Nostalgia City Mysteries

Mark S. Bacon

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About mbaconauthor

Mystery writer and journalist; former newspaper police reporter.

Brodie’s client trio mired in gloom

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Case Histories
Kate Atkinson
Little, Brown & Company, 400 pages
mass market paperback, $7.99
Kindle edition, $6.99

This British novel lives up to its name as the first chapters present–at length–three separate stories of death and disappearance, all of which happened years ago.  It’s not until page 71 (Kindle version) that we meet Jackson Brodie, ex-cop turned PI specializing in finding people.  When we meet him he’s tailing Nicola, a flight attendant whose husband suspects her of infidelity.   Nicola’s story soon fades into the background and Brodie eventually takes on the three cases already introduced.

In the first case, a three-year-old disappears from a back yard campout and 34 years later is still missing.  The second case involves a seriously overweight attorney who wants Brodie to find the person who knifed his daughter to death in his law office 10 years earlier.  The third case presents a scene of a husband and wife spat that ends with an ax planted in hubby’s skull.

To solve the crimes, Atkinson doesn’t take us on a procedural trail, rather she explores participants’ souls and secrets while Brodie, appearing now and again, offers  solace to members of the emotionally wounded cast and leisurely looks for clues.  Brodie’s character links the cases together but it’s polar opposite sisters Julia and Amelia–looking for their lost sister Olivia–who seem to take center stage.   Amelia is sexually repressed, Julia not so much, a condition not lost on Brodie.  The sisters tell Brodie a tale of four sisters living with a cold, distant, frustrated mathematician father and ineffective mother.   “Olivia was the only one she loved, although God knows she tried her best with the others.”

Of Brodie we learn that he’s divorced and angry at his ex-wife who has taken up with a professor.   Brodie’s ex has custody of their daughter and is threatening to move to New Zealand and take Marlee with her.

“For the most part, the work he [Brodie] undertook now was either irksome or dull,”  Atkinson tells us early on.  Case HistoriesFortunately, his Case Histories are more than irksome and far from dull although peppered with digressions.   When the digressions have digressions it’s a challenge to follow the flow.   Some of the digressions or other sections of the book could be short stories themselves.  An early murder scene would make a dandy suspense short story.

The clients and their respective troubles are dreary and depressing with a capital D, weighing down Brodie and the reader.   “Time did not heal—it merely rubbed at the wound, slowly and relentlessly.”  This line, referring to the attorney’s grief over his daughter’s death,  could apply to almost any of the characters in the book–including Brodie.

In the latter half of the novel, Brodie is regularly assaulted for reasons that remain unclear until the end.   “All the bones in his skull seemed to have been rearranged like tectonic plates slipping and sliding against one another.”

Wounded in more ways than one, Brodie presses on.  Ultimately he solves the poignant cases of lost loves–a subject he’s familiar with, details of which are saved for late in the book.   The conclusion packs an emotional, touching punch, Brodie solves one of the cases with evidence that seems a little too convenient (but it was originally missed due to sloppy police work) and the end of the story could turn Brodie’s life around.

Video Notes  In 2011, a series of three Jackson Brodie mysteries were aired on PBS and are now available on DVD.  The series is called Case Histories though only the first episode is based on this novel.   Jason Issacs, known to some viewers from the Harry Potter films, plays Brodie as a sympathetic, vulnerable yet rugged PI, giving him as much character as you’ll find in the novel.   The video is, of necessity I suppose, faster moving than the book and ultimately satisfying.

Mystery – Suspense: New novel releases

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The Killing: Uncommon Denominator
Karen Dionne
Titian Books  320 pages
The AMC TV series, The Killing, was taken from Forbrydelsen, a Danish detective series. The original show (available on DVD in Danish) was good but just a little hard to follow. You had to read the subtitles while listening to the swift dialog and trying to watch expressions at the same time. The U.S. series starred Mireille Enos and Joel Kinnaman as Sarah Linden and Stephen Holder. The superb cast, including a host of supporting actors, made the dark, gripping series something millions of viewers looked forward to each week. This was modern roman noir at its best. Two subsequent seasons of the show were not quite as sharp and compelling as the first. Titian Books acquired the rights to The Killing and hired thriller writer Karen Dionne to write books based on the original U.S. series. The first one is out now with the familiar characters of Linden and Holder.

The Killing stars

Enos and Kinnaman as Linden and Holder

 

The Doc / Tim Desmond / Black Opal Books    306 pages

A doctor and Civil War reenactor is asked to investigate the murder of a friend’s daughter and uncovers a murder squad run by the Department of Homeland Security.

The Inheritor / Tom Wither / Turner Publishing   348 pages

In this debut suspense novel, Islamic terrorists attack the U.S. energy infrastructure. Publishers Weekly called it a “high-stakes action thriller.”

The Ways of the Dead / Neely Tucker / Viking    288 pages

A reporter and former war correspondent covers the murder of a teenage girl, daughter of a high-profile Washington, D.C. judge. Of the plot twists, Kirkus Reviews said, “The shocks resound with acrid, illuminating insights into the District’s nettlesome intersections of race and class at the hinge of the millennium.”

Lights Out / Donald Bain / Severn House   203 pages

A hapless electrical engineer turns to crime to finance an affair with a beautiful Argentinean woman and winds up being sought by the Mafia, the cops and a PI hired by his wife.

No Stone Unturned / James W. Ziskin / Seventh Street Books   272 pages

Ellie Stone is a 24-year-old reporter for a small daily in upstate New York. Nearly ready to give up her job and return to New York City, she gets involved in the search for a killer.

 

Today’s low-budget flash fiction is the second half of a ‘double feature’

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The 100-word flash fiction installment today was inspired by familiar scenes from crime “B” movies from the 1940s and later.   A “B” movie was a low-budget film, generally starring less-than-well-known actors.  The movies were intended to be the second–and less publicized–films in double features.  By the late 1960s double features disappeared from most theaters, except drive-ins and the need for “B” movies declined.  The term survives, particularly among baby boomer film fans.  I didn’t copy this  story from a movie, but I could have.

‘B’ Movie Plot

Dashing off the curb, the teenager ripped open the car door and jumped into the passenger seat.   He aimed a small caliber semi-automatic at the driver.

Al Marino was unperturbed. “Jacking cars, kid? That’s no way to make a living.   Know who I am? I could use someone like you.”

“Pull around the corner,” the young man said.

“Sure, kid.”   Marino turned the luxury sedan and stopped.   “You’re making a mistake.”

“No mistake. I ain’t no ‘jacker. This is for my sister you got hooked on smack. Now she’s a ’ho’.”

Marino thought the kid wouldn’t shoot. He was wrong.

Crime wave movie poster

Stunning example of a “B” crime movie.