Saturday, May 9, 2026

The Shadow Appears

 The Shadow Appears is the first of two books written by Burt Tyson. Before this, I have never read a novel of this subject matter. It’s a post Civil War novel and what makes it unique to me is that it is a heroic tale of a Confederate soldier. I only recall reading books in which the Union soldiers were the heroes and the southern Confederate soldiers were the enemy. Perhaps their soldier acts were done so with obvious bravery, but those actions were still being done by enemy forces. In this book, the protagonist is Captain Robert Hester, but rather than use his name, he asks the characters with whom he interacts as being just “Captain.” At the start of the story, the Captain is just being released from a Confederate hospital where he has been staying the last three months while covering from near fatal war injuries. The fall of the Confederacy was at hand, only weeks before Lee’s surrender at Appomattox, Virginia. The Captain was sent, along with his assistant, Sergeant Turley, to provide protection for Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederacy. I should clarify that I have no doubt that there were as man Confederacy heroes as there were Union heroes, and I have no doubt that the union forces, under Mosely and Sherman, caused many outrageous atrocities on their rampage through the south at the end of the war.

On his way to find President Davis, the Captain did a brief detour to stop by his own farm from which he had been away for a few years in the war effort. As he arrived, he saw the house was in flames, and the farm was being destroyed by Stoneman’s “bummers” who were actually Union forces who had been presumably sent by Stoneman to do whatever damage they could inflict on the homes and farms of southerners. From a hilltop, he saw his father shot, his sister killed, and the woman he planned to marry killed. Although the odds were two against 19, in a rage, the Captain and Turley killed them all. After burying his own loved ones, he swore that when he was done with his assignment for Davis, that he would kill as many Yankees as he could find. Although the Captain never did catch up with Davis, in the process of trying to find him, he ran across numbers of “bummers” and against overwhelming numbers, killed all of them. Meanwhile, he provided great help to the people who survived the slaughter by northern troops. Time and again, the Captain was told he was a great man who seemed to have divine protection.

Even after Appomattox, when other southerners were conceding victory by the Union, the Captain continued his intent to kill Yankees. He and Turley continued west and landed in Texas where he encountered yet more bad guys who he killed. Despite getting more serious wounds, he spared a village which was about to be attacked by Ramon Herrerra. It was Herrerra who would be called the Shadow for his evil actions towards anyone who disagreed with him. Ramon was described as follows, “He is like the shadow before el Diablo, first you see the shadow and then you see el Diablo. Perhaps we should call him La Sombre del Diablo, the Devil’s Shadow.” It was Ramon Herrerra who is bound to become the villain in the second novel by Tyson, The Shadow Appears.

I can see how this material would appeal to many, but it’s a bit too worshipful of the Captain who is a murderous force in his own right. The dialogue was quite repetitive regarding the remarkable battle skills and generosity of the Captain. Although I did finish this story, I don’t have a plan to read the second novel in the series.

Monday, May 4, 2026

Son of Nobody


 Perhaps the author of Son of Nobody could qualify as the most interesting man in the world. He is also the author of the amazing Life of Pi. I looked for my review of Life of Pi, but it was not in the blog, so who knows what happened to that. Son of Nobody has a very different feel, but I also think it addresses some of the same themes about self-worth, society, and identity. Also, I have a fascination with ancient Greek literature, and this novel dives directly into that. If you’ve got little interest in the Iliad, then you might struggle with this book even though that’s not really critical to see the author’s main them.

In the novel, the protagonist Harlow Donne is a classical scholar. Living in Canada, he had the chance go to England to look at some papyrus fragments at Oxford University, and he took the opportunity where he made the discovery of his life. The papyrus fragments were from an account of the Trojan War, a contemporary work to the Iliad by Homer. This book is historical fiction, but it’s also about the fictional author’s psychological journey about his own life. While he is at Oxford, Donne’s troubled marriage is further damaged and his little girl, Helen, has a brief and fatal illness. Like characters in his book, Donne was displaced from the place he lived but he was compelled to continue his seemingly important work.

Martel’s fictitious author Donne had previously never achieved any fame for his scholarly work. In Oxford, Donne translated the writings of the unknown author of the papyrus fragments which he named the Psoad. The author of those fragments was given the name Psoas, who was nothing  more than a common foot soldier with the Trojans, also a seemingly unimportant person. Thus, we actually have a protagonist writing about a protagonist. Rather than being a history book, this was really a story about a person who is defined without lineage or family history. In one review that I read, it was noted that Martel seemed to be asking, “If a person has no inherited story, must they invent one – and does that invention become truth?”

Most interestingly, in this newly discovered material that has been at the heart of so many dramas over the last couple millenias, Martel then invented areas in which the Iliad and Psoad describe events the same way and areas in which their accounts differed significantly. He even put Homer and Psoas at the same location on one day.

The Trojan-Greek war which lasted for 10 years is apparently a reality. The destruction of Troy left what must have been the wealthiest city in the world at the time in total ruin. Martel suggestsed that while true, the war itself was absurd from the perspective of both sides. The costs of the war were horrendous for both the Greeks and the Trojans, supposedly because of the abduction of Helen, which may not have been an abduction at all. It’s my plan to read this book again at a future date. I think this is a very well-written and important novel.

Monday, April 27, 2026

The Blue Flame by George Pelecanos

Final power rotation author: George Pelecanos' The Blue Flame


First, a word about Pelecanos. He has something like 24 

novels, novellas, graphic novels, and story books to his credit. All are based in 

and around Washington, DC. Want more? How’s this: he was one of the 

original writers and producers of what many critics say is the best crime series 

on TV . . . EVER: The Wire. Add to that writing/producing credits for streaming 

series Treme, The Pacific, The Deuce, We OwnThis City. IMDB notes 68 credits 

to his work. Nominated twice for Emmy awards (The Wire, Treme). To top it all 

off, he gets quite the nod from none other than Stephan King who calls Pelecanos

 ‘The greatest living American crime writer.’


And I bet you aren’t reading his books. I’m borderline offended. 

 

The Blue Flame continues one of Pelecanos’ regular characters, Derek Strange,  

owner of Strange Investigations, a black PI who owns and runs his own business 

right there in front of all who inhabit his corner of NE DC. A black business

owner who is open dang near 24/7 to help out his neighborhood. Derek 

is a DC native, grew up in NE DC, was a DC cop until the 14th St. riots after 

the death of Martin Luther King, after which he quit and opened up a PI 

agency. He knows his limits. What he can do, what he should do, where 

he might gently step over the line, and importantly understand the relationship 

between a PI and DC Metro police. Nearing retirement, but still can get the job done. 


Billy Lake, a local defense lawyer known for his work mostly with drug dealers seeks 

Derek out. Antone Anthony sits in the DC Metro jail on a murder charge. Lake thinks 

the young man isn’t a killer (dealer: yes; killer: no). Wants  Derek to talk to his friends 

for background information.


Background info: Nigel Walker, Cynthia Barnes, Ricardo Lennox, Antone, and Kenneth 

Norton were all childhood friends. Now in their 20s and trying to figure out their place in 

the DC world. Cynthia had an older brother they all looked up to, but he was cut down 

by a drunk driver. And her mother had died (or run off, can’t remember to be truthful). 

The rest of the boys took in on themselves to look out for Cynthia. Which they did. 

Cynthia and Nigel had this occasional friends with benefits thing going on. But Nigel 

never parked outside of her house cuz he was afraid of her father, a retired DC cop. 


One night, Nigel told Cynthia that he was headed over to see Antone about a money 

beef. Something about cash flow in Antone’s dealing business. Only he never made it. 

A couple blocks removed from Cynthia’s, Nigel is shot in his car. When the police 

investigate, they check out the apts of all five friends and find the gun in Antone’s 

apartment. 


Derek talks to them all. Comes away with some observations, types up his report for 

Bill Lake, gets paid. Short story? He doesn’t think Antone killed Nigel. 


Maybe three weeks later, someone a few streets over from Antone’s calls in a foul odor 

from a junkyard. A body had been squeezed into an old freezer and the smell of decay 

was everywhere. It was Cynthia. 


The problem is that now one set of cops thinks the two crimes are connected and 

another thinks Cynthia was just wrong-place-wrong-time. A coincidence. Word gets to 

Derek and he approaches Lake asking for his contract in the Antone case extended so 

he can dig around a bit further . . . and not piss off the cops. 


Here’s the thing about Pelecanos. He has lived his whole life in Silver Spring, MD. 

Grew up working in small local corner cafes listening to the ebb and flow of DC life. I 

seem to remember reading he volunteered with DC Metro juvenile counseling kids to 

get out of the life. The stories he writes are mostly about DC street crime. Nary a 

mention about the DC intrigue of guv’ment, politics, FBI, CIA, etc. His beat is the 

streets. Based on his history, he comes by his plots and, importantly, the dialogue of 

the DC streets honestly. His brilliant portrayal of the landscape, geography, 

neighborhoods, streets, local details, is, in my opinion, among the best in the crime 

business. He makes DC come alive. Hey, I grew up in Silver Spring, MD. He and I 

attended the same high school (albeit maybe 6-8 years apart). As a local, I am 

continually impressed with his attention to detail about DC and for me, that is an 

enormous selling point. 


Bottom line: Get off your lazy hindparts, head to your local library, Amazon, or 

wherever you get your books and get busy reading Pelecanos. Don’t trust me? See the 

quote from Stephan King above. His previous book was published in 2012, 'What it Was'. 

I do hope we won't have to wait another 14 years for his next. I was getting impatient. 


Thanks to NetGalley for the advance reader copy. Expected publication date is August 4, 2026

 

ECD

The Brothers McKay by Craig Johnson

Second power rotation author: Craig Johnson’s The Brothers McKay.  #22 in

the Walt Longmire saga. 


There is no love lost when a cantankerous, but wealthy, local is found dead in a fishing stream back up Crazy Woman Canyon in Wyoming (Remember the crazy woman from the movie ‘Jeremiah Johnson.’

Year, that one). Not a single person liked Pepper McKay. A prominent

unlikeable wealthy citizen, Pepper McKay, not his family of four 

sons (make that 3.5. One of his sons is illegitimate) all who have motive, are the obvious suspects. His adult sons include a journalist, a monk from a nearby mountain monastery, an accountant (? Not sure about that one). The fourth lives as a ranch hand whose most critical project is breaking a big-ass mule named Borax. 


But there is more. All around the county, the locals are watching the wind as multiple wildfires are threatening valleys, farms, and small towns. Another body is found extending the list of possible suspects. We can’t ignore a former Russian spy, Maxim Sudorov who Walt is

acting as sort of a parole officer (a leftover character from the 

previous book, Return to Sender). The chemistry between Walt and Sudorov is tres interesting. It’s Maxim who points out the similarities of familial treachery to Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov (hence, the significance of the book's title) to the case.


The book begins in Johnson’s typical meanderings with locals and co-workers. Walt 

slowly puts pieces of the puzzle together amid the genial back-and-forth typical of the 

Longmire series that makes the characters so comfortable and compelling.


Until the Highway Patrol issues the GO order forcing everyone to get the hell out of 

dodge to seek safety. All that ‘aw shucks’ banter suddenly disappears. The monk runs 

off into the wilderness and the fire. Walt goes after him to stop him from being engulfed 

by the flames.  The smoke and flames become so intense that Walt takes a fall - 

messed up his ankle. As he rolls over to contemplate his immediate future, he sees a 

familiar face: Borax. And now we witness the travails of the cowboy and his trusted 

steed (maybe that’s giving Borax more rope than deserved) as they try to get to safety. 

The whole survival episode is where Johnson earns his chops. The reader may 

wonder if Walt will get out unscathed (probably), but what about the monk? And Borax? 

Compelling story telling at a fever pace after nearly three-quarters of the story was 

more like Gunsmoke on a Saturday afternoon and Miss Kitty’s saloon.  And don’t forget 

why we are all here? The murder of Pepper McKay. 


You need to check this out. But if you already worship at the alter of Longmire, you 

don’t need me to push this book on you. It’s an easy read. Straightforward storytelling. 

Fun characters (well, most are fun), plenty of humor, Native American mysticism, that 

Wyoming landscape.  


What more could you want?


Thanks to NetGalley for the advance reviewer copy. Available May 26, 2026

the advance reviewer copy. Available May 26, 2026


The Crossroads by CJ Box

I hit the jackpot this past month. Three of my power rotation authors have a new release or soon to be published titles. 

 

First power rotation author: CJ Box’s The Crossroads by CJ Box. 


By now, readers of this blog know that the MRB boys are big fans of CJ  Box’s 26 (!) Joe Pickett books. Started in 2001 and has published a book every year since. You’ll recall that Pickett is a Wyoming game warder whose primary task is ensuring that hunters, fishermen, etc. all have their licenses up to date and aren’t exceeding state mandated hunting limits. But always seems to end up being involved with cases that are (well) outside hit state mandates. And this one is no different. Sort of.


Joe’s been told by a hunter of seeing what appeared to be a drunk elk on a ranch. This 

falls under his authority so he goes to check it out. The ranch in question is a bit of a 

drive that takes him out of cell phone coverage. He drives out to where Antler Creek 

Rd crosses some other back country road. At this crossroads, Joe stops to consult his 

map. There are three ranches out here. One biggun’ owned by an Atlanta hedge fund 

manager (code word for ‘loaded’). Another ranch is owned by two borderline crackpot 

sisters. The third is owned by a long-time couple/resident who just wants to be left 

alone and isn’t afraid to face down trespassers, hunters, lawmen, anyone.


So far, basic Joe Pickett plot. 


Until he is ambushed. Shot in his own truck, including a head wound. Left for dead. 


This ain’t your ordinary Joe Pickett book now. A guy out hunting comes across the 

aftermath, calls it in and promptly disappears. Word gets out across the law

 enforcement community like a runaway wildfire. Wife Mary Beth is yanked from a 

library board meeting and taken to the crossroads. Daughters are called in. Eldest 

Sheridan is working as an investigator in the mountain area (works for Cassie Dewell 

featured in Box’s six ‘The Highway’ books). April helps run Nate Romanowski’s bird 

abatement business. Both are tough and not to be messed with. Lucy has just returned 

from a university experience in Europe. Not to mention there is a new sheriff in town 

and this is his first big case. Box and Mary Beth are airlifted to Bozeman, MT. Before 

doing anything drastic medically, the brain swelling must be controlled and the medical 

team puts Joe into a medical induced coma. 


Have to admit, when the primary protagonist for 25 books is gunned down in the first 

chapter, it’s painfully obvious that other typically secondary characters will have to step

 up. And the three daughters do just that. Each daughter gets one of the three ranches 

at the end of this road to find out who is behind the attempt on their father.


The Joe Pickett series is legendary for the devotion of its readers and Box certainly 

knows how to set a hook. When was the last time an author put the lead name out 

front and then nearly blew the lead into kingdom come? Had I not had a life that 

demanded attention, the sheer audacity of the plot would’ve kept me glued to my seat 

to see how Box puts the daughters front and center in the storyline while Joe is 

attended to by a team of neurosurgeons. The girls are up to the task because they are 

tough, resourceful, committed, and seriously angry. 


Gotta love it. Should be painfully obvious that Box is taking us into the world of the 

Pickett daughters while daddy recovers (and maybe retires?). Leave it to a great 

storyteller to leave us breathlessly waiting for episode #27 next year. 


And it’s in bookstores so you won’t have to wait. 

 

ECD 


 

Thursday, April 23, 2026

The Keeper


 This is not actually a review of the content of Tana French’s new book The Keeper.  I did not realize just how important the voice is in an audiobook, but I quickly realized it with this one. I only got about 2% into the book when I simply could not stand to listen to the narrator. The voice was too slow, too dramatic and hysterical, so I gave up. Although I liked and gave positive reviews of a couple of her early books, and although I did review six of her books, I’ve not been a great fan of her writing and haven’t read her work since 2018. Anyhow, perhaps this book would have turned the tables for me since she is obviously a very successful writer. But, the narrator soured my mood. I even tried to listen to it a day later – just could not do it. Now, duh, I've developed a new appreciation for most of the great narrators that have brought me so much pleasure. I didn't realize that I was taking them for granted. No more! Maybe you won't be turned off to this reader the way that I was.

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Butcher's Boy


 The Butcher’s Boy by Thomas Perry, a very prolific writer, published his first novel in 1982, and he won an Edgar Award for it. Although I listened to this audiobook to the end, I thought the best part was the introduction, I’m guessing it was written in the early 2000s, by Michael Connelly. He wrote about struggling with people who were complimenting his own writing only to have someone say they still liked his first book the best (The Black Echo published in 1992).  Connelly wrote this introduction at a time when Connelly had already written 12 books, so he lamented that such a back-handed compliment meant his time since the first publication must have been time squandered. He described feeling some difficulty with his feeling that The Butcher’s Boy was also Perry’s best work. Connelly added that his own reaction to such a compliment did eventually change and he was able to respond more kindly to those compliments. (I’ve read The Black Echo several times, and while I think it was a very good story, Connelly is the master of this genre, and he has in fact written more and better works.)

My primary problem with this audiobook was the narrator. The man spoke in too slow a cadence and there was a slight slur to his words, as if he was a bit drunk. The story itself was quite solid as you might guess given its history of winning the Edgar, but I think the novel would be better received by reading it and not just listening. I’m not really motivated to read the second book in the series, at least not in the audiobook format with the same narrator. The reviews of the four-book series have been quite favorable.