Monday, August 30, 2010
[[[When Will There Be Good News?: A Novel]]]

Discription : On a hot summer day, Joanna Mason's family slowly wanders home along a country lane. A moment later, Joanna's life is changed forever...
On a dark night thirty years later, ex-detective Jackson Brodie finds himself on a train that is both crowded and late. Lost in his thoughts, he suddenly hears a shocking sound...
At the end of a long day, 16-year-old Reggie is looking forward to watching a little TV. Then a terrifying noise shatters her peaceful evening. Luckily, Reggie makes it a point to be prepared for an emergency...
These three lives come together in unexpected and deeply thrilling ways in the latest novel from Kate Atkinson, the critically acclaimed author who Harlan Coben calls "an absolute must-read."
More review coming soon.
Atkinson 's third detective novel, as a function of jaded ex-cop Jackson Brodie delivers the goods with her signature wit, keen sense of potential matches, managing to keep the reader in a rage at his feet to unravel and predict when the next missing piece would be consistent.
Unlike some novels in the crime genre, Atkinson takes time to develop her characters. This is already very much evident in the shocking prologue,which was effectively haunting because the reader already develops a relationship with characters when something pivotal happens to them. As the novel progresses, it picks up on the failed but unresolved relationship between Brodie and tough-as-nails Inspector Louise Munroe, and it also introduces the endearing 16-year old Reggie, a fiercely loyal nanny with a painful backstory. At the centre of the story, a successful GP, Dr Joanna Hunter, suddenly goes missing and ties all these separate personalities together in the most surprising way.
Perhaps my reluctance to be overgenerous in my praise for this novel has to do with the author's seeming over-ambitious attention to detail, ironically. It felt to this reader that when the climax came, Atkinson had to account for the fates and stories of too many characters, which stretched the moment a little too thin and diminished the otherwise thrilling story.
Browse ...
I find that I must agree with mystery/suspense author Harlan Coban when he says that Kate Atkinson is a "must read" author. When Will There Be Good News? is Kate Atkinson's newest mystery. The story begins with a horrible life altering crime that occurred to a family over 30 years ago. The results of this crime unfold throughout the span of the story. Kate Atkinson has the amazing ability to allow individual pieces of the lives of her characters to connect and intermix and even unravel in a mesmerizing fast paced way. I fully intended to read this book in a calm and normal manner but once the story began to unfold...I literally attacked the book and could not resume normal activities until I arrived at the last page. I also have to admit the last 50 pages were read nearly breathlessly...I could not have stopped reading if I had wanted to. I literally did not want the story to end even while I was speed reading to the finale.
There are fascinating characters in this book. They range from Jackson Brodie, a former police officer now turned private investigator whom we first met in Kate Atkinson's earlier works Case Histories and One Good Turn. There is Louise Munroe, a police investigator who shares a history with Jackson Brodie. There is Dr. Joanna Hunter, who has a very strong and compelling connection with the 30 year old crime that begins this book. There is Reggie, Dr. Hunter's "mother's help" who is firmly convinced in a uniquely comedic way...that very bad things seem to gather around her even as she remains a light hearted, charmingly funny, sad and important character. There is Neil Hunter, Dr. Joanna Hunter's sort of mysterious underhanded husband. There is Billy, Reggie's brother. Billy just happens to be a drug dealing small time amoralistic thug. There is Ms. McDonald, a seemingly harmless innocent and even innocuous character who is a part of Reggie's life and who also is one of the reasons for a huge plot twist in the story. There are also characters within this story who are key players without us even meeting them...Tessa, Jackson Brodie's wife, and Marlee his daughter and Andrew Decker who has an immense connection to the original crime and the novel's breathtaking beginning. Even Scout and Sadie, the dogs in the story, are essential to the way Kate Atkinson unfolds each character and relationship.
I can only state again that this book is deep with complex character relationships and yet it is very readable. It is not the kind of complexity wherein you must go back and reread and reread again. The characters and their unfolding relationships to each other become a part of you. You will yearn for everyone to end their lives happy and unscarred even as quite horrible actions and events unfold all over Edinborough. Kate Atkinson's newest book is not a quiet ride...it is a roller coaster of surprises and thrills and chills that will leave you feeling a bit breathless as you read its final chapter.
I really enjoyed this book, staying up until 1:00 am reading it. There is a mystery entwined in the story - what happened to Dr. Hunter? But it's really about the characters and relationships. The four main characters are well defined and interesting. One of them, Reggie, is a 16-year-old orphan who has the determination to make it even though everything seems to be against her. This sentence sums up her current state of affairs, "Reggie got off the bus and turned the corner of the street to find that the all-too-familiar calling cards of catastrophe were waiting for her - three fire engines, an ambulance, two police cars, some kind of incident van, and a knot of bystanders - all muddled up in the street outside her flat. Reggie's heart sank, it seemed inevitable that they would be there for her." Flashes of wit and humor brighten the story and Atkinson's descriptive writing will make her characters linger in your mind.
Buy Here (for discount) When Will There Be Good News?: A Novel
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2010
(217)
-
▼
August
(53)
- When Will There Be Good News?: A Novel
- Footballers playing under the influence
- The autumn hot list 2010
- Mattea Kathy Good News Christmas (Piano/Vocal/Guit...
- Inkadinkado Clear Stamps 4-Inch by 8-Inch Sheet, G...
- Scout Lil' Slim Laptop Sleeve for 15-Inch Laptops ...
- Will Nick Clegg cherish the probation service? | V...
- New York Yankees 2009 MLB League Championship Lock...
- 10 new revelations about Labour
- Good News
- New social housing may be fire risk
- Friday quiz: the eminent historians | Michael Tomasky
- Star Wars Episode IV - A New Hope (1977 & 2004 Ver...
- Tories out in force for Gay Pride
- Gangs of New York (Two-Disc Collector's Edition)
- PM to discuss Megrahi release in US
- Good Evening New York City: Deluxe Edition (2 CD &...
- US-backed Iraqis defect to al-Qaida
- Headteacher Charlie Taylor's unconventional approa...
- GCSE results 2010 โ€“ live blog
- 10:10 โ€“ the story so far
- Mental disability, state power and the capacity to...
- New Schools Network lacks transparency
- Stop the blogging ambassadors | Oliver Miles
- What are all these American high school students d...
- Cameron's reality check for the nation is a risky ...
- A working life: The probation officer
- Sion Jenkins: Life after acquittal
- I wet the bed until I was 16
- A-level results blog
- Comic superhero Echo fights stereotypes of deaf pe...
- Good News [VHS
- New York Yankees Authentic On Field Game 59FIFTY C...
- Young patients turn to blogs to make cancer public
- Public blessing of cuts will dissolve when reality...
- A-level students advised to take gap year
- Graduate tutors help former offenders to escape th...
- Arsenal step back and offer fans a voice
- A world without antibiotics?
- Jonathan Freedland gives his verdict
- Don't let Georgia down, Cameron | Denis MacShane
- Sheriff Arpaio's high stakes in Arizona | Sasha Ab...
- Who wants to live for ever?
- Scout Doggie Bag Insulated Lunch Tote, Good News
- Saturday clockwatch - live!
- My only sister has cancer so I'm fighting it too
- England v Pakistan, day two
- Why do we so wilfully cover up the failure of the ...
- India's surrogate mothers face new rules to restri...
- Sue Wassef: My son is in an Egyptian jail for drug...
- Gerber Good Start 2 Soy PLUS, Powder, Case Pack, S...
- What to expect from the coming season
- Will the real Mama Grizzlies please rise up? | Bet...
-
▼
August
(53)
0 comments:
Post a Comment