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Book Review: Girl Most Likely by Max Allan Collins

Girl Most Likely by Max Allan Collins
2019, Thomas and Mercer
ISBN-13: 978-1542040587
Available: Kindle, Paperback, Audiobook, Audio CD

Girl Most Likely is the new novel from Max Allan Collins, who is famed for his graphic novel The Road to Perdition. Like the first work, Girl Most Likely is a tale that happens in the Midwest. Unlike the first story, this novel takes place in the present day.

Girl Most Likely is the first book in a planned series concerning the adventures of the new chief of police, Krista Larson. In this book, Larson’s high school reunion brings out the worst in people. As people from her high school class come to town and occupy a lake house, bodies start to pile up. Worse, secrets Larson thought people had forgotten after  high school start to resurface.
This is a fantatsic whodunit, a quality mystery that people who like such dramas will find most engrossing. Highly recommended for young adults.

Reviewed by Ben Franz

Graphic Novel Review: A Study in Emerald by Neil Gaiman, art by Rafael Albuquerque

A Study in Emerald by Neil Gaiman, art by Rafael Albuquerque

Dark Horse, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-50670-393-0

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, comiXology edition

A Study in Emerald is a Lovecraftian/Doyle mystery featuring a brilliant detective and his partner as they try to solve a murder. The investigation follows the investigators, named only as the Detective and the Major, from the Whitechapel slums to Queen Victoria’s palace as they attempt to find the killer of a member of the blood royal. The story follows almost all of the same plot points as the original Holmes story, A Study in Scarlet. There are numerous twists and turns in Gaiman’s story from the moment the Major approaches the front door of the Baker Street residence. It also becomes clear that this world is one where the Great Old Ones have prevailed. Cultists are in power, as are the entities themselves. The royals, after all, bleed green. This graphic novel was adapted from Gaiman’s short story of the same title: http://www.neilgaiman.com/mediafiles/exclusive/shortstories/emerald.pdf.

Readers who enjoy Holmes crossovers with a dash of Lovecraftian horror should pick this up, as well as read the original source material. The story is unique in several respects, especially regarding a few of the big reveals that happen through the investigation. I think the only disappointment I have in this volume is that it ended so quickly. I would have loved to have read more. Albuquerque’s beautiful, rich illustrations are the perfect accompaniment to Gaiman’s tale of a great detective and his companion searching for a killer in an alternate Victorian setting.

Recommended.

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

Book Review: River Bodies by Karen Katchur

River Bodies by Karen Katchur

Thomas and Mercer, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-5039-0239-8

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook

 

River Bodies is being billed as a thriller, and… it isn’t.  Really.  Calling it a thriller is pigeonholing a book that has a lot more to offer. It’s not “blow you away” exciting, and it doesn’t have simple characters, like most thrillers.  This book is a good deal more.  With its beautifully drawn characters, interactions between them, and outstanding writing, you have a story that is a bit of everything: excitement, intrigue, romance, and characters learning what’s really important to them.  If anything, it’s a study of three very different people who grew up around the same time, in the same place, but wound up walking very different paths.

Becca is a 30 year old veterinarian in New Jersey.  Her life is going fine, minus her struggles with her boyfriend’s infidelity.  She learns that her father, who she despises, is on the last legs of his battle with cancer, so she crosses the river to her childhood home in Pennsylvania to see him.   Unbeknownst to her, the morning she crosses, she sees John Jackson, who she grew up with, at the scene of a murder he just committed (telling you that Jackson is the killer does not give anything away: the author reveals that Jackson is the guilty party in the second chapter).  On Becca’s return home, she runs into Parker, her childhood flame, now the chief of police in her hometown, and in charge of the murder investigation.

The story builds through the perspective of all three characters, as they find themselves drawn back into each other’s lives, through a complex web of events, circumstances, and relationships.  The backstory of the characters is also prominent, as it turns out that a similar murder happened years ago.  Becca’s dad was chief of police at the time, and he may have hidden information that could have brought the murderer to justice.

As noted before, this isn’t a roller coaster ride with desperate chases, wild shootouts or breakneck car chases, like most thriller novels: there really isn’t that much action at all.  What carries the story is the author’s excellent writing, especially as shown in the character development.  All three of the leads are extremely well done, with a lot of emotional depth.  The best, and the most intriguing, is John Jackson, the killer, who is an enforcer for a local motorcycle gang.  As one would expect, he isn’t a good person, living the standard biker life of drinking, skirt-chasing, and terrorizing other people.  But he does have his good qualities, ones that become important later in the book.  Flashbacks provide understanding of how the characters developed: they are handled smoothly, and written well enough that you don’t get confused with the back and forth between the two time periods.  There are a few implausible moments in the book where you will have to suspend disbelief, but they are easily overlooked and don’t detract from the story.

Overall, it’s a well written story that should appeal to a wide audience, and at only 290 pages, one that is easily digestible and doesn’t require a substantial investment of time.  Recommended.

 

Contains: mild violence

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson