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$13.95
ISBN-13: 9781616200220
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 6/2011
 Something for Nothing, by David Anthony .

[We’re indebted to Adam Woog for bringing this wonderful book, from a publisher which rarely does crime fiction, to our attention in his recent column in The Seattle Times.]

Martin Anderson is a 44-year-old adolescent. He’s married to a good woman, father of two appealing kids, and owner of a business which buys and sells used private airplanes, and he’s a really nice guy, but he has never grown up. It’s 1974, and times are not as tough as in 2011, but surprisingly similar: oil is scarce and the economy is in the doldrums. Anderson Aircrafts is what we’d call today “under water.” Martin’s biggest problem, though, is that he’s an habitual liar – lying to himself as well as to everyone else. His idea of an explanation is to come up with a “cover story.” And as a liar himself, he suspects everyone else of lying, which complicates his life significantly.

When he’s offered big money to make a few quick flights to Mexico to pick up illicit drugs, what’s a guy who has never learned to make responsible decisions going to do? How else can he hold onto his upscale home, Cadillac, private boat, race horse (!), etc.?

In 300+ pages we get pretty deeply inside this guy’s head, and I think most readers will, like me, recognize a little residual adolescence in ourselves, and somehow hope for a happy ending here. We come to understand why Publishers Weekly calls Martin Anderson “the most lovable drug smuggler in ages.”

A brilliant debut novel.


$26.00
ISBN-13: 9780307408846
Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days
Published: Crown, 5/2011

This is the true story of an American family who went to live in Berlin in 1933.

Seattle author Larson (Erik, not Stieg) is expert at writing non-fiction works which read like novels. And several of them have involved killers. Thunderstruck  is about the convergence of wireless inventor Marconi’s efforts to establish transoceanic messaging, with the infamous wife-killer Dr. Crippen’s fleeing to America pursued by Scotland Yard. (The Crippen story is also told, without Marconi, in the wonderful novel, The False Inspector Dew, by Peter Lovesey Soho tp, $13.00.) My favorite earlier book by Erik Larson is Isaac’s Storm, about a killer hurricane in Galveston in 1900, which killed 10,000 people and effectively killed Galveston’s future as a major city. Larson’s best known book, until now anyway, is The Devil in the White City (Vintage tp, $15.95) which tells of the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893, and steps up from wife-killer or killer storm to serial killer, with “Dr. H. H. Holmes” lurking murderously around the Fair grounds.

Now Larson has moved up from serial killer to mass murderer, with a naïve but principled American college professor trying to practice diplomacy on Adolph Hitler.

William E. Dodd was a professor at the University of Chicago who was trying to write a heavy-weight book, and finding that his academic schedule wasn’t leaving him enough time to write. Thinking that the U.S. Foreign Service would offer more free time, he applied for a position there. He got more than he bargained for when FDR appointed him U.S. Ambassador to Germany. But he took the job, and moved to Berlin with his wife and grown son and daughter.  On arrival there he quickly learned that conditions under the Nazi regime were much harsher than anyone in the U.S. or elsewhere outside Germany had realized. Treatment of Jews was already inhumane, and criticism of the government by any German citizen was punishable by confiscation of property, imprisonment, or death.

Ambassador Dodd was in an impossible position. As a diplomat, he was charged with creating amicable relations between America and Germany, even to press for payment of war debts owed to us from WWI.  At the same time, as a principled man he felt compelled to increase American and world awareness of the Nazi excesses. In this he met significant resistance: within the Foreign Service, a natural rivalry between career officers and an outside appointee; in America, from strong feelings of isolationism and even anti-Semitism.

This book did much to further my understanding of the forces that enabled the Nazis to solidify their position of power. And as true-crime international intrigue, it’s a fascinating read


$25.99
ISBN-13: 9780857682871
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Hard Case Crime, 9/2011

I have just one thing to say about Lawrence Block’s Getting Off.


WOW.


$24.95
ISBN-13: 9781590589731
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Poisoned Pen Press, 12/2011
Seattle author Larry Karp first caught my attention about 20 years ago with a light, entertaining series of mysteries involving music boxes. Then he kept me reading with a not-quite-so-light but still entertaining trilogy involving ragtime music and especially composer Scott Joplin. Now he returns to his erstwhile day job as an obstetrician with A Perilous Conception (in TP or HB).

It’s 1976 when Joyce and James Kennett, a couple in Emerald, WA (where could that be?) struggling with infertility, consult OB Dr. Colin Sanford, who, as it happens, is eager to perform the world’s first in vitro fertilization. With the aid of PhD embryologist Giselle Hearn, Dr. Sanford succeeds, and Joyce Kennett delivers a healthy baby. But then James Kennett pulls a gun and fatally shoots Dr. Hearn and himself! What’s going on here?

Well, in addition to IVF and murder, there’s blackmail, a disappearing lab supervisor, illicit affairs, and ultimately a whodunit plot worthy of Agatha Christie, all told with Larry Karp’s characteristic dry wit. In the process we meet Emerald Police Detective Bernie Baumgartner, who deserves several more books. But is this the first book in a Detective Baumgartner series?

That’s a mystery for Larry Karp to solve.