The Hamilton Spectator

WHODUNIT: JACK BATTEN

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“An Elderly Lady Is Up To No Good,” by Helene Tursten, Soho, 184 pages, $12.99

In five darkly engaging short stories, the accomplish­ed Swedish crime writer Helene Tursten makes the case in favour of an elderly killer. The old party in question is 88-yearold Maud who is without spouse, children, relatives or friends. She has the money and a swell apartment in Gotenberg to enjoy her solitary life and it’s at least partly to preserve it that she knocks off victims at the rate of one per story.

All of this is carried on more or less in the spirit of the two spinster sister slayers in “Arsenic and Old Lace,” though Maud is both older and slicker than the Brewsters. The murders Maud pulls off are meticulous­ly plotted and executed, and one of the pleasures of the stories lies in watching Maud in action and wondering, as the book moves along, if this next murder is the one where the cops finally catch on to the most unlikely of serial assassins.

“Dig Your Grave,” by Steven Cooper, Seventh Street, 368 pages, $15.95

The central figure in Steven Cooper’s readerfrie­ndly series is Alex Mills, a likable homicide detective in Phoenix, Ariz. Our guy Alex is resourcefu­l and tireless, but sometimes, for a little extra edge at some points in his investigat­ions, he feels a need to turn to his civilian pal Gus Parker and Gus’s otherworld­ly talents.

It seems that Gus possesses what he variously refers to as his “psychic revelation­s” or his “sudden visions” or simply his extra powerful “intuition.” In short, the unassuming Gus detects stuff that is beyond everybody else’s range of comprehens­ion. This is a gimmick that, in the hands of a lesser writer than Cooper, would become tiresome and even silly. But in the Cooper books, Gus and his powers seem entirely acceptable.

Certainly, in this consistent­ly attractive book, they work nicely in helping Alex Mills sort out a series of killings that somehow involve Phoenix’s upper crust of businessme­n and politician­s.

“Kingdom of the Blind,” by Louise Penny, Minotaur, 400 pages, $35.95

Chief Inspector Armand Gamache’s plate is overflowin­g. For one thing, it appears that Gamache, head of the Surete of Quebec, has somehow let loose in the province a cache of opioids large enough to kill thousands.

On a much smaller scale but more entertaini­ng, Gamache, for reasons unknown to him and everyone else concerned in the matter, has been named one of the three executors in the will of a woman unknown to the executors. The will itself involves manipulati­ons, some of them obviously illegal, in the investment world. The more Gamache looks into these strange developmen­ts, the more he comes to doubt both the people named in the will as well as, shockingly, himself.

In other words, the story is vintage Louise Penny with lots of space allowed to Gamache’s fellow residents of the lethally quaint village of Three Pines.

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