Friday, May 2, 2014

Friday Flashback: Rec. #3: Case Histories

I decided to start doing Friday Flashbacks in case you missed some early posts the first time around. You're busy; I understand.


What: Kate Atkinson's first foray into crime fiction was a massive success and an Orange Prize nominee for best novel of 2005. An award-winning literary novelist [currently being celebrated for Life After Life], Atkinson proves with Case Histories that genre divisions are, frankly, kind of silly. 

She introduces us to private detective Jackson Brodie, whose work on three cold cases we see through alternating points of view. Brodie's investigations continue in One Good Turn, When Will There Be Good News? (my personal fave), and Started Early, Took My Dog.

Comparable to: There's a bit of a Deborah Crombie flavor in the characterizations, but approached through a Mark Haddon-ish tone.

Representative quote: "Rosemary, their mother, said that she wished Olivia could stay at this age forever because she was so lovable. They had never heard her use that word to describe any of them. They had not even realized that such a word existed in her vocabulary."

You might not like it if: You are a bit squeamish about stories in which kids get disappeared.

How to get it: Available at most libraries and bookstores. Plus, there's a BBC1 series based on the Jackson Brodie novels. (I'm afraid to watch it because unless it's absolutely perfect, I will hate it so hard.)

Connections to other Wreckage: To review, the Jackson Brodie novels go in this order:
1. Case Histories
2. One Good Turn (Rec. #69)
3. When Will There Be Good News? [thebestbestbest] (Rec. #192)
4. Started Early, Took My Dog (Rec. #270)


[Originally posted 1/2/11.]


No comments:

Post a Comment