The Tzer Island book blog features book reviews written by TChris, the blog's founder. I hope the blog will help readers discover good books and avoid bad books. I am a reader, not a book publicist. This blog does not exist to promote particular books, authors, or publishers. I therefore do not participate in "virtual book tours" or conduct author interviews. You will find no contests or giveaways here.
The blog's nonexclusive focus is on literary/mainstream fiction, thriller/crime/spy novels, and science fiction. While the reviews cover books old and new, in and out of print, the blog does try to direct attention to books that have been recently published. Reviews of new (or newly reprinted) books generally appear every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Reviews of older books appear on occasional weekends. Readers are invited and encouraged to comment. See About Tzer Island for more information about this blog, its categorization of reviews, and its rating system.
French Windows by Antoine Laurain

First published in France in 2023; published in translation by Pushkin Press on July 1, 2025
French Windows is a different take on the murder mystery genre. Dr. J. Faber is a psychoanalyst. His new client, Nathalia Guitry, tells him that she thinks she has screwed up her life. She feels “not fully alive” and characterizes her professional life as a failure.
Nathalia is a photographer but she no longer takes photographs. “‘When you can no longer do the job you love,” she explains, “you lose interest, and you don’t love it any more.” Faber asks her about the last photograph she took and she answers that it was a photograph of a murder. The topic of murder is not raised again until the story is about to end, leaving the reader to wonder how this could be a murder mystery. The answer: it mostly isn't.
Nathalia tells Faber that she spends much of her time looking out her window. She watches the people who live in the five floors of the wing across from her. She describes what she sees as “Stories. Lives. Life.”
Faber instructs Nathalia to write a story about the occupant of the ground floor and bring it with her to their next therapy session. “A true story, or one you’ve made up, it doesn’t matter which.” They will then repeat the process for the remaining floors until she has given Faber five stories. Faber hopes that she will reveal something about herself through the stories she tells of other people.
The bulk of the novel consists of Nathalia’s stories. One explains how the occupant of a flat adopted a new identity and became a YouTube influencer, a lifestyle coach who gives relationship advice, having achieved fame with the video If All Men Are Idiots then All Women Are Fools. After the session in which Nathalia discusses that story, Faber does some research and discovers that the story is apparently true.
The next story is about a successful, overweight cartoonist who buffs up to impress a woman who ignored him in high school. The third is about a man who must choose between his cat and a child who has a cat allergy. Another is the story of a man who had a near-death experience, sold all his goods, and traveled to Scotland to visit a tower that became his obsession. The last one, about a hypnotist, finally works its way back to the photograph of a murder.
Faber’s investigations of each story glue them together. The reader learns about Faber and his relationships with his wife and daughter, as well as his interest in old skeleton (passepartout) keys. It makes sense that a psychoanalyst would have a passion for keys, given his desire to unlock the hidden thoughts of his patients.
The story might be about the destiny we unconsciously shape. In the words of Jung: “Our destiny is the external manifestation of our internal subconscious conflicts.” Faber comes to understand Jung’s meaning through his interaction with Nathalia. Perhaps the reader will, as well.
Given its almost tangential nature, the mystery would be easily spoiled by discussing the murder that Nathalia photographed. The murderer’s identity necessarily comes as a surprise, given that the reader knows nothing about the murder until late in the story. While neither the murder nor the reveal are shocking, the story’s structure is quite clever.
French Windows might not appeal to mystery fans who want their mysteries to follow a familiar formula. The novel barely qualifies as a murder mystery, but the stories of the various apartment dwellers, while not particularly mysterious, are all engaging. As is Nathalia, a beautiful woman whose features Faber cannot recall after she departs. Faber’s wife wonders whether she is real or a figment of Faber’s imagination. Whether Faber’s wife is on the right track is a question for the reader to decide.
Although French Windows is a murder mystery in name only, it succeeds as a captivating glimpse of a psychoanalyst who needs to unlock his inner self before he can understand his relationships with his family and patients. Unpeeling the story’s deceptively complex layers might be a greater challenge than solving a murder.
RECOMMENDED
The White Crow by Michael Robotham

Published by Scribner on July 1, 2025
American crime novels that tell stories from the perspective of a police-affiliated character (detective or beat cop, coroner, forensic investigator) tend to be less interesting than their British counterparts. American characters are too often self-righteous, annoyingly so when they deliver predictable lectures about how nobody else cares about victims as much as they care. British characters are more self-effacing, while British authors tend to focus on good storytelling rather than tedious lectures about their advocacy for crime victims.
The apparent victims in The White Crow are a jeweler and his family. Masked men force Russell Kemp-Lowe into his house just as he’s arriving home. They tie up Caitlin, his wife, before making off with Russell. One of the robbers is kind enough to tuck their daughter into bed when she wakes up and wonders about the masked strangers in her kitchen. The robbers leave a man behind to watch Caitlin. They tell Russell that the man will kill Caitlin if Russell doesn’t let them into his jewelry store and shut off the alarms. When the robbers leave the store, they tie Russell to a chair with a bomb that will explode if he moves.
Philomena McCarthy is a police constable. She’s driving with her partner when she sees a little girl in pajamas near the road. Just as they stop to investigate, they are called to the scene of the jewelry store robbery. Phil’s partner responds but Phil stays behind to search for the girl. The little girl is, naturally enough, the child of Russell and Caitlyn.
The girl, Daisy, tells Phil that her mother has a bag over her head and won’t wake up. Daisy leads Phil to her home, where Phil discovers Caitlyn’s dead body, still tied to the chair. While it quickly becomes apparent that Caitlyn was suffocated, there is no bag over her head when Phil arrives.
Philomena isn’t a detective but she worms her way into the investigation because she’s formed a rapport with Daisy. Surveillance cameras reveal that Phil’s father and uncles have some sort of connection to Russell. Phil becomes a suspect because her father is a semi-retired criminal who now operates a construction company. Philomena is the “white crow” of the family (the Bulgarian equivalent of “black sheep”), a misfit who doesn’t conform to her family’s lawlessness.
The White Crow is fundamentally a whodunit. Someone killed Caitlyn, but the robbers left the home before Daisy. The murderer must have removed the bag from Caitlyn’s head after Daisy left and before she returned with Phil. It isn’t clear why one of the robbers would have done so. Who committed the foul deed?
Michael Robotham offers an array of suspects for Philomena and the reader to consider. Russell was having serious money issues and might have benefitted from his wife’s insurance. Philomena’s father is having money issues of his own, thanks to a gang of Bulgarian criminals who want to take over his construction business so they can use it to launder their criminal proceeds.
The notion of a cop turned suspect — a cop who then goes rogue to prove his or her innocence — is a frequent plot driver in police thrillers, but Robotham can be forgiven for borrowing that familiar device. The rest of the story seems fresh.
Robotham builds depth into Philomena’s character through her troubled relationship with her father. While it is common for fictional (and real) cops to have troubled relationships with spouses, Robotham avoids the “I’m married to my job” cliché. Phil’s strong relationship with her firefighter husband becomes central to the story when bad guys kidnap her as the story approaches its climax.
The scenes following the kidnapping move at a frenzied pace, justifying the novel’s “thriller” label. While the story ends with exciting action, The White Crow isn’t a typical action novel, filled with shootouts and fistfights. Phil occasionally demonstrates her ability to defend herself, but the novel sustains interest by blending detection with suspense.
The killer’s identity, revealed in the final pages, might not come as a shock, but it isn’t such a foregone conclusion that the reader will be tempted to skip to the end before moving on to another book. Like many British crime novels, The White Crow avoids most crime novel clichés while placing complex characters into an engaging (and sometimes exciting) story.
RECOMMENDED
How to Dodge a Cannonball by Dennard Dayle

Published by Henry Holt and Co. on June 17, 2025
How to Dodge a Cannonball is a Civil War comedy that morphs into an alternate history. The protagonist, a 15-year-old named Anders, participates in “the second-craziest American rebellion” he’s seen. It comes in the midst of the craziest rebellion, the Civil War.
Anders comes from a long line of soldiers who specialized in flag twirling. When he’s seven, his mother tells him that, if their family “had gotten their due, we’d still be down south” with land and slaves and a future. She blames high-interest lenders for chasing them to Illinois. Anders’ mother instructs him to “pursue an education and avoid asking for hugs,” but when he’s fourteen, Anders joins the Union Army. He twirls flags for ten months before switching his allegiance to the Confederacy.
Confederate General Longstreet assures his soldiers that they are fighting for freedom because “every man, save a few simians, deserves freedom.” Shortly after Longstreet orders his men to charge across a field to engage a large assembly of Union soldiers, Anders drops his flag and sprints “in the exact opposite direction, away from the cannons and rifles and bayonets and fists and other tools for ending his life before he was good and ready to go.” When the Union soldiers begin to advance, Anders removes the blue uniform from a fallen body and again becomes a Union soldier.
Anders is in a pickle when he discovers that the regiment he’s joining consists of black soldiers. To explain his presence, Anders claims to be an octoroon, an explanation that satisfies white officers who believe that “one-eighth [N-word] rounds up to [N-word].” A black corporal named Gleason takes Anders under his wing, giving Anders an opportunity to prove his worth as a flag twirler.
The story that follows is peppered with humor. Some is drawn from the number of black soldiers named Jefferson (including the corpse that once wore Anders’ uniform) who contend that they descended from the nation’s third president. When Anders asks a white Jefferson whether he is related to the former president, the man asks, “Do I look black?”
Other laughs come from discussions of religion. When Anders tells Gleason “All I know is that God isn’t paying much attention,” Gleason replies, “Then you’re a Deist!” and proudly proclaims the “legacy of reason” that Deists have shared, “stretching back to the Founders.” General Harrow cautions his black soldiers not to bother him with “Baptist nonsense” and assures them that if prayer worked, none of them would have been slaves.
Without intending a pun, I would characterize the racial comedy as dark. Anders knows some Confederate codes but can’t get white officers to believe him without revealing that he’s white and a Confederate deserter. When Gleason tells Harrow that Anders is a codebreaker, Harrow responds: “We can’t stake battles on black intelligence. Even if it’s reliable, it perverts the character of the army.”
To Anders’ surprise, a soldier named Petey turns out to be a woman named Patricia. She wanted to be a soldier instead of a nurse because nurses “just saw important bits off people all day.” Using makeup, Patricia becomes a white woman named Polly.
Dennard Dayle also finds disturbing humor in the hypocrisy of war. Apart from the Confederacy's bizarre claim that fighting to preserve slavery is actually a battle for freedom, the Union's claim of moral superiority is undone when Harrow’s regiment is ordered to loot the local community because the Union Army “saved the men and women of this region from pillaging by Lee’s barbarians. Now we’ll help them contribute what they can for our trouble. The patriots among them will appreciate it.” Gleason devises his own looting plan, focusing on an arms factory owned by Slade Jefferson, a white manufacturer of weapons who sells his wares to both sides of the conflict.
While the undercurrent of comedy keeps the story flowing, Dayle’s novel addresses serious themes, including the occasionally confusing nature of racial and gender identity. Slade advances another of the novel’s themes: the futility of war. “When the last shot is fired,” he proclaims, “this will be the same country it was in 1861. Just less crowded.”
The story holds the reader's attention by moving in unlikely directions. Practicing “speculative dramaturgy,” Gleason writes a play about a version of Frankenstein’s monster that serves as a human computer called Clotho. Anders delivers a letter from Slade to his female business partner in Manhattan, a mission that proves to be deadly. The last several chapters take place in New Mexico, where a new monarchy is taking hold — the “second-craziest rebellion” in Anders’ young life.
I found the New Mexico portion of the story to be less biting (and less interesting) than the rest, but How to Dodge a Cannonball succeeds as a satire of American history. Clotho puts a fine point on that history when he explains that, despite all its computational talents, it “can’t make a culture sane. United Americana inherited a single, insane lie. Freedom built on bondage. A structure demanding servitude and celebrating its absence.” Hypocrisy is indeed one of the nation’s defining characteristics, which might be why many people believe that schools should either rewrite history or ignore it.
The novel asks big questions — What is freedom? What is art? What is race? — and delivers non-answers that both inform and amuse.
RECOMMENDED
Weepers by Peter Mendelsund

Published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux on June 17, 2025
Edward D. Franklin describes himself as a “cowboy poet, powerful sad sack, five-tool infielder in the winningest, wettest crying-squad in the entire lower forty-eight.” Ed isn’t much of a poet (his repertoire consists of “cattle drives and campfires”) and he’s not a real cowboy (although his disastrous father owned a ranch so he can pass as one while acknowledging that he is not a “true member of that bowlegged brotherhood”). Lamenting the fact that cowboy is no longer a “viable career choice,” Ed remarks that “we love that life in a way that can only spring from acquaintance with a fallen Eden.”
The “crying-squad” consists of professional weepers, members of Local 302. Ed is the first-person narrator of Weepers. In Peter Mendelsund’s imagined America, emotional fatigue has swept the land. People who attend funerals need motivation to express their sorrow. Professional weepers get things started, or perhaps do the crying for those who can’t muster their own tears. They have stamina and know how to “get right down to it.” They also fill the pews to create the illusion that “the deceased was dearly loved and sorely missed.”
The weepers each have a part to play. Ed’s part is the cowboy poet, although why a cowboy poet would be expected to contribute to a funeral is puzzling. Joining Ed as union regulars are his buddy Dill Denvers, “the old, friendly neighbor of the bunch”; Johnnie, the group’s soldier; Lemon Barbara, the “old matron who’d drink you under the table and steal your wallet”; and a few others. Chief Clarance, taking his persona from an old commercial, “weeps for the land and what was taken.” The Nguyens play the role of outsiders. Weepers come and go, but the core of Local 302 has stayed the course. The union president, Regis, matches the members to funerals that will be served by their individual talents.
The premise — a nation in need of performative grief — is interesting but a weak foundation upon which to build a novel. To keep the story moving, Mendelsund adds a character known only as the Kid. The weepers are getting old (they seem to know many of the departed they mourn) but the Kid revitalizes the group. The Kid rarely cries but has a unique gift for making others sob. Ed reveres the Kid’s gift but fears that the other weepers resent his abilities, or perhaps his youth.
The Kid is often in trouble. Drugs and fights send him to jail. He loses control of his life. He steals from Ed after Ed tries to help him. Ed finds a notebook in which the Kid has recorded the names of everyone for whom he wept. Ed is distressed to discover that some of the names were entered before they died. While I can’t fault Mendelsund for avoiding a predictable path after he has Ed make that discovery, I was disappointed that more was not made of the story's most interesting plot twist.
Other characters add to the story’s background, if not its shaky plot. Ed’s ex-wife Jeannine quit her gig as a weeper. Ed and Jeannine were drawn to each other’s “ineradicable melancholy,” but Jeannine became anesthetized while Ed was still “leaking buckets.” Jeannine left Ed for a man who abused her, apparently preferring violence to grief. Now Ed sometimes spends the night with Local 302 member Chantal, a woman of fading beauty who men hire in advance to attend their wakes in the role of “mysterious mistress.” Chantal’s talent as a weeper is to make her mascara run.
Ed is drawn to Chantal because she “gets it.” What she gets, what any of the weepers understand about each other that others fail to grasp, is never quite clear. Perhaps they share an understanding that “mourning the dead is always a sight easier than loving the living.”
The story’s point is also a bit fuzzy. Mendelsund makes the point that no other animal cries and that nobody understands why humans do. Perhaps Weepers is meant to suggest that empathy is dying. It may be true that people reserve their empathy for their family and friends, a narrow group that excludes people they define as “the other,” but I don’t think that’s the point Mendelsund is trying to make.
In the novel’s reality, people increasingly became “completely anesthetized, and the multitudes of the angry became psychopathic.” They no longer say “howdy,” they do not marry or reproduce or value education. People on the radio scream at each other. It’s easy to find parallels in current American life, but Weepers, while an entertaining read, is a long road to travel just to learn that we live in a nation divided between the empathic and the uncaring.
Mendelsund’s prose is lively and surprising. I recommend Weepers for that reason and for its amusing takes on the grief industry, notwithstanding a plot that fizzles out before reaching a meaningful destination.
RECOMMENDED