 Worst Mothers in Books.  See it as an antidote.

Thanks to PeterL and Aviva for some of the above links!

Saw the Movie? Read the Book!

Wednesday, May 1st, 2013

These May movies are based on books:

Jurassic Park 3D (the 3D release of the 1993 box office smash hit)

is still based on the novel Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton (iconic cover by the amazing Chip Kidd).

Hannah Arendt is a biographical film about the German Jewish philosopher. It isn’t based on any specific book,

but there are quite a few books about her, the times she lived in and her work, like The Portable Hannah Arendt.

Two Mothers is based on the short story The Grandmothers by Nobel Prize winner Doris Lessing.

The Great Gatsby is based on the classic written by F. Scott Fitzgerald.  If you haven’t read it yet, do!  Glorious use of language.  :-)

The Company You Keep is based on the novel with the same title by Neil Gordon.

L’Ecume des Jours is based on the French novel with the same title by Boris Vian.

It has been translated to English with the title Froth on the Daydream.

Epic is based on the novel The Leaf Men and the Brave Good Bugs by William Joyce

(the same man who also wrote The Rise of the Guardians books).

Midnight’s Children is based on the modern classic by Salman Rushdie (originally scheduled for March).

Store Bits

Monday, April 8th, 2013

My lovely fellow booksellers frequently send me short notes about a new book from their sections that has caught their fancy, or a website that highlights a particular series of books they’ve seen fly off the shelf, or a picture with a subsection change.  We tweet them often enough, but I thought they warranted a special spot here on the blog, too!  So I’m introducing a brand-new series of posts, Store Bits – kind of a Lit Links mixed with a Bookbits mixed with ABC News.  Enjoy!

PeterL has spotted a new subgenre in the Mysteries & Thrillers genre: personal growth/mind-body-spirit crime.

“Bestselling author Gay Hendricks, well known for his books about personal growth and the mind-body connection, has, in collaboration with Tinker Lindsay, written a new crime-series.  In The First Rule Of Ten, Tenzing Norbu (“Ten” for short) – ex-buddhist monk and soon to be ex-cop – takes on his first case as a private investigatorin L.A. Growing up in Tibetan monestery, Ten dreamed of becoming a modern-day Sherlock Holmes. So when he was sent to Los Angeles to teach meditation, he joined the LAPD instead. Set in the modern-day streets and canyons of Los Angeles, The First Rule of Ten is at turns humorous, insightful, and riveting—a gripping mystery as well as a reflective, character-driven story with intriguing life-lessons for us all.”

There are currently 2 volumes in this series, The First Rule of Ten and The Second Rule of Ten, and both are available in the Crime section on the first floor of ABC Amsterdam.

Jitse wants to direct your attention to the Gotham City Archives, where Chip “Iconic Book Designer” Kidd’s Batman: Death by Design is discussed.  Be warned if you’re a Batman fan, though, because the site is loaded with great Batman material, including maps of Gotham City and articles by people like philosopher Slavoj Zizek about the Christopher Nolan movies.

He’s also very happy to be able to say that the Art & Animation section has been revamped at ABC Amsterdam.  See the bottom of the post for a picture.  You can find the section on ABC Amsterdam’s first floor.

Jilles is really excited about a great new book by Nick Ortner, The Tapping Solution, “about Emotional Freedom Technique, or EFT as they all call it. The technique is very easily explained and it’s applicable to almost every problem with often very quick results. Everybody is using it these days, so check out this very practical book.”  You can find The Tapping Solution in the Consciousness section on the second floor at ABC Amsterdam and in the Psychology section at ABC The Hague.

On our Facebook page we found the following message last week: “Hi there! I discovered ABC online and can’t wait to pop by to see your bookstore in person when I’m next in Amsterdam! :) I devised a Bookstore Bucket List and included you guys in it! Please read & share the article. Thanks, enjoy! – Ashlea Green

Thanks for including us, Ashlea!  We hope you manage to visit all the beautiful stores mentioned – and hope you can pass by ABC The Hague, too.  :-)

Lastly, Marten reminds me to let all of our customers know that both stores have David Byrne’s How Music Works back in stock!

You Review: The Blood Gospel by James Rollins & Rebecca Cantrell

Friday, February 15th, 2013

Reviewed by David Young

The Blood Gospel of the title refers to a legend that Jesus himself wrote a Gospel, which was interred in a sarcophagus buried under a mountain in Israel and later looted by the Germans during World War 2. The plot describes the quest to track the book down, and our heroes are Dr Erin Granger (pretty blonde thirtysomething, too obsessed with her archeology to be interested in men), Jordan Strange (fortysomething US Army Sergeant, broad shoulders, piercing blue eyes, hair the colour of wheat) and Rhun Korza (several hundred years old, sometime vampire, now Catholic priest). Their rival is Balthory Darabont, Oxford-educated voluptuous redhead Hungarian (age unspecified), leading a group of werewolves and vampires.

The action is recounted in the staccato style so beloved of this genre (“October 16, 3.12pm IST, Masada, Israel“). Our heroes survive near-burial under an earthquake and battles with werewolves and man-eating giant bats, shrugging off apparently life-threatening injuries with the aid of Sergeant Jordan’s first aid kit. Despite all that and little or no sleep or food they remain fresh and perky to the end, via an underwater dive in Germany, Rasputin’s lair in St. Petersburg and another pitched battle in the catacombs under the Vatican, so much so that Jordan is able to give Erin a blood transfusion using another first aid kit which Monk Leopold conveniently happens to have about his person.

Anyone buying this sort of book is not looking for a contribution to World Literature or deep insights in to the Human Condition, which is just as well. It’s a quick read, would make a long intercontinental flight pass quickly, and will leave absolutely no trace afterwards, I guarantee.

You Review: The latest releases, reviewed by ABC customers.