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.

Entries in Recent Release (452)

Friday
Nov182011

The Secret in Their Eyes by Eduardo Sacheri

First published in Spanish in 2005; published in translation by Other Press on October 18, 2011

I wouldn't call The Secret in Their Eyes a thriller (although it develops some thrills toward the end), or even a mystery. The novel tells a very personal story of one man's role in the Argentinean system of criminal justice, his mild obsession with an unsolved murder, and the difficulty of pursuing the truth in a corrupt political regime.

Facing a lonely, dreaded retirement from his life as a deputy court clerk, Benjamín Chaparro decides to fill his time writing the story of Ricardo Morales. When they first meet (in the 1960s), Chaparro is overseeing the investigation of Morales' pregnant wife's rape and murder. The two men form a bond. Morales is, like Chaparro, a morose man who prefers rainy days to sunshine, who looks at photographs and feels a sense of loss for the "vanished paradise" they depict. Yet Chaparro envies Morales because Morales has experienced true love, while Morales drifts through relationships, marrying and divorcing, never content.

Chaparro harbors a secret love for a former co-worker named Irene, a judge who, thanks to his retirement, is no longer part of his daily life. Writing of unrequited love is, I think, a South American specialty, and Eduardo Sacheri does it masterfully. I could feel Chaparro's fears and regrets, his heartache -- "the ache of stifled feelings" -- in my bones. As Chaparro compares his life to Morales', the contrast is between a love kept hidden and a love lost: each tragic in its own way. Neither man knows how to live the rest of his life: Morales without the wife he loved, Chaparro without the joy of seeing Irene every day.

The murder investigation, such as it is, drags on for years, spurred forward by Chaparro's intuition and later by a fortuitous confrontation between a railroad conductor and the murder suspect. A third of the novel remains when the crime is solved, another sign that the investigation is secondary to the real story; a happy ending would not be true to the lives of either Chaparro or Morales. The novel then raises an intriguing moral question -- how much self-sacrifice should be expected from Chaparro to save Morales from harm? -- and concludes with a satisfying (if not entirely unexpected) twist as the secret of Morales' life is revealed.

I like the way the story is structured, the story within a story: Chaparro ponders the book he's writing (what scenes should he include or omit, whether the book is about Morales or himself), a story that Sacheri wraps around the novel that Chaparro actually writes; the reader benefits from reading both Chaparro's novel and the story of its creation. Sacheri indulges in a bit of political commentary (he has little good to say about Organía's military regime) but the novel isn't a polemic. It is instead a subtle, nuanced, absorbing look at the intersection of two lives and the difficult choices made by two decent men, with the addition of a beautifully unresolved romance (a story carefully designed to continue in the reader's mind after the novel ends).

RECOMMENDED

Tuesday
Nov152011

Cain by José Saramago

First published in Portuguese in 2009; published in translation by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt on October 4, 2011

There is little need to summarize the plot of Cain because anyone with a passing knowledge of Genesis is familiar with much of it, although perhaps not with José Saramago's twisted (and infinitely more entertaining) version. Saramago imparts all sorts of useful information omitted from the original, including why people have navels and how the battle of the sexes began. We do learn more about Cain's life after the death of Abel than Genesis explains, including Cain's affair with Lilith, his intervention in Abraham's sacrifice of Isaac, and his visits to Sodom, Jericho, and the Tower of Babel. Cain becomes a sort of time traveler, bouncing from bible story to bible story and witnessing the obvious truth that god "can't bear to see anyone happy" before concluding that "The history of mankind is the history of misunderstandings with god, for he doesn't understand us, and we don't understand him."

Some readers might be put off by Saramago's unconventional writing style -- the absence of normal punctuation and capitalization -- but those who stick with it will find it easy to adapt. It's a quirky style that befits a quirky book. Cain's various conversations are nothing short of hilarious; punctuation would only get in the way of the rapid-fire exchanges.

Readers who don't appreciate irreverent humor might want to avoid this book. This is literature, not a guidebook to -- or a serious retelling of -- Genesis. Saramago's humor derives from the wicked application of common sense to familiar biblical lore, a technique that had me laughing from the first page, but one that might offend the more devout. In this version of biblical history, characters feel entitled to talk back to a capricious creator who deserves a good scolding. The god of this novel sometimes agrees that he's fallible, but doesn't want others to know of his faults. God knows he can't stop the sun but wants Joshua to pretend he did; angels show up late (a mechanical defect in the left wing throws one off course); the easiest way to deal with Satan is to throw him an occasional victim.

For those readers who have difficulty reconciling the notion of a wise and caring god with the petulant deity who turns a woman into a pillar of salt because she's curious, who tests loyalty by asking people to slay their children, who rains fire down upon the innocent, encourages the mass destruction of cities, and floods the earth because he's disappointed with his creation, this is the novel for you. Saramago's Cain is wholly unimpressed with the creator's sense of justice. He argues that the lord's ways aren't just mysterious but abhorrent. Viewed from the standpoint of a mere mortal, his argument makes good sense -- although Cain's moral authority to complain about god's murderous ways is dubious, at best. In the end, both the creator and the creation are deeply flawed.  Those flaws make for a wonderfully funny novel.

RECOMMENDED

Saturday
Nov122011

Mule by Tony D'Souza

Published by Mariner Books on September 27, 2011

James Lasseter and his soon-to-be-wife Kate are living the good life in Austin when Kate, newly pregnant, is fired from her job. The economy has gone south and James, a freelance writer, can't get an assignment. James and Kate move to a mountain in Northern California where they can stretch their meager savings while deciding what to do next. As Kate shares a joint with a friend from Austin who raves about its quality, James soon realizes that he can earn serious cash by selling NoCal weed in Austin and elsewhere. Thus begins James' career as a mule: a runner of drugs between California and Florida.

For a bright guy, James does some remarkably stupid things, like continually booking one way flights from Florida to California and renting cars for the return trip. He might as well have stamped DRUG MULE on his forehead. He also does a deal that screams "trouble." I suppose the moral is "Greed will make you do stupid things." True enough, but that tale has been told many times before, often more convincingly than D'Souza tells it here.

Had this been a true story, a memoir of a life of crime, I would probably have found it more interesting. As a work of fiction, it lacks pizzazz. Tony D'Souza's writing style is bland and part one of the story he tells is surprisingly dull. James speaks of feeling both nervous and elated while driving drugs cross-country, but D'Souza failed to make me feel James' emotions (to his credit, that changed in part two). When a fairly predictable moment of drama finally arrives (about midway through the novel, toward the end of part one), the dramatic boost it gives to the story is too little, too late. The dramatic tension is stronger in part two as James' drug business begins to unravel, but never reaches a state I would describe as gripping.

On the other hand, D'Souza does some things well. He writes movingly of the toll an economic downturn takes on the lives of the working poor. He captures the marital conflict that results when one spouse wants the other to be home more but doesn't want to give up the income he's earning -- although that aspect of the novel becomes tedious in its frequent repetition. He persuasively portrays the perniciousness of a moneyed lifestyle: it's easy to say "I'll just do this once or twice," not so easy to give up the benefits of steady cash flow. Of course, all that has been done in other novels, often in more scintillating prose.

Although I liked the ending -- it isn't credible, but it's satisfying -- this is ultimately a novel about whiny characters who make a soap opera of their lives while playing at the game of drug dealing. The serious dealers are caricatures, Hollywood versions of what heavy-handed dealers are supposed to be like. The novel isn't awful by any means, but it rarely rises above ordinary.

RECOMMENDED WITH RESERVATIONS

Wednesday
Nov092011

He Died With His Eyes Open by Derek Raymond

First published in the UK in 1984; published by Melville House on October 4, 2011

A nameless police sergeant is assigned to investigate the violent death of Charlie Staniland, a 51 year old nobody. The sergeant is a dedicated cop stuck in Unexplained Deaths, a division that specializes in crimes committed against London's downtrodden and, for that reason, lacks the respect given to the divisions that specialize is more newsworthy crimes. The sergeant's blunt nature likely assures he will never be promoted; in the belief that "murder outranks rank," he regularly mouths off to uncooperative superiors who take no interest in the unglamorous cases he pursues.

As the sergeant listens to tapes Staniland recorded before his death, he discovers that Staniland became involved (rather impotently) with a woman named Barbara Spark after his wife left him. The sergeant talks with Staniland's brother, his ex-wife, his stepson, his former employers and co-workers, a bank manager, a bartender, Barbara's ex-husband -- all colorful, sharply rendered characters -- as he reconstructs the dead man's life. When he finally meets Barbara, his investigative approach is unconventional -- one might even say unprofessional. The plot eventually takes a turn toward the bizarre as we learn more about one of the characters than we might comfortably want to know.

This is a dark novel. Some of the characters want to be dead; some might as well be. Life has beaten them down. Crime is only a secondary source of darkness in the novel; life itself is the real culprit, life and its treachery, its false hopes, its broken promises. The sergeant is far from being a source of light in the surrounding gloom, although he has a degree of compassion that the other characters tend to lack. He is an uncommonly philosophical law enforcement officer, one who wonders "what the value of truth really was, if getting at it entailed so many lies." Although he doesn't stand out in the world of noir crime fighters, he's a solid entry.

Derek Raymond's prose style is efficient, biting, bleak, as hard and chilly as granite -- in other words, well-suited to the story he tells. Originally published in 1984, this is the first of Raymond's "Factory" novels and the first I've read. It won't be the last.

RECOMMENDED

Sunday
Nov062011

The Prague Cemetery by Umberto Eco

First published in Italy in 2010; published in English by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt on November 8, 2011

The story that underlies The Prague Cemetery is told, for the most part, by Simone Simonini, a forger who thrives on hatred -- of Jews and Germans, Jesuits and Masons, the French and Italians (although he is half French and half Italian), artists and women, his parents and God -- a man whose motto is “I hate therefore I am.”  In an introductory note, Umberto Eco tells us he tried to create “the most cynical and disagreeable” character in the history of literature.  He may not have succeeded, but he put forth a worthy effort.  Recognizing that it is possible to laugh at (rather than with) hateful people frees the reader to enjoy (or at least tolerate) the absurdly bigoted ramblings of Eco’s scornful rogue.

As the novel opens, Simonini is having an identity crisis -- or an identities crisis, given his suspicion that he is not only Simonini but Abbé Dalla Piccola, about whom he knows nothing.  We soon learn that Dalla Piccola is having the same crisis, wondering whether he is, in fact, Simonini -- except that Piccola seems to know more about Simonini than he knows about himself.  Simonini and Piccola begin leaving messages for each other.  This clever device allows Eco to explore Simonini’s (mostly repulsive) moral character from both an objective and a subjective perspective.  The mystery of the apparent dual identity binds the unfolding story.

Although set in the late nineteenth century, Simonini’s reconstructed memories of his own past begin in mid-century Piedmont and offer an opinionated view of European history in the century’s last half.  Simonini is often employed as a spy for the police and various governmental entities in Italy, France, Russia, and Prussia.  When the truth (in which nobody is particularly interested) is either difficult to find or inconveniently innocent, Simonini concocts stories and documents to satisfy his clients.  At one point, Simonini borrows and embellishes the story of a conspiratorial gathering in an abandoned Jewish cemetery in Prague, a meeting allegedly designed to further a long-standing, sinister plan to control the world.  Standing always in the middle, with loyalty to none and hatred of all, Simonini pits nation against nation, Freemason against Jesuit, and everyone against the Jews, all the while revising his story of the Prague cemetery as new potential buyers for his conspiracy theory come along.

Eco provides a bit of everything to entertain his reader in this grand novel:  drama, intrigue, humor, action, philosophy, brilliant prose, strong characters, and a lengthy history lesson that culminates with the Dreyfus affair.  Eco advises that all but a few minor characters (other than Simonini) really existed, and that the major historical events described in the text actually happened.  Knowing that, I read the novel with Google close at hand.  Learning more about the historical references probably doubled my reading time but the added context made the story more comprehensible.  Serious fiction often demands something from the reader; in this case, the serious reader’s effort will be repaid.

Many of the themes in The Prague Cemetery resonate in modern times, including the attempts governments make to instill fear of the “other” in their citizenry as a means of gaining power and control, an exercise that supposedly justifies “harsh measures” to control alleged criminals.  There is little difference between the detentions without trial in nineteenth century French prisons that Eco describes and those that occurred at Guantanamo in our recent past.  The recycling of lies and the ease with which people are fooled when told what they want to hear -- a recurring theme in Eco’s novel -- is also a truth that readers might recognize in the modern world.  As Simonini frequently observes, a jaded writer can dredge up a twenty year old discredited story and pass it off as new, confident that most readers (who are likely reading what they want to believe) won’t know the difference, or won’t care.

Some readers might be offended by a rather graphic scene involving a devotee of Lucifer named Diana and the erotic role she plays in a Black Mass.  The scene is far from gratuitous -- it is, in fact, critical to the story, and beautifully written -- so I mention it only as a warning to those who might be put off by content of that nature.

Lush prose, confident storytelling, a Byzantine plot of dizzying breadth, even a series of sketches illustrating scenes in the novel -- all these elements combine to form a novel that is both serious and extraordinarily fun.

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED