Showing posts with label The Likeness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Likeness. Show all posts
8.23.2012
A Review: Broken Harbor by Tana French
A family of four is found in their seaside home; two children and their father dead, their mother barely hanging on. Mick "Scorcher" Kennedy has been sitting idle after a past case didn't particularly turn out as well as it should have, adopting a rookie detective, Richey, in the hopes that this will be the case that offers redemption. When he receives orders to take on the case in Broken Harbor, a location that brings back memories of a childhood summer he'd rather forget, he's in for more than might be able to handle.
To say that I was anticipating this title is an understatement. I practically had a calendar count down set up at the house. After reading the other three in this series with an intensity unmatched, I knew that her fourth would not disappoint.
Broken Harbor was a bit more detective novel in that it provided much more detail to the actual technical aspects of inspecting a crime scene than the other three offered. While I won't say I learned much, as I don't know how authentic the experience actually is, I thought it made a difference enough to really separate it from the other three. Kennedy has a deranged sister that he is constantly supplying attention, the story focused less on his own issues, that of the location of the crime and its relation to his own family, unlike the others. Both Faithful Place and Broken Harbor required the reader to follow a detective (rivals, mind you) in a case, while reconciling their own connection with the location of the crime committed. While Frank's from Faithful Place was much more disturbing, Broken Harbor offered enough frustration for me to understand the impact of these respective places to their narrators.
My only complaint is that I felt like many of the characters, while offering their own personality, have very similar voices. Perhaps you could argue that the murder squad requires a certain type of individual in order for success, but I felt that the opening felt much like the other three. However, French is a brillant writer, who, effectively, and in a very entertaining manner, builds the scene and the individuals that interact within it.
I've seen reviews that proclaim this is the favorite of the four, but I can't say I agree. While it was entertaining, a book I did have hard time putting down, it was by far one of the least thrilling in my opinion. I didn't necessarily know what was going to occur or who may or may not have committed such a terrible crime, I had some ideas and felt like Scorcher's preoccupations with his sister and his partner took away from the suspense. This effect, most likely intentional, displays French's ability as a writer to build a character and force the audience to review the sequence of events through such a tight lens. There were moments when I was far more agitated with Scorcher's treatment of his younger sister than he ever allowed himself to be and almost wished her character were not involved in the book. However, it was evident that she had to exist in order to keep the memories of Kennedy's mother, and that terrible summer, alive for the whole family to constantly remember. French makes this novel in-your-face in the present as the murdered family's life is picked apart. A loving couple destroyed by a economy turned upside down, stuck in a home crumbling around them, in a deserted neighborhood that once offered grandeur.
As I've said before, you don't have to read this series in order (unless you're a stickler about that kind of thing). Characters are mentioned in several of the novels, but it certainly isn't a make or break situation. If you enjoy a real thriller, pick up The Likeness or In the Woods; if you're looking for a highly satisfying crime novel with smart characters head for Faithful Place and Broken Harbor.
7.24.2012
Excitement: Tana French's Broken Harbor Release
From Goodreads:
In BROKEN HARBOR, a ghost estate outside Dublin - half-built, half-inhabited, half-abandoned - two children and their father are dead. The mother is on her way to intensive care. Scorcher Kennedy is given the case because he is the Murder squad’s star detective. At first he and his rookie partner, Richie, think this is a simple one: Pat Spain was a casualty of the recession, so he killed his children, tried to kill his wife Jenny, and finished off with himself. But there are too many inexplicable details and the evidence is pointing in two directions at once.Don't know about Tana French?! Who are you?!? Where have you been?!?
Scorcher’s personal life is tugging for his attention. Seeing the case on the news has sent his sister Dina off the rails again, and she’s resurrecting something that Scorcher thought he had tightly under control: what happened to their family, one summer at Broken Harbour, back when they were children. The neat compartments of his life are breaking down, and the sudden tangle of work and family is putting both at risk . . .
Take a peek at my reviews of her first three novels (and then read them and love them):
Already read it? Don't tell me because I'm jealous. But seriously. What'd you think?
10.14.2011
A Review: The Likeness by Tana French
Moving towards the finish line on the RIP VI Challenge, I picked up Tana French's The Likeness. Having read the first and the third of the Dublin Murder Squad series, I had this one sitting on my shelf for quite some time and thought it was the perfect novel to help me works towards completion.
The premise: Cassandra Maddox, a leading player in the first novel, In the Woods, has decided to dive, head first, into the world of the undercover agent. Taking the place of a murdered victim, who she almost identically resembles, Cassie must take residence in a brilliant Irish country house, with the deceased's closest friends. Cassie must maintain her role, in order to track down her killer, without forming attachments, despite the allure of the fellowship the four offer. True to the genre, expect characters to crawl out of the wood work, and twists and turns that complicate matters to the extreme.
The novel, was, for the most part, completely unrealistic. When you begin, you'll certainly question whether or not someone, who, in every sense of the word creepy, looks just like you, could fool your closest friends or family. I'd like to believe that I have certain quirks that no one could ever recreate. However, for the purpose of the story, I was able to suspend disbelief and join the party.
There's something about French's language that is almost indescribable for me. It's exciting and draws my attention. It's well crafted and funny. I usually don't want to put it down but almost always end up doing so just so I don't finish too soon. The characters are highly excitable, infectious even, despite their obnoxious commentary and mostly disagreeable attitudes. Furthermore, she's able to create unique voices that clearly define each character, making the story much more engaging. She spends her time delicately balancing between setting up the landscape, the characters and the action, leading to an ultimately enjoyable, thrilling read.
It may not be as solid as some readers prefer, but I found it highly entertaining and quite witty. I found that this particular title had more closure than the first or third novels in the series, which may persuade readers to pick this up instead. While you don't have to read them in order, I find that it's probably good advice.
3 of 4 RIP VI Challenge Reads
(Although, I think I might have just added two more considering I'm doing so well so far!) Stay tuned for my review of The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern, which I'll be finishing up in the very near future.)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)