John Boland is one of the finest crime writers working today. I'm going to let
the description below do the heavy lifting for his latest novel but I do want
to say that Touch of The Sun is one of the most surreal, savage and compelling
crime novels I've ever read. Edgar worthy. It is wholly original in story
and so witty and elegant and brutal by turns you just don't want to let go
of it. A masterpiece is what we have here.
Retired to a Florida trailer park,
Clete hasn't wondered who owns the place, or how they deal with nosy old men.
By Edgar- and Shamus-nominated author.
Product
Description
A new novel by the author of Hominid.
Less than a year after the death of his wife, Clete Dowski has sought refuge
from his loss in a quiet Florida trailer park. Heron Isle, on the Gulf coast,
isn’t where he expected to end up—riding a three-wheeler to the local pharmacy
and the community pool, killing afternoons with gossip and beer. For McClosky
& Sons, of St. Paul, Clete had bossed construction jobs in parts of the
world his new neighbors never heard of. And he hadn’t expected to end his days
among these people. His friend Ralph Hopper can’t remember the cards he holds
as he bets at poker. Al Baumgarten, a retired stockbroker, won’t stop pitching
investment schemes—"Make some dough," he tells Clete, "live it
up on the Cote d’Azur among the topless broads." Muscular Danny Martel, an
eighty-something with Frankie Avalon hair, boasts of having been a kept man at
a Manhattan whorehouse. Edith Harslip reads Edgar Cayce and imagines she
channels the deepest truths of the universe. Liz Matthews, a semi-retired
lawyer, lives a tidy life keeping secrets that Clete would like to learn. And
Clete Dowski, at sixty-seven, rides what he disparagingly recognizes as a
tricycle. An idyllic and hopeless place, Heron Isle. And it hasn’t occurred to
Clete to wonder who owns the trailer park, or where they recruit their help--or
to wonder how the owners might deal with a nosy old man. John C. Boland’s
diverse stories and novels have been nominated for Edgar, Shamus, Derringer and
International Thriller Writers awards. Publishers Weekly’s starred review of
his 2012 novel Hominid called that book a “superior science . . . thriller.”
His other Florida mysteries featuring young sleuth Meggie Trevor include Last
Island South and Out of Her Depth.
2015 Edgar Finalist in Criticism
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The rivals of Perry Mason
Two-time Edgar winner Francis M. Nevins explores
the role of law in crime novels, cinema and TV in
this mammoth scholarly work.
From early tales of frontier justice to the courtroom
dramas of Perry Mason and Atticus Finch,
we see the role of timely legal issues
in shaping mystery fiction and popular culture.
By the author of Ellery Queen: The Art of Detection
JUDGES & JUSTICE & LAWYERS & LAW
Exploring the Legal Dimensions of Fiction and Film
466 pages 6 pages photos Trade Paperback (oversized) $24.95
ISBN: 9781935797692
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2 comments:
Not the same John Boland who wrote a biography of Hitler, I assume.
No, Cap'n, Bob, different Boland. But I recall reading the other Boland's book in Hitler when I was young. Excellent.
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