Montreal Gazette

Ava Lee series ends with fun twist

Author wraps detective yarn after 10 books

- JOAN BARF OOT

The Imam of Tawi-Tawi Ian Hamilton House of Anansi Spiderline Ava Lee is Chinese-Canadian. She’s chic, in her mid30s and massively wealthy thanks to her work—mainly in Asia—as a martial-arts trained forensic accountant retrieving stolen or misappropr­iated millions from dangerous people.

And she’s lesbian.

It’s hard to conjure a less likely person to investigat­e an isolated school, in the southernmo­st, predominan­tly Muslim part of the Philippine­s, suspected of being a training ground for potential jihadis.

And so it’s odd that when she’s asked to look into activities at Zakat College on the island of Tawi-Tawi, neither she nor any of the men seeking her help raise those questions of suitabilit­y. It seems a haunting sort of gap.

The Imam of Tawi-Tawi is the 10th in Canadian Ian Hamilton’s Ava Lee series, exotic and flamboyant novels that tend not to cling too closely to credibilit­y at the best of times. But they’re fast-paced, smoothly written and fun in an often-violent sort of way. Plus, they make accounting glamorous, complicate­d and dangerous.

In this outing, the man who approaches Ava for help is Chang Wang, an associate of the dodgy Filipino billionair­e Tommy Ordonez, for whom Ava once recovered $50 million from a land deal gone badly awry.

She’s initially reluctant to investigat­e Zakat College. Recently launched into a secret relationsh­ip with a top Chinese actress and involved in the business pursuits of her Three Sisters investment enterprise, she’s been shifting her career away from pursuing ill-gotten millions.

But she also keep sin mind the importance of helpful contacts in Asia, including Chang Wang, Ordonez and the powerful Filipino senator who outlines the TawiTawi problem for her.

The men, it turns out, own vast pineapple plantation­s in the southern Philippine­s. They have a useful detente with the Muslim Brotherhoo­d there that no one wants disturbed by the possible presence of jihadis in training.

The Brotherhoo­d is specifical­ly worried that if the Philippine government hears the Zakat College rumours, its forces will swoop into the region and take the opportunit­y to brutalize its Muslim residents in general.

The Imam of Tawi-Tawi is clever, not least in the parallel sit creates between extremist Islam and extremist Christiani­ty. And it has one of the best plot twists of modern crime fiction, though it may take a little patience to get there. The finale is both a dazzler and ominously, scarily plausible.

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