Monday, July 26, 2010

"Evil deeds do not make an evil person. Otherwise we would all be evil. If evil people cannot be defined by the illegality of their deeds or the magnitude of their sins, then how are we to define them? The answer is by the consistency of their sins. While usually subtle, their destructiveness is remarkably consistent. This is because those who have "crossed over the line" are characterized by their absolute refusal to tolerate the sense of their own sinfulness."

— M. Scott Peck, People of the Lie

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Confessions of a Dangerous Mind by Chuck Barris


Confessions of a Dangerous Mind
An Unauthorized Autobiography
by Chuck Barris

Chuck Barris minces no bones about portraying himself in the worst light. And maybe that is part of the joke, too. Serving as a hit man for the CIA as well as producer/creator of some of TV’s all time funniest game shows, including his hosting the infamous Gong Show, one doesn’t worry if this is true. It’s well written, entertaining, and down right fun. One can see him as the spy as he struggles against the TV Exes who’s jobs are, it seems, to undermine what makes each show successful. In the end, we have him coming out of retirement to slay the killer of his best friend as The Gong shows burns in its own wreckage and he finally marries Penny Pacino.

I’ll give it 3.5 star out of 5.

I will certainly be reading the sequel, Bad Grass Never Dies.

Finished reading: 07/19/10 (Monday)
Review written: 07/24/10

Thursday, July 15, 2010

The Second Confession (A Nero Wolfe Mystery Novel) by Rex Stout


The Second Confession (A Nero Wolfe Mystery Novel)
by Rex Stout

A steady mystery, a good book, but not as promising as Phillip Routh had suggested by his reading of other Nero Wolfes mysteries. Naturally, having seen the A & E mini-series, I imagined Maury Chaykin as Wolfe and Timothy Hutton as the milk drinking Archie Goodwin. The ensemble cast of the TV show also made regular appearances in my imagination. I was bothered by the preoccupation in the hunt for Communists. Of course, this was written in 1949, the year China fell to Mao and the Soviet Union was testing nuclear bombs as the Cold War grew into a monster. But I thought more of Stout’s talents than having him become a propagandist. I also content that as a youth in Eastern Europe, a much thinner Nero Wolfe had fought the communists, causing an obvious prejudice in the Big Man. I did enjoy this tale being one of the few times Wolfe left the comforts of his Brownstone home and was forced to prolong that by a couple days due to an untimely murder as he and Goodwin attempted to do their client’s bidding and discover if indeed the boyfriend of the client’s youngest daughter was a Commie as a mysterious note had declared.

Phillip had also come across a trend: suicides. There were none in this one.

If one was to appraise this in a five star system of rating, I would give it 3.5.


Book finished: June 18, 2010

Review Written: July 15, 2010

Faceless Killers by Henning Mankell

Faceless Killers by Henning Mankell


Henning Mankell's (Swede crime fiction writer) excellent first Kurt Wallander Mystery is called Faceless Killers & is quite excellent in all facets.

It was more like well written literature than murders and mayhem. I know this will not be my last Mankell. Maybe a routine is brewing & I will read all of them. It was practically poetic in its attention to details while also it served up a dose of believable gritty realism as the main character dealt with a malingering divorce, a vagabond, once suicidal daughter, a half crazed father, who was also a famous oil painter, with fits of dementia, and his general health in decline as he confronted a bevy of strange, often disturbing, murders. In this novel, an elderly couple has been tortured to death in their own isolated farmhouse & "foreigners" were to blame. Foreigners seeking asylum from the Soviet Union & Eastern Bloc countries was a major issue in Sweden in 1990 when this was written. Locals were enraged with the government acceptance of so many refugees. In some locations, they actually stormed the immigrant holding centers & committed not only vandalism but violence when they could. The fear was that the wife's dying word of her killers being "foreign" would unleash dangerous repercussions country wide. Wallander, on the sly, just to himself, disliked the mostly Polish asylum seekers. There were enough twists & blind alleys in this story to keep a reader guessing up until the end. In fact, they kept my interest excitingly stimulated throughout.

The weather was a critical character as important as the crime itself. As the mystery unfolded and took various incorrect turns, the weather was there, worsening while Wallander worried about it as much as in solving the double murders themselves. This actually helped me in my own writing. At the present, I am stuck in air-conditioning with heat index days pushing past 110 degrees most everyday while I write about a cold June in Portland, Oregon.

In the end, after the pages were finished & the book went to rest in a special bookshelf in my studio, I found myself a tad bit depressed for a couple days. It seems I was missing the story. I’m not sure if I’ve ever felt that way before. To solve that dilemma, I have already purchased the next book in the series.


Book finished: July 5, 2010

Review completed: July 15, 2010