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Author

Brian Kenney

Review

The Museum Detective

by Brian Kenney September 12, 2024

A wonderfully compelling crime thriller that takes the reader deep into Pakistan in pursuit of a newly discovered mummy, known as the Persian Princess, and based on a real-life scandal that rocked the antiquities world back in 2000. Dr. Gul Delani, archaeologist and expert in ancient art, is woken in the middle of the night and hustled off to a remote part of the country to inspect a recently discovered mummy that came to light as part of a drug bust. Initially, the mummy appears to be authentic, although some of the iconography is unusual, and Gul is eager to bring the discovery back to Karachi and begin to analyze it. But quickly the mummy is claimed by different forces within the country and attracts corruption like bees to honey. The Museum Detective pulls into the broader narrative the story of Gul’s niece, a teenage girl committed to feminism who disappeared several years ago; Gul’s brother, a financial investor who succumbs to corruption; other scholars who have their own agendas; and the wonderful Mrs. Fernandes, who cares for Gul along with scores of children and teens who live on the street. All these characters and subplots come together brilliantly, creating an outcome that is nothing less than shocking. In Gul, Maha Khan Phillips has created an amateur sleuth whom readers will be all too happy to meet again and again.

September 12, 2024 0 comment
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Review

The Quiet Librarian

by Brian Kenney August 29, 2024

As a single, 47-year-old librarian in Minnesota, Hana Babic leads a quiet life. Until one day when a police detective stops by the library to inform her that her best, and really only friend, Amina, has been murdered. Hana and Amina share a history that extends back to the Bosnian War, when Hana witnessed the rape and murder of her entire family by Serbian soldiers, murders Hana swore to avenge. Joining Bosnian militia fighters, Hana transformed herself into a fierce warrior who became known as the deadly Night Mora—a legend among Serbian troops. But with a price on her head, she eventually poses too much of a risk to her fellow soldiers, and is sent to the Bosnian community in St. Paul to reinvent herself. Amina’s murder decades later does more than just reawaken Hana’s horrible memories. It convinces her that she is being hunted, and to survive, she must reawaken the Night Mora, drawing Amina’s murderer into a trap. Written in chapters that alternate between Bosnia in the 1990s and present day Minnesota, the book eventually merges into one astonishingly powerful narrative that is nothing less than genius. Like Eskens brilliant The Life We Bury, this would make an excellent choice for a book discussion, especially since many participants will know nothing about the Bosnian War. Eskens includes scenes of sexual violence and other war crimes.

August 29, 2024 0 comment
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Review

Saltwater

by Brian Kenney August 29, 2024

“Let me tell you about the very rich,” wrote F. Scott Fitzgerald. “They are different from you and me.” And Kathy Hays’s Saltwater does a spectacular job of illustrating not just how they are different, but why. Back in 1992, Sarah Lingate—a Lingate by marriage, not blood—took a tumble down the cliffs behind the family’s villa in Capri during their annual vacation. She left behind Helen, her three-year-old daughter; Richard, her madly controlling husband; and other relatives and hangers-on. Was Sarah pushed or did she jump? Pushed is what most of the island thought, but with their vast resources, the old-money Lingates were able to insure that her death was ruled an accident. Thirty years later the Lingates, like so many swallows, are making their annual pilgrimage, as though to prove to the world that they are beyond public opinion. But as one disturbing incident after another occurs—who sent them the necklace Sarah wore to her death?—cracks and fissures begin to show. Written from three points-of-view: that of Helen, who desperately wants to escape from the family; Sarah, speaking right before her death; and Lorna, a personnel assistant who has disappeared, this novel creates a world and then takes it apart, in the most shocking of ways. For readers who enjoy contemplative crime dramas.

August 29, 2024 0 comment
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Review

The Best American Mystery and Suspense 2024

by Brian Kenney August 22, 2024

Guest edited by S. A. Cosby, best known for Razorblade Tears, with series editor Steph Cha, author of the Juniper Song series, this weighty volume needs pride of place on every bedside table. For the insomniacs. For those who enjoy flipping between suspense and mystery genres. For those who like their crime fiction bite-sized. And for those who just love being terrified. Many of the stories rely on lying, creating falsehood, like Rebecca Turkewitz’s “Sarah Lane’s School for Girls,” in which a murder at a Vermont school provokes one lie after another. In Megan Abbott’s “Scarlet Ribbons,” a teen takes it upon herself to visit the Hoffman House one night, where a family was horribly murdered years ago. The results? Far worse than we could have dreamed. In Tananarive Due’s “Rumpus Room” a young mother in southern Florida does everything she can to keep her daughter, but the older gentleman she is meant to care for is so creepy she’s quickly packing. “These days the market for short stories is eroding like a thin strip of beach in a hurricane and I think that’s a shame,” writes Cosby in the introduction. He may be right, but until they completely disappear, we still have the Best American Mystery and Suspense series to enjoy.

August 22, 2024 0 comment
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Review

Coram House

by Brian Kenney August 22, 2024

An eerie, unsettling, and gothic investigation into a Vermont orphanage, inspired by the real stories from Burlington’s St. Joseph’s Orphanage. Alex Kelley is a brilliant true-crime author, although her most recent book was a failure, somewhat coinciding with her husband’s death. Desperate for work and renewal, she’s hired to ghostwrite a history of the long-closed orphanage, and Alex immediately begins to dig hard and dig deep. In no time, she’s following a lead about Tommy, a nine-year-old boy who disappeared in 1968—or was it murder? As Alex pursues Tommy, even more stories from the orphanage float to the top as the body count starts to rise. Seybolt does an excellent job of moving between past and present, having the former orphans, now seniors, tell their stories. The ending is as powerful as it is shocking. A strong work of crime fiction.

August 22, 2024 0 comment
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Review

This Is Not a Game

by Brian Kenney August 15, 2024

A classic “locked-mansion” mystery set on Michigan’s actual Mackinac Island, which in off-season has a population of a mere 500. And the only way to get on or off the island is by boat or chartered plane. Mimi—as curmudgeonly as she is humorous—is a well-established resident who’s invited to an opulent party cum auction by Jane Ireland, a super-rich neighbor (who’s dating her own son-in-law). Mimi decides to bring her granddaughter Addie, hoping to use the party as a way to mend their fractured relationship. Wouldn’t you know, a big storm blows in, effectively cutting off the partygoers from the rest of the population. Anxiety producing for sure, but when Jane is found dead—and she’s only the first victim—all hell breaks loose. Lots of the fun in this book is thanks to granddaughter Addie, a gamer who produced Murderscape, a hugely popular video game, while her fiancé claims to have done most of the work. See you in court, Mr. Wrong! Addie’s expertise helps solve many of the problems while moving the story along. Also, like a cloud hanging over the evening, is the blackmail threat that Jane sent to Mimi and that Mimi hasn’t shared with anyone. Does Jane’s murder invalidate the blackmail? Closed circles are hugely popular these days, but this title puts an unusual and playful spin on the proceedings.

August 15, 2024 0 comment
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Review

The Inheritance

by Brian Kenney August 15, 2024

Succession meets Canyon Ranch in this terrifying family reunion. The deeply complex and über-rich Agarwals family (parents, three adult kids, a daughter-in-law), with homes scattered about the map, have gathered together on an island off Scotland. The estate is owned by Myra, the oldest daughter. She’s putting the finishing touches on the conversion of the mansion into a luxe resort and wellness center, and losing buckets of money in the process. But for now it’s just the Agarwals’ playground. And there’s plenty to celebrate, including the parents’ fortieth anniversary (Shalini, the mother, is very needy) and the announcement by patriarch Raj of his long-awaited succession plan (he’s pretty arrogant). Narrated by both Myra and Zoe, the middle-class daughter-in-law who is a fake influencer, everyone’s dirty laundry gets exposed as they wait to see who gets the biggest cut of the pie. With the addition of some angry Scots—this is their land!—and the arrival of former family members, you have a recipe for murder that is certain to shock most readers. Here’s a clue: if the Agarwals motto is “family first,” where does that leave everyone else?

August 15, 2024 0 comment
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Review

The Plus One

by Brian Kenney August 15, 2024

It’s the marriage of the moguls, and a crew of celebrities and business titans have gathered at a super-posh resort in Cabos to celebrate the wedding of Radhika Singh and Raj Joshia. The week-long affair—which we see through the eyes of Shaylee “Shay” Kapoor—is just about to begin. But Shay is far from belonging to a wealthy Indian-American family; something she is reminded of regularly. She’s the “plus one,” the girlfriend of Raj’s best friend, preppy Caleb Prescott III. But on the morning that the wedding is set to begin, Daniela, the wedding coordinator, finds the bride and groom dead, gunshots to the head, drug-lord style. With knowledge that there is a killer in their midst, chaos takes over the resort and the guests start swarming to leave. But Shay stays on, as the reader begins to realize that Shay isn’t what we thought. In fact, many of the inner circle, including Caleb, have alternate personas. Shay’s still an outsider, but that’s just what might be necessary to uncover the truth. For those who enjoy closed circles, family drama, and sinister resorts.

August 15, 2024 0 comment
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Review

All the Other Mothers Hate Me

by Brian Kenney August 8, 2024

She ain’t lying! All the moms do hate her. Because Florence Grimes is quite the unrepentant good-time girl who gets all the side-eye from the moms and smirks from the dads. She has a collection of lovers that’s like a deck of cards. Her get-ups are designed to provoke, at the very least. And her last, and only, job—years ago—was in a girl band that ended in humiliation. The one ray of light is her ten-year-old son, Dylan, who is a radical environmentalist and attends a fancy London all-boys school. But when Alfie Risby, Dylan’s bully and heir to a frozen-food empire, suddenly disappears during a class trip, and Dylan is the prime suspect, Flo starts to wake up and realizes that she is the only one that can save Dylan. Rich in satire, hugely funny, with a running wink-wink to the reader, this novel is pure comedic gold.

August 8, 2024 0 comment
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Review

Death and the Old Master

by Brian Kenney August 8, 2024

Set in the rarefied atmosphere of a Cambridge college, this excellent mystery has Detective Chief Inspector Arthur St. Just interrogating a wide assortment of characters—from the college porters to art historians, from curators to super-rich American graduate students—all to discover who killed Sir Flyte Rascallian, the master of his college and a renowned art historian. Why kill Rascallian? Because, we are led to believe, he may have recently inherited a Rembrandt, unleashing no end of speculation. Excellent art mysteries are always rich in atmosphere and complex in plot, and Death and the Old Master does not disappoint, bringing the reader as far back as the Monument Men (and Women) who worked during World War II to recover and restore stolen cultural treasures. A sophisticated and effortless read that is one of Malliet’s very best.

August 8, 2024 0 comment
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firstCLUE© aspires to publish the first reviews of today's most intriguing crime fiction. Founded by Brian Kenney and Henrietta Verma, two librarians who are former editors at Library Journal and School Library Journal.

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