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Picks of the Week

  • Alafair Burke: 212: A Novel

    Alafair Burke: 212: A Novel
    If you live in New York, you'll recognize the cases 212 is based on, but the headline rip doesn't really matter: what's more important is that this is a story that is rooted in the now, where the investigation depends on web 2.0 being used for both good and ill, and where the book's heroine, Ellie Hatcher, acts in a smart, capable manner and, even when not in control of a situation, knows what she must do to re-assert it. When I say 212 is a mystery of superior professionalism, I mean that as the highest possible compliment. Burke's territory is her own, and I'm eager to see how she carves out an even larger corner that belongs to no one else. Powell’s | Borders | Amazon | B & N | Indiebound

  • Kate White: Hush: A Novel

    Kate White: Hush: A Novel
    White's novels, for me, are the perfect vacation read, even when I am up to my ears in deadlines. HUSH, however, is a departure from the first person Bailey Weggins mysteries (which owe their debts to fair-play mysteries), instead a third-person femjep spiraling out from one woman's impulsive sexual decision. What follows is a broken-glass sequence of murder, workplace tension, and the growing sense that someone is going to kill Lake Warren only after she's been subject to all kinds of psychological torture. I know I felt genuine palpitations while reading HUSH; something tells me many others will, too. Indiebound | Powell’s | B & N | Borders | Amazon

  • Lisa Lutz: The Spellmans Strike Again: A Novel

    Lisa Lutz: The Spellmans Strike Again: A Novel
    What do you mean this is the end of the Spellman Saga? Don't we get to find out what happens to Rae in college, or whether Isabel will stay the maturity course, or if Henry can stay sane amidst the craziness of a clan perfectly happy to spy on each other and others and withhold information from each other (and themselves!) all in the purpose of greater good? Maybe we will. Maybe we won't. But this fourth and final installment perfectly encapsulates the zany sweetness and the larger ramifications of family that loves each other too much, in their own way - even if that way of demonstrating involves regular surveillance. Amazon | Borders | Powell’s | Indiebound | B & N

  • Sean Cregan: The Levels

    Sean Cregan: The Levels
    It's a new name, a new style, and a new publisher for the man once and still known as John Rickards, and I think the change on all writerly fronts is absolutely the right one to make at this point in his career. THE LEVELS is dystopic without being obvious about it, instead creating a tangible, darkened world each of the seemingly doomed characters inhabits, tries to escape from and ultimately accepts in one form or another. It's the written version of the burnt out, empty buildings captured on film by Godfrey Riggio with Philip Glass scoring underneath - a landscape that repels and attracts but is too busy moving and changing to care what you think or are uncomfortable with. Indiebound | Borders | B & N | Amazon | Powell’s

  • Zoe Heller: The Believers: A Novel

    Zoe Heller: The Believers: A Novel
    On the one hand, I wish I had read this book when it came out in hardcover. On the other hand, I'm glad I waited because THE BELIEVERS demands total attention and now was the time for me to give it. The characters are so caustic and yet inspire such empathy. The narrative moves briskly yet embeds a considerable amount of detail. The dialogue is spot-on and hyper-literate, and Heller is catlike in her observations of family dysfunction, leftist politics and religiosity of all stripes, seeing all and asserting power over her characters, paradoxically, by giving them the floor to screw up and triumph. It is marvelous. Amazon | B & N | Indiebound | Borders | Powell’s

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March 21, 2010

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Comments

Mary Arrrr

The article you linked to about Peter Watts is grossly incorrect. He was not found guilty of assaulting an officer - only of "obstruction" - which means not following the officers orders at the scene to their satisfaction. He faces two years in jail for asking "why?" when asked to get out of his car. Boing Boing has a far more accurate take on the matter: http://www.boingboing.net/2010/03/20/peter-watts-may-serv.html

Maxine

I like the word "Nords" in that Orgegonian piece. (She writes about the genre sometimes being called "Nordic" crime fiction, and then the people who live in Scandinavian countries as "Nords".)

Karen C

Every Sunday I look forward to reading your blog and sorting through all the great crime fiction reviews. Thank you so much for doing this every week.

I have to comment on the last link. The article makes no attempt to investigate why Peter Watts was convicted but rather, it assumes from the outset that Watt's version of events is true and he is simply the victim of some poorly written law and abusive American guards. This lack of objectivity and depth is poor journalism. The article headline claims he was convicted of assault when per the boingboing article he was not, he was convicted of obstruction.

I'm also bothered by the sensationalist aspect of this article, that he COULD spent up to two years in prison without any examination of how he is LIKELY to be sentenced. If he has no record and his conduct was as minor as alleged, obviously the judge would not opt to impose the maximum sentence. As someone who has worked in American courts for years, it would seem most likely that Peter Watts is going to end up with probation and community service, or minimal local time.

I normally wouldn't comment about an article that I disagree with but what really concerns me is how you characterize the article. You write, "This is why everyone should and must know about jury nullification." I am troubled by this comment because 1) you are accepting the validity of this simplistic story and Watt's underlying claims without any critical evaluation and 2) advocating people to "nullify" is asking jurors (who have sworn an oath that they will follow the law) to disregard the law, the judge's instructions and do whatever they want if they don't agree with the law. If a person doesn't like the law and thinks it's wrong then they can tell the judge they could not be fair on the case and should be removed from the jury. If they don't like the law, then they can work with like-minded citizens and work on changing the law. Maybe I misunderstand but if you are advocating jury nullifcation, aren't you essentially advocating that that they violate their oath and disregard the law?

Karen C

Tom

Karen, I've been following the Peter Watts story rather closely. If you'll look it up at Making Light or on John Scalzi's Whatever blog, you'll see that nullification, in this case, would have been the correct course.

The jurors didn't want to convict, have said so in the aftermath, and didn't know they had an option.

The most egregious of Watts' crimes – according to witnesses – was not that he didn't obey (after being struck by the officer), but that he *hesitated* to obey. Under an absurd law passed in haste without due oversight, this now makes Watts a felon.

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