Monday, July 09, 2007

Great Reviews for Great Authors

I decided to push back the conclusion of the "Put Your Best Trait Forward" contest until tomorrow, instead to focus on two stellar, starred reviews in this week's Publisher's Weekly for September crime novels that will soon be wreaking havoc on bookstores everywhere:

The Reincarnationist, M.J. Rose. Mira
Best known as an author of erotic thrillers, Rose (Lip Service) delves into religious myth and past-life discovery in her well-paced ninth novel. In present-day Rome, a terrorist bomb explosion triggers flashbacks of pre-Christian Italy in photographer Josh Ryder. Josh experiences the memories as Julius, a pagan priest defending the sacrosanct monuments of his gods and the life of his vestal virgin lover against the emperor-mandated onslaught of Christianity in A.D. 391. Six months later, Josh has teamed with the Phoenix Foundation, an institute specializing in past-life memories in children, to explore a newly excavated tomb that may contain pagan memory stones that incite past-life regressions and will, by proving the existence of reincarnation, challenge the church. The stakes rise after it becomes clear that dangerous outside forces also want the stones. In a series of memory lurches, the narratives of Josh and Julius slowly wind together to reveal a Da Vinci Code–esque tale of intrigue that’s more believably plotted and better meets its ambitions than Dan Brown’s ubiquitous book. (Sept.)

When One Man Dies, Dave White. Three Rivers.
Derringer Award–winner White’s engrossing, evocative debut novel will grab most readers from its opening sentences: “I’ve killed three men in my life. One the police know about, two that I’ve kept to myself.” New Jersey ex-cop Jackson Donne is about to use profits from his PI business to fund a bachelor’s degree when his closest friend, Korean War vet Gerry Figuroa, is killed in a hit-and-run. Reluctantly investigating the accident, Donne finds evidence that Figuroa may have been supplementing his actor’s income by manufacturing crystal meth, and soon suspicious ties appear to an apparently unrelated adultery and divorce case. White manages to make improbable plot twists seem plausible, and his choice to alternate Donne’s slightly unhinged first-person narration with the third-person perspective of New Brunswick Police Det. Bill Martin, Donne’s despicably corrupt former partner and nemesis, works surprisingly well. Fans of hard-hitting, uncompromising private investigators will hope that Donne ditches his college dreams and continues to pound the pavement. (Sept.)

Congrats Dave and M.J.!

1 Comments:

Blogger Dave White said...

Thanks, man. You played a part in this too!

8:53 AM  

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