Monday, July 9, 2007

Basket Case by Carl Hiaasen

Read: 10 July, 2007

Jack Tagger's career as a reported was destroyed when he criticized his new boss. He now writes the obituaries - a job he was assigned in the hopes that he would give up and quit. But Jack isn't quite ready to give up yet. He waits for the day that someone famous dies in his territory so that he can write the obituary that would save his career. When Jimmy Stoma of the Slut Puppies dies under mysterious circumstances, Jack believes this time has come. He must fight his editor and discover the secret to Jimmy's death, a search that leads Jack into the very bowels of the music industry.

With all this talk of once great reporters reduced to anonymity by an oppressive newspaper structure, I begin to wonder if Hiaasen isn't verging on the autobiographical. When a theme is repeated in two or more of an author's works, I begin to question just how fictional that theme may be. Similarly, the "baddie" characters are again killed (in similarly gruesome fashion). Now, in this case there doesn't seem to have been much of a peaceful solution (though the characters never propose simply going to the police). Even so, a normal (non-psychopathic) individual might still feel a little guilty for what happened. Not these characters, though! So what is it about Hiaasen that compels him to write about such brutality with total lack of feeling? Finding this in one novel was unnerving. Finding it in two is downright scary.

Other than that, however, the novel was fantastic. Again, I adored the writing style and the humor. The references to Neil Young and other musicians I rightfully should not have heard of at my tender age prejudiced me in favor of the story. The jokes about modern pop music sealed the deal, so to speak.

Saturday, July 7, 2007

Lucky You by Carl Hiaasen

Read: 8 July, 2007

JoLayne Lucks has won the lottery. In a town where miracles are made of plastic Maries with water pump tears, a real miracle becomes quite the center of attention. Bodean Gazzer and Chub, two Neo-Nazis who would rather blame just about anyone but themselves for their less-than-perfect lives, also win the lottery and decide to use the money to start up a militia. When they find out that their winnings will be split, they decide to steal the other ticket. JoLayne, how has plans of her own for the money, enlists the help of Tom Krome (a once successful journalist who now only writes the "fluff news") to track Bodean and Chub down and take back what's rightfully hers.

I love Hiaasen's writing style. It strikes me as very conversational (a great change from the novels I read for school!) and filled with humour that sometimes touches on over-the-top. I enjoyed most of the novel, but the end seemed to display a very questionable morality. Bodean is killed and Chub is badly injured. JoLayne, who cannot bear to be his cause of death, heals his wounds. She then proceeds to abandon him on the island where he eventually starves and is eaten by scavenger birds.

I found this to be very inconsistent behavior for someone who, just recently, had claimed not to want to cause the death of a fellow living creature. In fact, the very casualness with which Tom and JoLayne leave Chub struck me as disturbing. They seemed to see absolutely nothing wrong with the act, justifying it merely by stating that they had no way to prove that their version of the story was the true one should the police intervene - the sort of thinking a psychopath might used. A character set up to be as caring as JoLayne might at least have lost a few nights of sleep.

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Three Doors to Death by Rex Stout

Read: 4 July, 2007

Nero Wolfe solves three separate mysteries with the help of his assistant, Archie Goodwin. In the first, Man Alive, a fashion designer who supposedly committed suicide has returned only to be murdered. There are only five people alive who could have murdered him and it's Wolfe's job to find out which one did it

In the second story, Omit Flowers, a chef is accused of murdering his boss's husband. Wolfe, suspecting the widow and her "flock" of children, must prove the chef's innocence by catching the real killer.

In the third story, Door to Death, Wolfe finds the body of a murdered girl while trying to hire a gardener to replace Theodore while the latter is away for a family emergency. The gardener is suspected and Wolfe must prove his innocence if he wants someone to care properly for his orchids!

Of the three Nero Wolfe novels I have read this summer, this has been my favorite. Each story begins with a set up, every detail that is needed to solve the mystery is presented. From there, Wolfe merely needs to piece the puzzle together and solve the mystery. With the exception of Omit Flowers, little new information is added during the course of the stories.

Monday, July 2, 2007

The Father Hunt by Rex Stout

Read: 3 July, 2007

Amy Denovo's mother chose her last name because it means "of new," representing the clean break she made away from Amy's father. She never spoke of her past to Amy and, though questioned, refused to divulge her father's identity. That is, until the day she was killed in a hit-and-run incident. Soon after, Amy finds a box filled with money and a note explaining that the money is from her mysterious father. She uses this money to hire Nero Wolfe to dig into her mother's past and find her father.

Another excellent addition to the Nero Wolfe library. Disappointingly for a mystery novel, many crucial details are withheld until the very end preventing any accurate guess as to the answers. Despite this, however, the story is an enjoyable read. Wolfe's eccentricities and Archie's weight jokes are enough to make just about any plot worthwhile (at least for the limited number of Wolfe books I've read).

Sunday, July 1, 2007

The Black Mountain by Rex Stout

Read: 2 July, 2007

When Nero Wolfe's friend, Marko Vukcic, is killed, Wolfe vows to find the murderer. When Wolfe's adopted daughter, Carla, goes to Montenegro to take over Vukcic's affairs with a rebel group and is also murderer, Wolfe decides to finally leave his New York apartment and travel to the land of his birth.

An odd choice for my first book to read since it is so consciously breaking all of the trademarks of the the series. The novel reads almost more like a travel narrative set with already known characters than it does like a mystery. The ending is disappointing in that the mystery is solved merely because Archie and Wolfe happen to be at exactly the right place at exactly the right time and manage to overhear the baddie tell a prisoner his entire plan. If you are looking for a good mystery, turn away now. But the novel has beautiful descriptions of the area and is well worth a read despite its many flaws.