Thursday, 14 November 2013

Interview: Chris F. Holm, author of The Collector series

I'm so thrilled to received today Chris F. Holm! 

I've met him at the QuebeCrime festival last year. I was too shy to go meet the authors that were there so I was hanging with another volunteer. We had so much fun that Chris came to talk to us, telling us we had too much fun not to share it with others! He merely talked about the others, telling us how incredibles they were, what a great story they had, how great writers they were and wondering why he was invited. 

I must say that I didn't know him at the time so I asked about his book. Well, he got me when he explained it was a crime fiction mixed to fantasy! I told him I'll read his book because it seemed to be my kind of reading. I'm not sure I convinced him at the time but it really was the book I wanted to read... and the first I've read after the festival. And oh boy! what a book! Dead Harvest is the first one in the Collector trilogy and one of the best books I've read last year! His two other books The Wrong Goodbye and The Big Reap were as good and no wonder they're still in the top 5 of the most seen books on my blog!

Chris is one of the most humble and kind author I know and also one hell of author and he's accepted to answer my questions that I'll let you read now! 

Will you tell us a little bit about yourself? 

Uh, sure. I’m tall, but not too. Skinny, but not as skinny as I used to be. I’m fond of small talk and small kindnesses. Of pie and punk rock and tattoos. I’m a damn good parallel parker, and a horrible – if enthusiastic – singer. Try though I might, I can’t pull off hats. But every now and again, I can write a half-decent sentence. 

So Chris, knowing that Sam was born from a doze-off... any other "dime-a-dozen" lastly? 

It’s strange – I don’t often take inspiration from dreams. Mine are usually so nonsensical, or filled with such lame horror-movie clichés – they’re of limited narrative utility. The opening scene of DEAD HARVEST was, until recently, my sole exception. But a month or two ago, I had this vivid nightmare that caused me to leap out of bed and jot down everything I could remember, and I’ve been noodling at the idea ever since. It looks like it may turn into a sprawling post-apocalyptic horror novel in the vein of THE PASSAGE or THE STAND. But I’ve got another novel or two I need to write first. 

How do you manage to combine work and writing (and tweeting and blogging and running...) 

My friend Julia Spencer-Fleming likes to joke that writing, for her, is a hobby that’s gotten out of hand. I feel much the same way. When I started out, I wrote a couple hours here and there on weekends. Now I work a few hours every day at least – and way more than that on weekends. That means I’ve had to scale back on lots of other things – cooking, cleaning, movies, television, guitar, socializing, reading – to make room. I don’t mind; I love my writing life – and since my wife is a book reviewer, we’re often working side-by-side, which is nice. Truth be told, the only thing I really miss is having more time to read. 

Which subjects are more difficult to write about? 

My books contain their share of violence, but that violence is particularly difficult when it touches the lives of innocents. In fact, one death in DEAD HARVEST – those who’ve read it will know which – affected me so deeply, I wasn’t sure I could keep it in the book. I was worried I’d crossed a line. My wife insisted I hadn’t. For what it’s worth, I must not have, since I didn’t get a single letter about it. And more recently, one of the storylines in THE BIG REAP required me to put myself into the head – albeit briefly – of one of the most despicable figures in human history. I thought I knew what I was in for, writing that bit – it’s not as if I painted this person favorably, after all – but it was far more disturbing than I imagined it would be. Oh, and sex. Any writer who tells you sex scenes are easy is either lying or delusional. 

Which events will you attend in the next months? 

As I write this, I’ve just returned from a weekend at Murder and Mayhem in Muskego, which was my last book event of the year. Now comes the long, quiet stretch of winter. But in March, I’m headed to Left Coast Crime in Monterey, California. I suspect it’ll be a nice break from the snow. 

What are you reading now? 

As I mentioned, my wife, Katrina, is a mystery reviewer. As such we wind up with lots of ARCs in our house. Rarely to I ever sneak a peek at one before release – even when she’s got a copy of something I’m dying to read – because it feels like cheating. I’m a big believer in paying for books to support the authors I love. But recently, Kat came into possession of the new Hilary Davidson novel, BLOOD ALWAYS TELLS, and I couldn’t resist. So far, it’s fantastic. When it comes out, I’ll buy a few copies to make up for my transgression. 

What do you look for in a good book? Is there anything that will make you put a book down, unfinished (or to throw it with great force as advocated by Mark Billingham lately)? 

What I look for most is voice. If I fall in love with a novel, it’s almost always on account of voice. I want it to grab me. To transport me. To knock me out of my critical, writerly mode of reading and make me believe. If it does, I’ll keep reading, regardless of the subject matter. If it doesn’t, I’ll likely put it down. My threshold for doing so is pretty low, actually – life’s too short to read a book I’m not enjoying. 

If you could experience one book again for the first time, which one would it be? 

What a wonderful – and difficult – question! It’s tough to narrow it down to one, but if I had to choose, I’d say THE THIN MAN by Dashiell Hammett. It’s a wonderful novel full of sparkling characters rendered in clean, crisp prose, but it also packs a wallop of a twist that still holds up some eighty years later. I’d love a second chance to be duped by a true master. 

What's next for you? 

I’ve recently put the finishing touches on a creepy little tale about the murder of a poor high school student in small-town Maine. It’s equal parts crime novel and ghost story, and I’m really proud of it. I’d tell you the title, but I’m not yet sure it’s gonna stick – my agent and I have changed it a couple times already. With luck, you’ll hear a lot more about it soon. 

Why so serious questions questions:

What would be your desert island read? 

Just one? Sheesh. I suppose I’d go with JONATHAN STRANGE & MR NORRELL by Susanna Clarke. It’s long enough to entertain for days on end, and rich enough to provide a fresh escape each time I read it. Plus, maybe reading about the chilly English weather will keep me cool. 

Your favorite villain? 

There are so many to choose from – but I confess, the books I love best don’t tend toward heroes and villains in the traditional sense. So instead, I’ll pick one each from television and movies. My favorite TV villain is Alias’ Arvin Sloane. He’s so oily, so cruel, and so smart, he provided a lovely foil for the heroic Sydney Bristow. And my favorite movie villain would have to be True Romance’s Drexl Spivey, the white pimp who thinks he’s black. He’s vicious, feral, and – thanks to a brilliant performance by Gary Oldman – unbelievably funny. You can’t take your eyes off him when he’s on-screen, for fear of what he’ll do next. 

Whose hero do you wish you had created? 

I’m going to go a little outside the box on this one, and choose Jeff Lindsay’s Dexter Morgan – in part because I think the idea of a serial killer who hunts other serial killers is lightning in a bottle, and in part because I think both the books and the television series (while entertaining) squander some of that character’s potential. Obviously, questions of morality are front and center in my own writing, and I think I could push Dexter in some interesting philosophical directions. It seems a better hypothetical use of my time than imagining myself writing subpar Philip Marlowe or Sherlock Holmes novels, don’t you think? 

Sam (who truly loves studying) or Dean (who truly loves pie) Winchester? (I always found some similarities between the Winchester and Sam and I'm not the only one as it seems...) 

I’m going to use this question to get a little something off my chest. I used to watch Supernatural, back in its monster-of-the-week days. But then I stopped – not because I didn’t like it, but because they started telling stories that had a lot in common with this book of mine called DEAD HARVEST that my agent was shopping. Fast-forward a few years to when the book finally comes out, and all the sudden folks everywhere are saying my book sounds a lot like Supernatural – or the TV show Reaper, which also debuted after I finished it. The fact is, we all got to the same place via different routes, with no knowledge of what the other writers were getting up to. Maybe now that I’ve got a few Collector novels under my belt, I can go back and catch up. 

Back to your question, I’ll say this: I’d rather hang out with Dean Winchester, but I’ve got more in common with Sam. Sadly the things we have in common don’t include good hair or impressive-for-a-bookworm musculature. 

More importantly: which kind of pie ? Oh, I love all kinds. But if I had to pick a couple favorites, I’d say pumpkin, rhubarb, blueberry, buttermilk (which is really more of a tangy lemon curd), and key lime. 

========

To follow Chris on Twitter or his blog

About The Collector series: Sam gave away his soul to save his wife. Now he's collecting others' soul. But he remembers what it's like to be human and what were his values so he follows his instinct more often than his orders, which puts him in situations where it's difficult to know what's right to do and who he can trust. 

Tuesday, 12 November 2013

The Ghost Riders of Ordebec

by Fred Vargas
Vintage Books (25 mars 2014)
ISBN-13: 978-0099569558
448 pages - 16.99 $

I discovered Fred Vargas - a French author known around the world who has received the International Prize Dagger Award in 2013 for this novel - after reading several books by Patricia Cornwell... Vargas, you like it or not (I rarely heard mixed reviews about her!) And personally the Adamsberg's wacky and offbeat style, after the scientific rigor of Scarpetta, was sheer bliss! I also appreciate that her stories are often related to fears or old stories (fear of the wolf in Seeking Whom He May Devour, of the plague in Have Mercy on Us All). This time, it's about a legend about the ghost riders...

The blurb

France's bestselling crime writer, and three-time winner of the CWA International Dagger, sends the unorthodox Commissaire Adamsberg far outside his jurisdication in a chilling tale of evil-doers who disappear after visitations from a band of ghostly horsemen. 

'People will die,' says the panic-stricken woman outside police headquarters. She has been standing in blazing sunshine for more than an hour, and refuses to speak to anyone besides Commissaire Adamsberg. Her daughter has seen a vision: ghostly horsemen who target the most nefarious characters in Normandy. Since the middle ages there have been stories of murderers, rapists, those with serious crimes on their conscience, meeting a grizzly end following a visitation by the riders. 

Soon after the young woman's vision a notoriously cruel man disappears, and the local police dismiss the matter as superstition. Although the case is far outside his jurisdiction, Adamsberg agrees to investigate the strange happenings in a village terrorised by wild rumours and ancient feuds.

What I think of it

We meet back in this novel with the brigade lead (or not too lead actually) by Adamsberg. Vargas knows how to create very credible characters despite their caricatural flaws. There's the Commandant himself, a kind of evanescent UFO in the police world but also the nerd Danglard, Veyrenc who speaks in alexandrine, Retancourt a nonstandard cop including in size or The Ball - the cat that spends his time sleeping and that is carried to his food - and all the others. Their flaws make them endearing and humans, They're not super cops, they're not cops who drag their past like some cannonballs. We can feel that Vargas likes all her characters, so that in spite of their flaws or perhaps because of their flaws, we appreciate them.

The story is also well done. Adamsberg is conducting three parallel investigations, one who drags him in Normandy in the footsteps of the Lord of Hellequin and his deadly riders that designate who will die next. The designated fall one after the other and Adamsberg finds the culprit thanks to a detail he banged into without understanding. I confess that until the end, I didn't know who was the killer, because Vargas, nonchalantly, leads us by the nose, throwing in front of us the most likely suspects and leaving in shadow the identity of the murderer until the denouement.

What I also like about this book is the atmosphere and the off-the-wall dialogues - often due to Adamsberg who speaks as he thinks... and thinks differently, leaving his colleagues - and us - in the fog but who thinks in a very personal and effective logic in the end. An extract in which Adamsberg mixes the suspect Christian Clermont in Paris and the dead guy in Normandy Mortembot :

- Blue striped costume for Christian. You see? Not brown.
- No.
- So why did I thought that Mortembot's jacket was blue?
- By mistake.
- Because he changed Danglard. Can you see the link now?
- Frankly, no.
- Because I knew, deep down, that Christian had changed. As well as Mortembot.
- And why Mortembot has changed?
- But we don't care about Mortembot! Yelled Adamsberg. One would think that you deliberately don't understand.
- Do not forget that I almost died under a train.
- It's true, briefly acknowledged Adamsberg.

In a nutshell

A fast reading, not complicated but much less simple than it seems. We let ourselves be carried away by the crazy atmosphere of the book and we end up being had by the conclusion! I give it 4/5.

My thoughts on closing the book : He's a really great guy that Adamsberg!

Thursday, 7 November 2013

The Heavens Rise

by Christopher Rice
Simon & Schuster Canada, Inc.
Kindle edition : 14.99 $
336 pages


I had that book through NetGalley in exchange for a fair review. I thought the blurb was promising and him being the son of his mother... I expected a great book, full of mystery, voodoo, bayou and such things that delight me in Anne Rice's books (I know, it's stupid, good writing is not genetic... but hey, one can hope right?)

The blurb 

It’s been a decade since the Delongpre family vanished near Bayou Rabineaux, and still no one can explain the events of that dark and sweltering night. No one except Niquette Delongpre, the survivor who ran away from the mangled stretch of guardrail on Highway 22 where the impossible occurred…and kept on running. Who left behind her best friends, Ben and Anthem, to save them from her newfound capacity for destruction…and who alone knows the source of her very bizarre—and very deadly—abilities: an isolated strip of swampland called Elysium.

An accomplished surgeon, Niquette’s father dreamed of transforming the dense acreage surrounded by murky waters into a palatial compound befitting the name his beloved wife gave to it, Elysium: “the final resting place for the heroic and virtuous.” Then, ten years ago, construction workers dug into a long-hidden well, one that snaked down into the deep, black waters of the Louisiana swamp and stirred something that had been there for centuries—a microscopic parasite that perverts the mind and corrupts the body.

Niquette is living proof that things done can’t be undone. Nothing will put her family back together again. And nothing can save her. But as Niquette, Ben, and Anthem uncover the truth of a devastating parasite that has the potential to alter the future of humankind, Niquette grasps the most chilling truths of all: someone else has been infected too. And unlike her, this man is not content to live in the shadows. He is intent to use his newfound powers for one reason only: revenge.

What I think of it

I really loved the eerie atmosphere. For that, I was not deceived: we're in Louisiana, with all its charms, its secrets, its carnival, its so peculiar atmosphere that's so easy to fell for. The beginning of the book (or more likely its 2/3) is all about the setting. There's not a lot of action, its more about a secret you'll be aware very soon but without knowing its content. We follow some characters through some events that show you there's a problem (a big one at that), that something is wrong. You understand rapidly that it's something about the bayou, you think its voodoo, then you discover it's more scientific than you thought. All in all the build-up is very well done: there's a lot of tension, you don't know which one will be hurt, you don't know what'll happen. 

About the characters. We follow different people without really becoming attached to them. The story is about Niquette and her two friends, Ben and Anthem. Something big happens to Niquette, she's changed for ever yet she's not very present in the book.  Ben and his boss are those we see more often and in a sense they can be seen as the main protagonists. Ben is the character I liked the most, probably because he's more present. Anthem seems a nice guy but we don't see a lot about him or not enough to really feel for him. The bad guy in the story, Mitchell, is so purely bad without any real reason, that it's difficult to hate him! As for Niquette, that's a pity she's not more present throughout the book, seeing that she's kind of the reason for all the violence! I wish the author had written his characters as well as his setting, it would have been terrific!

About the story, as I said, the tension is well built along the plot, it's increasing slowly but surely. You're captivated by the atmosphere, by the setting, by the secret and you let yourself go with the story, thinking hoping that the end will be astonishing. That's where I was disappointed. The end is too easy, too quick, too not credible. I can't say why cause I'll give the plot but I'm not sure I'll accept as easily that killing people to gain an ability is no sweat...

In a nutshell

Christopher Rice is a good writer and his world can be bewitching but the book lacks of credible explanations and of an end that makes sense. Those who prefer an eerie atmosphere in a book will be delighted, those who prefer a strong story might not like it. I give it a 3/5. 

Monday, 4 November 2013

R.I.P. VIII wrap up

October is just finished and with it, the R.I.P. VIII challenge.




Carl, who created the challenge tells us that : 

"R.eaders I.mbibing P.eril VIII had nearly 200 participants this year and we read and reviewed nearly 500 books, short stories and films/tv shows. I’m sure there were many more things read and viewed that were not reviewed."

My participation, albeit modest, was to read four books and I succeeded the challenge, even though I had to change one book at a time due to a writing too small to read on my Kobo mini ...

Here's what I read:
Alex by Pierre Lemaitre, a truly master in writing and suspense!

L'enfant des cimetières by Sire Cedric, truly disturbing but quite good.

Don't look back! by Karin Fossum, some very smarts dialogues, a parochial attitude faithfully transpose.

The Clearing by Dan Newman, an enchanting island, an endearing character, sprinkled with voodoo.

Without being chauvinistic, I admit that my preference was to Pierre Lemaitre whom I discovered with great pleasure. I particularly appreciated the quality of the writing, a literary style very well mixed with slang. Not to mention the story that'll chill your blood, the turnovers of contexts and feelings (you'll truly be manipulated by Pierre Lemaitre even in your feelings!) In short, a great book!

I did not take part in the TV series challenge, but I also discovered during this period Whitechapel. Excellent, well-acted, an English humor as we like it, the investigations incorporate very famous cases in England (which allows to know more of the detective story in the UK). In short, a gem that I am glad to know.

One thing is for sure, this was my first challenge (with the exception of the Goodreads challenge to read 30 books this year... okay, my first specific challenge) and I loved it. I will do it again next year, for sure!

Wednesday, 23 October 2013

Juste une ombre

by Karine Giebel
Thriller
Pocket - mai 2013
608 pages - 13.95 $

I discovered with pleasure the rising French authors in the polar world. Karine Giebel in part of them: she won several times the price of polar of Marseille and the Cognac and SNCF prices of polar. My forays into the French readings are just as best as possible as they allow me to find back my roots while diving with delight and thrill in a thriller...

4th cover

First, it's a silhouette, one evening in the street ... A face-to-face with death.
Then, it is a presence. By day: at every intersection. The night, by your bedside. Unable to understand, explain, to prove.
Soon, an obsession. Which ruins your career, separates you from your friends, your lover. Makes you crazy. And alone.
Just a shadow. That takes on your life and takes it forever.
You belong to it, it is already too late ...

What I think of it

Here is a special case: we hate as much as we are afraid for Cloe. She's so pedantic, pretentious, cruel, pushy, that initially we want to say "she has it coming" But as you learn to ignore the shell, we discover her secret, we feel compassion for her faults and we're bamboozled by her charm. Alexander also is and as we like Alexander - a broken cop with crazy eyes but a killer smile - we soon find that Cloe does not deserve this shadow. Nobody deserves that. Yet there it is but nobody sees it except Cloe. So you will find in this book some realistic and well written characters and emotions we all felt at one time or another.

As for the plot, what about it? It's powerful enough for us to strongly feel powerlessness. This is mainly a psychological thriller and it's tense, intense, nervous. You think that this is not possible, the shadow will end up making a mistake by leaving a footprint but here is the whole problem: shadows don't leave trace. And then suddenly, BAM! Giebel throws you to the ground. It's so realistic, I thought it speaks from experience. The story is so similar to news items that you can read sometimes. And news items rarely end well...

This book reads like a play, like behind closed doors. The action takes mainly place in three locations: at Alexander's flat, at Cloe's work and at Cloe's flat. As a result, a kind of intimacy is created, we go inside their home like it's ours, making the Shade even more disturbing with its intrusions. There's enough to become paranoid by reading this book! However, beware, this book is not for everyone, it's about a shadow that seeks to destroy women, there are some difficult scenes. I do not want to spoil the book, but rapes are at issue and as some people around me can not bear to read this kind of scene, I prefer to warn you fellow reader.

In a nutshell

A book you'll read in one go, a compelling with (too?) realistic tension story. Characters whose flaws are very credible. A book I highly recommend. I give it 4/5 .

My thought on closing the book: dammit, she's didn't go in for half measures!

Good to know : Her books are translated in Italian, Dutch, Russian et Spanish

Monday, 21 October 2013

The Snowman

by Jo Nesbø
Harry Hole #7
Vintage Canada (4 janvier 2011)
464 pages - 19.95 $

After reading the Leopard, I bought this book, because it's often cited as one of the best of Jo Nesbø and more importantly, I wanted to know why Harry Hole was in such a bad shape and it seemed it was due to the Snowman ...


Synopsis


The night the first snow falls a young boy wakes to find his mother gone. He walks through the silent house, but finds only wet footprints on the stairs. In the garden looms a solitary figure: a snowman bathed in cold moonlight, its black eyes glaring up at the bedroom windows. Round its neck is his mother's pink scarf. Inspector Harry Hole is convinced there is a link between the disappearance and a menacing letter he received some months earlier. As Harry and his team delve into unsolved case files, they discover that an alarming number of wives and mothers have gone missing over the years. When a second woman disappears Harry's suspicions are confirmed: he is a pawn in a deadly game. For the first time in his career Harry finds himself confronted with a serial killer operating on his turf, a killer who will drive him to the brink of insanity.

What I think of it

In that book Harry's professional and personal relationships mingle and meet and you get to know better the different characters, which makes us closer to the protagonists and gives us the impression of being part of the team. I met Harry Hole again with pleasure. He's in a better state than in The Leopard (which was written after The Snowman), but as I haven't read them in the order... It's in this book that I knew the extent of the horror experienced by Harry and why he's hurting so much in the future. In any case, I enjoyed discovering more about Harry 's relationship with his colleagues who regularly mock his propensity to see a serial killer behind every dog run. I made acquaintance with Rakel - and discovered their history - and Oleg who worships Harry.

Here, no action at all costs, no chases in each chapter, but tension rises gradually. We have a sense of failure and a feeling of the horror to come. Harry must investigate the murders of the past in connection with the disappearances of the present time and it takes time. Time during which the danger increases and we feel that something bad is coming but the killer seems quite too smart for Harry and, indeed, he's on the verge of not succeeding. The atmosphere is cold as can be - probably because it's about the first snow (perhaps to read it in July would not have the same impact!) - and adds to the tension and anxiety. As to discover the culprit... beware the obvious!

Harry's struggle not to drink, his efforts and the anger he feels all the time are obviously recurring in the series, but this is what makes him an endearing character (yes, cliché die hard in thrillers!). However, even if you can read the books by itself because it does not interfere with the story, there are several references in the books to what happened before. It seems to me that it's best to read them in order, especially as Harry's state of mind is linked with what he has experienced and therefore what happened in the previous books.

In a nutshell

Second book I've read by Jo Nesbø and I'm sold! He has a style of his own, where the horror of the crimes, the anxiety associated with the investigation and the atmosphere will guarantee you cold chills! One thing is certain, you will not see snowmen in the same way... 4/5 for this volume .

My thought on closing the book : Poor Harry, he really caught hell!

Thursday, 17 October 2013

The Clearing

by Dan Newman
Available October 29, 2013
ISBN: 9781909223523
Format: Large (Trade) Paperback
336 pages - $ 16.99 CAN

I received an email informing me of Exhibit A's future release of this book. I liked the summary and I wanted to discover the author. So I ask and received and ARC (and was so happy to have a real book instead of an ePub!) This book is the last in the challenge R.I.P. VIII.

Synopsis

In 1976, four boys walked into a jungle. Only three came back alive.

Haunted by terrifying childhood memories he doesn't fully understand, journalist Nate Mason returns to the Caribbean island of St. Lucia where he grew up.

Back then, as the son of a diplomat, he was part of an elite social circle. But during a weekend of whispered secrets and dares in a decaying jungle mansion staffed by the descendants of slaves, Nate’s innocence was torn apart.

The survivors of that gathering blamed what happened on a myth, an unseen terror from the bush. No one believed them. But now. almost forty years later, is the truth finally about to come out?

Within hours of arriving back on the island, Nate becomes convinced he’s being followed. He soon discovers that his search for answers could cost him his sanity as well as his life, as he realises that some childhood nightmares never go away.

Can childhood nightmares haunt you for the rest of your life? How much do you need to believe in a monster for it to become real? The Clearing is a dark and atmospheric psychological thriller, full of intrigue, terror and superstition, which examines our deepest fears of the unknown. A potent mix of the friendship and bravery of Stand By Me and the betrayals and fear of Angel Heart.

What I think of it

We follow Nate who returns several years later on the island - where he lived a dramatic story in his youth - to end a series of galleys in his life that are bound to the famous event. We follow him but at different times through flashbacks (at the time of the event when he lived in the island, at a crucial period of his recent past and nowadays). What may seem confusing actually let us understand the current events, the reason for his return to the island and to be closer to him. Because we discover the young boy, full of joy, excitement and terror, we learn to appreciate him, we want to protect him (I confess : the fact that I'm the mother of a pre-teen of the same age had a lot to play in this part !)

Facts, old and new, are discovered along the story. There's that idea that we can't understand the present without knowing the past and that premise is good. There is also a supernatural hand (it is an island!) Voodoo is never far away, odd situations are never exactly explained but are well designed to create a distressing condition for Nate who don't understand them because he's not native. Nor are we, so we very well put ourselves in his shoes, living a surreal adventure (have you ever get a chicken leg thrown in your face?). We do not understand but we feel very uncomfortable. So there is a rise of feelings of discomfort, fear and misunderstanding well conducted by the author, who knows the islands, having lived there.

There are some lengthy parts although the space does not falter. How so? It takes a lot of time for Nate to get to his goal and of course many things happen but at times I felt that the author could have not included some mishaps. Fortunately, the atmosphere of the book, how Newman tells the story and the back and forth in time are so well done that every time I began to find it long, the story bounced, the pace accelerated and I was reconciled with the book.

Nate wishes to return to the place of origin of his bad luck to solve all his problems. I admit that when I discovered why he wanted to go back I found it a bit superfluous. The fear experienced by the children is enough to explain their tell at the time and Nate's desire to return was largely explicable by his guilt associated with the event 25 years ago. The end is not as thrilling than is suggested by the story, even if the author manages to make it more enjoyable by adding a final touch of mystery.

One of the characters in the book (if you can talk about character) is the island itself. Certainly there are other people in the novel but in my opinion the island holds the upper hand with Nate. The author has described it as scary as a spot paradise. As much with a joyful atmosphere as a strange one and just as simple in relationships than full of several customs and beliefs that complicate things. We understand and share the joy of Nate who revisit some places, the longing for his childhood but also his fear. That island has two sides to its coin and it can turn very quickly!

In a nutshell

A good novel with its particular and pleasant atmosphere. A character we learn to like, an island that puts a spell on you. I give it a 3.5/5.

My thought on closing the book: what a good dive into the Culture of the islands!