Monday, January 29, 2018

Chapter Ninety-one

Though the Holiday Season was busy, I was able to attend a Book Sale in Metuchen just before Christmas. I got there early and pretty much had the freedom to wander around and pick up what I wanted. I spent $12 and had to borrow a bag to carry them to the car. So many books, so many genres. Here are the one's I read this month.

Miscellaneous

Confederates
- Thomas Keneally ($.50/$3.50, copyright 1979, 437 pages, Paperback)
I don't usually pick up historical fiction but this grabbed my attention. This is not your typical Civil War Novel. There are no happy endings here, and no escape from the inevitability of this nightmare. The Confederate army we meet consists of ragged and hungry teachers, musicians, small farmers, orphaned children, men in their 60's, conscripts, and even the sorely ill and walking wounded, who share their stories and simple dreams as they trudge resignedly and painfully across Virginia toward their destiny at Antietam.  Keneally, from chapter to chapter, paints a compelling picture by showing us what various characters are going through while still giving us what I think is an historically accurate depiction. I enjoyed it.


The Death Of The Detective - Mark Smith ($.50/$1.95, copyright 1973. 636 pages, Paperback)
This book drew me in. On the surface the plot is very familiar: a grizzled detective named Magnuson is summoned to a friend's deathbed only to find him murdered, and he must solve the mystery and bring the killer to justice. The difference is that there is no mystery for the reader. From the opening pages we know there is an escaped mental patient looking to take vengeance on his intended victim. Magnuson, theorizes vast conspiracies and multiple suspects with imagined motives for the killing, and all the while the reader knows that he is wrong. This vast novel is full of characters, each of them has their own history that, once revealed, can change the entire way they are viewed. The character of Tanker is the best example of this but I won't get into that.  he is easy to write off as a young street punk, but in the space of a few pages his back story makes him into a tragic figure. I enjoyed it.

Series

The Insidious Doctor Fu Manchu - Sax Rohmer ($.25/$.40, copyright 1913, 191 pages, Paperback)
I'm a big fan of Pulp Fiction and have a collection of Doc Savage and the Shadow. I was lucky enough to pick up several volumes of Sax Rohmer's Fu Manchu series at the book sale. This is the first and introduces the main characters - Nayland Smith and his good friend Dr. Petrie . Smith brings Petrie into an adventure revolving  around the figure of a mysterious Chinese doctor named Fu-Manchu, the evil genius at the center of a plot to subjugate the white races to oriental domination. As the plot unfolds these two  Englishmen, encounter many of Dr. Fu-Manchu's terrifying agents, including numerous representatives of a mysterious Asiatic strangler cult. I really enjoyed this.

I still have quite a few books left over so I'm ready for February.

Talk to you then.

Keep reading.