Making a case for new mysteries
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For mystery readers interested in works by authors outside the
usual circle of suspects, the trail is hot with new firsts.
If award nominations are any indication, C.J. Box had one of the
most promising debuts of 2001 with “Open Season.” On center stage is
Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett, a hero unafraid to risk everything
when his moral compass flickers. Alas, Joe also is prone to “bonehead
moves” that put him and his family at risk. Finding himself in a
battle to save an endangered species, he emerges as a fully fleshed
champion in a thriller that blends ecological themes with depictions
of Wyoming’s wilderness.
A more urban setting is the backdrop for “The Jasmine Trade,”
another stunning debut and multiple award nominee from Los Angeles
Times reporter Denise Hamilton. In her alter ego as journalist sleuth
Eve Diamond, Hamilton probes the phenomenon of “parachute kids,”
upper-class Asian teens living on their own in contemporary Los
Angeles while their parents run businesses in China. Hamilton will
appear Sept. 26 at the Central Library to discuss her work and sign
copies of her book.
Rural Georgia is the milieu for a bloodbath stirred up by aptly
named Karin Slaughter in “Blindsighted.” Grisly from the get-go, her
debut novel introduces Dr. Sara Linton, doing double duty as county
coroner and local pediatrician. When she discovers college professor
Sibyl Adams drugged, raped, slashed and left for dead in the local
diner, a trail of gore leads through Sara’s secret past to a
cliff-hanging denouement.
A gruesome crime scene also launches “A Witness Above,” the first
of a new series by Andy Straka starring former NYPD Frank Pavlicek.
Now working as a private eye in Charlottesville, Va., the divorced
dad is hunting with his red-tailed hawk when he discovers a teen’s
corpse -- disturbing enough without the unearthing of his daughter’s
phone number in the dead boy’s pocket. Within days, his daughter is
in jail and Frank’s life is on the line.
When you’re ready for something really different, check out a most
original amateur private investigator in Donna Andrews’ “You’ve Got
Murder.” Pulled from cyberspace, Turing Hopper is an AIP (Artificial
Intelligence Personality, named for AI pioneer Alan Turing)
overseeing research programs at Universal Library. When programmer
Zach Malone mysteriously disappears, Turing leaves no database
unturned in an investigation that involves corporate espionage,
danger and murder.
While not as lighthearted as one might suspect, this is an
entertaining romp for computer buffs and sci-fi fans, as well as
mystery lovers on the trail of a new body of work.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach
Public Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams in
collaboration with Claudia Peterman. All titles may be reserved from
home or office computers by accessing the catalog at
www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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