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.

Thursday
Apr302026

The Teacher by Tim Sullivan

First published in Great Britain in 2024; published by Atlantic Crime on May 5, 2026

George Cross is among the most entertaining protagonists in the modern world of crime novels. He suffers from Autism Spectrum Condition (he used to call it Asperger’s Syndrome but he’s changed his preference). Perhaps his co-workers suffer more than George, because he fails to recognize social cues and is thus unintentionally rude to everyone. When people get to know him (as readers quickly do), they realize that he makes the best of what he’s got, and what he’s got is focus and tenacity. When George locks onto an unsolved murder, his mind doesn’t rest until he’s found the solution. But what George doesn’t have is ill will. He simply wants the truth to come out and can’t understand why anyone else would have a different agenda.

The Teacher develops George and surrounding characters a bit less than earlier Cross novels. To the extent that Tim Sullivan adds to his well-developed characters, family plays a strong role in the novel. Mothers are particularly important. A subplot involves as the mother of George’s work partner, DS Josie Ottey, who now lives with Josie in one of those uncomfortable adult mother-daughter relationships.

George’s mother is back in his life. Her husband has recently died and she’s hanging out with George’s father, the most stable element of George’s universe. His father accepts him for who he is and keeps him anchored. George is starting to fret about how he will survive when his father passes, a worry that humanizes George and helps the reader appreciate that, whatever his condition might be called, he is still a human who deserves empathy and understanding.

The plot follows a formula that serves mystery writers well. It starts with a murder. Alistair Moreton has been stabbed in the heart with a chisel. His German Shepard mourns his master’s death, although that may be the only creature who will miss Alistair.

The story then introduces a number of plausible suspects, starting with a next-door neighbor, Barnaby Cotterell, who shared a driveway with Alistair and was hot-headed about Alistair’s maintenance of the hedges. But Alistair used to be a sadistic headmaster and there is no shortage of former students who have vowed to see him in his grave. Some resent him for making his son the head boy. The son, Sandy Moreton, is now a member of parliament, although another of Alistair’s students, Richard Brook, got Sandy recalled for bullying his staff. Like father, like son, it seems.

It turns out that Alistair developed a drug addiction after he had hip surgery. When his doctor wouldn’t prescribe more narcotics, he found a supplier. Two men then moved into his house, keeping him high with their supply while they used his residence as a base for their drug distribution. And then there’s Malcolm Fisk, who once accused Alistair of kidnapping his daughter. They are among the many suspects Cross interrogates as he tries to identify the killer.

A new detective, DI Bobby Warner, is filling in from another jurisdiction. He quickly settles on Cotterell as the killer and devotes his time to proving his theory is correct, a common method of police work that leads to the conviction of innocent people. The method is anathema to Cross, who soon finds himself at odds with Warner.

Warner is also at odds with police staffer Alice Mackenzie, an attractive young woman who doesn’t appreciate Warner’s aggressive sexual interest. Men who don’t know how to behave with women and the institutional protection they enjoy is a recurring theme in the story.

It’s no surprise but immensely satisfying when Cross proves that Warner’s theory is unsound. Alice is a bit more physical in teaching Warner a lesson. Cross finds the killer by turning his obsessive attention to the clues until he pieces them together in a new way. He’s assisted by the efforts of forensic investigator Michael Swift, who fancies himself a Watson to Cross’ Holmes. Several dogs enter the story and Swift’s ability to identify the dogs helps Cross identify the killer.

In book after book, Tim Sullivan delivers all the elements of a classic whodunit. I love the series, however, for Sullivan’s ability to create likeable characters while reminding readers that compassion and understanding are essential components of a meaningful life.

RECOMMENDED

Monday
Apr272026

Ghost Town by Tom Perrotta

Published by Scribner on April 28, 2026

“When you’re thirteen, you don’t know what to think or who to believe.” Ghost Town is the sad coming-of-age story of a 13-year-old whose mother has just died. Adults assure him that his mother is in heaven but “it felt fake — too good to be true — like a story adults had invented to make children feel better and ended up believing themselves.”

The story lives in the memory of Jimmy Perrini, who thinks back to a fateful summer in 1974. One of Jimmy’s teachers is a far-right bigot whose brother died in Vietnam. He won’t tolerate any dissent about the war and has no use for hippies or nonwhite people in Creamwood, New Jersey. Jimmy has no experience with people of color until Wayne, his hippie cousin, moves into the house next door with his mixed wife Nilda and her Black cousin Hector.

Intermittent returns to 2024 reveal that Jimmy is now best known as Jay Perry, an author who was experiencing declining sales for his literary novels before writing a successful YA series that turned into an even more successful television show for kids. With some trepidation, he returns to Creamwood to attend an event honoring his father. He makes the trip because he is tired of denying the past. “It felt like I was finally ready to face up to it, to reclaim those missing years, the world I’d left behind.” He is surprised by how racially diverse the town has become in his absence.

The 1974 story gets moving after Jimmy becomes overwhelmed after hearing his mother’s voice at her funeral. As he flees from the funeral home, Eddie Fitzpatrick pulls up in his Chevy Vega and offers Jimmy a ride. A bit younger than Jimmy’s sister Denise, Eddie does little that summer except smoke pot and cruise the streets, occasionally making unsuccessful attempts to impress girls.

Jimmy and Eddie begin to cruise the town regularly, always in the evening, and Jimmy eventually accepts Eddie’s offer to take some hits from his joints. Jimmy enjoys being high and indulges regularly after that first experience. Jimmy adopts a routine of riding with Eddie until he concludes that the Vega is haunted by the ghost of its original owner.

Jimmy knows his mother would have grounded him “for the rest of his life if she’d found out that he was smoking pot with a high school kid and staying out way past his curfew. But that was the thing— she wasn’t alive anymore and the rules were different now.” His father is a firefighter who, lost in his own world after his wife’s death, never keeps his promises to spend more time with Jimmy and devotes little effort to supervising him.

Jimmy has a not-quite girlfriend named Janie, but while he was away from school in the week after his mother’s death, Janie began to date his best friend Greg. When Janie’s family leaves for the summer, her friend Olivia offers to use her Ouija board to help Jimmy communicate with his mother. They make contact with a spirit (or so it seems to Jimmy) but it isn’t Jimmy’s mother. A later Ouija board sessions summons still a different ghost.

Although Olivia is two years older and six inches taller than Jimmy, she quickly inspires him to forget about Janie. A fleeting sexual experience — Jimmy’s first of any significance — enlivens the plot until he hears his mother’s voice, causing him to flee from Olivia just as he fled from his mother’s funeral. Whether the admonishing voice comes from Jimmy’s dead mother or his conscience is for the reader to decide, as is the real or imagined appearance of his mother’s ghost as the story nears its end. Jimmy might not believe in heaven, but he comes to believe in the enduring power of his mother’s love.

In addition to its flirtation with the spirit world, race relations are a dominant theme. Creamwood is a white community and many of its residents want it to stay that way. Eddie’s pot dealer, a loser who has no moral authority to judge anyone else, is one of those. He is particularly antagonistic to Hector, despite Hector’s generous nature and friendly demeanor. That animosity appears to play a role in the novel’s defining moment.

Ghost Town is a low-key novel that underplays its climax. It always seems that the story will lead to an eventful moment (because that’s what coming-of-age stories do), but it isn’t clear what that moment will be until it happens. The life-changing event is dramatic, but the reader learns little of its immediate impact on Jimmy because he repressed the memory. In the novel’s final pages, having returned to Creamwood fifty years later, Jimmy finally makes sense of it as best he can.

Like the movie American Graffiti, Ghost Town creates a sense of nostalgia for a lost time, a youthful summer of cars and shifting friendships and doomed love. Ghost Town takes a darker tone, however, in its depiction of Creamwood as a community that is hostile to social progress. Some of this understandably goes over the head of 13-year-old Jimmy, while the adult version of himself is pleased that small-minded residents of his childhood home could not stand in the way of progressive change.

Ghost Town evokes a mixture of sweet and sad emotions. Still, it doesn’t stand apart from other coming-of-age novels that have covered the same ground. Perrotta pushes all the right buttons, but I can’t say that he achieves anything new or particularly memorable. The appearance of Jimmy's mother's ghost at the novel's end is a bit sappy, although plenty of readers will appreciate the sap. The novel has enough strong moments to earn a recommendation, but its familiarity robs it of emotional resonance.

RECOMMENDED

Thursday
Apr232026

Fair Chase by Travis Mulhauser

Published by Grand Central Publishing on April 28, 2026

I’m always happy to find a thriller that doesn’t depend on tough guys saving the world by clobbering bad guys. It’s not that I don’t enjoy tough guy heroics, but is that the only way to write a thriller? Travis Mulhauser proves that crime stories can be exciting without introducing protagonists whose fists or guns dominate the narrative.

Fair Chase takes place in the fictional Cutler County, Michigan. A resort economy sustains the county residents, some of whom claim to have seen a gray wolf. Local businessmen and government officials insist that they saw a large coyote.

Residents worry that a wolf will eat their pets or scare away vacationers. Some are panicking because they fear a wolf that settles into the local environment will attract more wolves. Of greater concern to resort owners is the risk that resort construction will be halted by environmental studies if endangered wolves suddenly appear.

A few rowdy residents vow to take up arms and illegally hunt the wolf. They are the typical tough-talking blowhards who could stand ten feet from a wolf in the woods and never spot it. A shady guy named Davenport, however, hires Darnette Lewis to kill the wolf. Darnette is a young man fresh out of prison who needs cash. He has few skills beyond the ability to track and kill animals. Davenport promises to give Darnette a healthy payment, assuming he can dispose of the wolf’s body before anyone can prove that a wolf has entered the county.

The Sawbrook family owns forested land between the Crow River and Lake Michigan. Lucy Sawbrook is part of that family. She’s also a game warden who understands the importance of protecting the wolf. She knows that if wolves take up residence in the county, locals will rarely see them and will eventually learn to coexist, just as they live with bears and bobcats. Lucy understands that people freak out when their fears are stoked, but know they will eventually “get bored and need something new to worry over when this doesn’t pan out to be the end of the world.”

This branch of the Sawbrook family — consisting of Lucy, her sister Jewell, her brother Buckner and his wife Sky — is less villainous than the family’s reputation would suggest. When a young man named Delos Harris shows up claiming to be a Sawbrook, they quickly recognize him as one of their own.

Delos served some time in a juvenile prison and was most recently living with a foster family, but when his foster father threatened to hunt for the wolf, Delos stole the man’s rifle and fled. Delos feels a kinship with the wolf and wants to protect it. His need to protect the wolf is one reason the Sawbrooks accept him as one of their own.

The story turns into the chase that the title implies — Darnette, Delos, and the Sawbrooks all chase the wolf, with its fate to be decided by whichever person reaches it first. Fair Chase is also the story of a family sticking together to protect the things they value — their land, their independence, and a wolf. Perhaps the wolf symbolizes the Sawbrook family. The Sawbrooks deliberately live apart from human society and, like the wolf, are seen as a threat by many members of the larger community.

Buckner makes the interesting point that society’s view of wolves is dictated by emotion rather than reason. Nobody cares if a wolf kills a barn cat, “but kill one of Mrs. Jennings’s cats and it’d be a five-alarm fire. It’s just like with humans. Certain kinds you can get away with doing whatever you want to them, other kinds you can’t so much as look at them sideways.” Delos is the kind of kid society might throw away, the kind who can be victimized while people with power turn their heads. He’s a sympathetic character because he has greater respect for wolves than he has for selfish landowners who believe their profits are more important than an endangered species.

The story moves forcefully to a poweful conclusion. Travis Mulhauser’s occasional forays into philosophy give the novel a bit of intellectual heft, but the book is a standout because of its authentic characters. Their fidelity to family and to nature imbues them with a kind of honor. The real predators in the story are not wolves but greedy resort owners.The Sawbrooks and Delos earn the reader’s respect by bending the law to protect a wolf, a more noble purpose for bending the law than protecting profits.

RECOMMENDED

Monday
Apr202026

Mrs. Shim Is a Killer by Kang Jiyoung

First published in South Korea in 2010; published in translation by Harper Perennial on April 21, 2026

Mrs. Shim Is a Killer is only the second crime novel from South Korea that I can recall reading. The first, The Plotters, is notable for its strong characterizations and careful storytelling. Mrs. Shim Is a Killer adopts a lighter tone but is equally enjoyable, albeit for different reasons.

The novel is impressively constructed. Each chapter holds a delightful surprise. The chapters are linked together, but for most of the novel, each chapter introduces, and focuses upon, a new character. Each character comes with a unique backstory. Because the novel’s destination is never clear, the plot is unpredictable.

There is a farcical edge to Mrs. Shim Is a Killer, first noticeable when Mrs. Shim, with very little contemplation, agrees to become a contract killer in exchange for a bar of gold. Mrs. Shim (first name Eunok) is an ajumma, which roughly translates as middle-aged woman. She is 51 when the novel begins. She just lost her job at a butcher’s shop because the owner was arrested at a gambling den. Her husband owned his own butcher’s shop but he died after driving his car into a pub. Since her husband was nearly blind, the police decided that he committed suicide so Eunok received no insurance payout. She had to sell her husband’s shop to pay for damages to the pub.

Eunok is still caring for a son and daughter and doesn’t know how to cope with her financial woes. Because an ajumma cannot easily find employment, she doesn’t expect anything to come of the ad seeking an ajumma for a high-paying position at a detective agency.

Korean detective agencies do the usual investigations into cheating husbands, but the story suggests that a couple of agencies are willing to solve a client’s problems by eliminating their source. The Smile Private Detective Agency provides that service. The firm’s CEO, Park Taesang, was its star killer, but he wants to recruit someone new to take on that role. Eunok’s skill with knives, honed during her career as a butcher, makes her a perfect fit, if you don’t count the fact that she has no history of murdering people.

Kang Jiyoung’s decision to turn a middle-aged widow into a knife-wielding assassin was clearly made with tongue in cheek, but Kang makes it easy to suspend disbelief. In the universe created by the story — a universe in which an ajumma is such an unlikely person to hold any job that isn’t menial, much less the job of assassin — the job offer and Eunok’s easy acceptance of her new profession seems natural.

Until the novel nears its end, each chapter tells a new story, each as interesting as the last. Each chapter sheds a different light on the chapters that came before. One story is about a cop who sacrificed his relationship with a son who now wants him dead because he arrested the villain who his son believed to be his true father. Another is a variant of Cyrano de Bergerac, involving a man who took credit for writing a love letter that was actually written by someone else (the story ends with a murder). Other stories are equally offbeat. Kang’s ability to flesh out the primary story with engaging background tales assured that my interest never wavered.

Only as the story approaches its end does the focus return to Eunok. By that time, her son is an apprentice killer for a rival agency, although mother and son are hiding their professions from each other. At the same time, the rival CEOs of two detective agencies want to kill each other, a development that pits mother and son assassins against each other. At the same time, another novice ajumma killer (this one the wife of a cop) enters the story.

Readers may need a spreadsheet to keep track of all the characters and their relationships to each other. The novel often has the feel of a comedy of errors as characters take extreme actions to conceal the truth from each other. The story is entertaining precisely for that reason. The plot follows unexpected routes as it hops from character to character and it is wildly impossible to accept at face value. Nevertheless, the novel’s construction is so clever and the characters are so sympathetic that the unlikely story did not distract from the pleasure I took in following it to its unexpectedly happy and satisfying destination.

RECOMMENDED

Thursday
Apr162026

Small Boat by Vincent Delecroix

Published in France in 2023; published in translatino by Mariner Books on April 21, 2026

Small Boat is a novel of conscience. A woman lives with her guilt by denying her wrongdoing, by claiming — as so many people do when they make offensive or insensitive comments about members of groups to which they do not belong — that she was only saying what everyone else was thinking. But deep within her shriveled heart, she knows she was wrong — or does she?

The story is built upon a real-world event. In November 2021, migrants on an overcrowded rubber dinghy were attempting to cross the English Channel from France to England when their motor failed. As the dinghy began to take on water, a migrant made frantic calls to the rescue services of the British coastguard and the French Navy.

After some jurisdictional squabbling about whether the migrants were in French or British waters, it became clear that no British vessel was close enough to rescue the migrants. A French trawler spotted the dinghy and asked the dispatcher what it should do, but the trawler’s crew were told that a French vessel was on the way. The French Navy dispatcher, however, declined to send help and seemed annoyed that the migrants kept pleading for rescue.

Recordings reveal that the dispatcher told the migrants “Don’t you get it? You won’t be saved.” When a migrant protested “I’m up to my feet in water,” the dispatcher answered, “It wasn’t me who told you to leave.” Nobody rescued the migrants. In the days that followed, 27 bodies were recovered, most of them Iraqi Kurds. They would have been saved, but for the dispatcher’s obstinate refusal to act.

The first and last parts of the novel are narrated by a fictional version of the French dispatcher. In the first part, the dispatcher is questioned by police officers who are investigating her negligent (or perhaps willful) failure to send a rescue vessel to help the migrants. The dispatcher offers multiple excuses — she claims to have believed that the dinghy was in British waters or soon would be — and fails to take responsibility for her actions.

The dispatcher’s job is to save people, not judge them, but she has no patience with a police investigator who seems to be judging her. The dispatcher doesn’t believe it was her responsibility to “weep, weep for their wretchedness and the drowning of their dreams, weep with them and for them, which most certainly would not have saved them, but at least, apparently, would have saved me, would have saved my soul.”

The novel’s second part is a brief but horrifying third-person account of the passengers on the dinghy. The focus is on the young man whose cellphone still worked, who repeatedly called both England and France for help before he and the raft sank into the water, the initial event in his slow journey to death.

The last section reveals more of the dispatcher’s inner thoughts. She finds herself metaphorically drowning as she struggles to justify her inaction. She carries a resentment toward the world that seems to stem in part from her failed relationship with her daughter’s father, a white French nationalist. “When Eric left, when I had to ask him to leave and in the end he actually did, and I found myself alone with my daughter, and I couldn’t manage all alone with my little girl, and I was going under, who came to my aid, who tried to save me? No one.” She is entirely self-absorbed and thus has no time for the problems of migrants.

The dispatcher also believes that her interrogator judges her so she can feel better about herself. In the dispatcher's view, the interrogator wanted her to send help “so humanity could be reassured about itself, so humanity need not doubt its humanity, and so she would not have to fear what she’d become, that is to say, a woman like me, like the one I’ve become.”

The narrator also wonders whether there is any point to her job: “Why save one, ten, twenty; it’s all the same, since you can’t save them all. There is always one left. … And the one that you save will perish tomorrow or the day after, here or elsewhere. So why bother?” She is still in denial but is clearly haunted by thoughts (perhaps ghosts) of the dead migrants. “The night is full of voices calling, mingling with the sound of the waves which do not cradle me. All these voices like waves above the waves. Voices of men, women, cries, sobs, prayers and farewells. A great babbling in English, always the same words, the beseeching sea.”

Vincent Delecroix’s prose adds a lyrical quality to a powerful story. He illustrates how, in some people, self-justification overrides conscience and acceptance of responsibility. But the story also forces us to understand that every person who ignores the plight of migrants seeking refuge also shares responsibility for their fate. Small Boat is a short but intense examination of how the absence of compassion destroys lives, including the lives of those who are condemned to live with the guilt they try to suppress.

RECOMMENDED