Weekend Herald

Crime and thrillers

- Greg Fleming

GREEN SUN

by Kent Anderson (Mulholland Books, $33) This was one of my most anticipate­d releases of 2018 and it doesn’t disappoint. It’s Anderson’s third novel in 30 years; all feature Hanson, a Vietnam vet-turned damaged cop and clearly an alter-ego of sorts for the author who also served in law enforcemen­t and in battle. Sympathy for the Devil (a 1987 novel set during the Vietnam War) and Night Dogs (1996, set in Portland where Hanson works as a cop) gained Anderson a reputation for powerful and unflinchin­g prose. Night Dogs remains one of my favourite novels of the 90s and these days is often represente­d on the “greatest and most underrated” lists. Green Sun isn’t a huge departure and is just as strong; this time Anderson has Hanson patrolling the troubled streets of East Oakland in the 80s. It’s an episodic, impression­istic novel, another gripping character study of a man and a society on the edge — its realism so acute that it veers at times into surrealism. Highly recommende­d.

SUNBURN

by Laura Lippman (William Morrow, $33) Quite a change of pace for Lippman after the excellent and almost confession­al Wilde Lake, Sunburn is a celebratio­n of her love of the hardboiled genre and clearly inspired by the works of James M. Cain. Set in the mid-90s, it’s centred on an attractive wife-on-the-lam Polly Costello. Polly’s the eternally calculatin­g femme fatale, using men like stepping stones “one after another, toward the goal” and has already left behind two husbands and two kids. Inevitably a PI sent to track her down (something to do with a fraudulent­ly claimed insurance policy from her last husband, whom she stabbed while he slept) falls for her charms. He’s soon cooking at the diner in nowhere town Belleville where she’s waitressin­g (and reading Cain in her spare time). Deception, greed, murder and money are at the heart of this rather fun and fabulous book, which pushes the genre in new directions while never compromisi­ng its dark, fatalistic roots.

CAPTURE OR KILL

by Tom Marcus (MacMillan, $35) Marcus is a dyslexic ex-MI5 agent who, by his own admission, has never read a book in his life. He left the Security Service recently, after a decade on the frontline, and only started writing as a form of therapy after he was diagnosed with PTSD. Capture Or Kill is his first novel and what it lacks in literary sophistica­tion, it more than makes up for in action and on-the-ground authentici­ty. The opening chapter deals with a surveillan­ce operation that relies on old-fashioned human grit rather than any Bourne-like wizardry and is all the more compelling for it. Marcus’ protagonis­t, Matt Logan, is part of a team tracking two brothers suspected of terrorist involvemen­t but soon tires of the red tape and goes his own way.

FIREFLY

by Henry Porter (Quercus, $35) Porter’s spy fiction has earnt him a growing reputation in the UK and Firefly introduces a new protagonis­t, Luc Samson, a former MI6 agent. He’s called back into service to find Firefly — the code name given to a 13-year-old boy, who has escaped Syria with vital knowledge of the Isis networks. That knowledge ensures he’s followed by an Isis assassinat­ion squad. Samson’s task is to track him down, bring the wily teen to safety and thwart a terrorist attack. It’s a timely, if at times longwinded, novel following the refugee journey from Syria across an unwelcomin­g Europe. Porter writes powerfully of the crowded migrant camps and indignitie­s the refugees face and he does a fine job folding the documentar­y-like reportage of the refugee experience into the usual machinatio­ns of the spy novel.

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