The Latest

A brilliant Indian novel about the First Opium War

A brilliant Indian novel about the First Opium War

A review of River of Smoke, by Amitav Ghosh. @@@@ (4 out of 5). The second book in Amitav Ghosh’s planned Ibis trilogy set among the momentous events of the massive 19th-Century opium trade between India and China. Details the life at sea and in the foreign enclave in Canton of the immensely rich men who dominated the trade, principally Britons and Americans.

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SCIENCE FICTION

MYSTERIES & THRILLERS

A murder and a cover-up jump-start this Travis McGee thriller

A murder and a cover-up jump-start this Travis McGee thriller

From 1964 to 1985 a World War II veteran officer and Harvard MBA named John D. MacDonald published a series of 21 remarkable short crime novels centered on a "Florida beach bum" named Travis McGee. Travis, of course, was MacDonald's alter ego, with an incisive mind, a head for...

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NONFICTION

How a team of rebel Tories ousted Neville Chamberlain

How a team of rebel Tories ousted Neville Chamberlain

You may have the impression that Winston Churchill stood alone in warning England of the rising Nazi menace. Many histories of the period paint that picture. But it's not accurate. In fact, a group of younger Conservative MPs were vocal opponents of the Tory Establishment's...

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Popular Fiction

A brilliant Indian novel about the First Opium War

A brilliant Indian novel about the First Opium War

Balzac (and lots of people after him) thought that "Behind every great fortune there is a crime." Nowhere is that aphorism more baldly pictured than in the 19th Century opium trade that enriched England, Scotland, and the United States. There, trade in the drug created a score...

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Explore My “BEST OF the category” selections

WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE BOOK?

When people ask me that question, I never know what to say. In a lifetime of reading, I’ve read many thousands of books. And I’ve reviewed well over 2,000 of them on this site. Picking just one as a “favorite,” or even a handful of them, makes no sense to me.

The problem is, I read for many different reasons. Perhaps you do, too. And I read many different sorts of books. Mysteries and thrillers. Popular fiction, especially historical fiction. Science fiction.

And nonfiction, history in particular. You’ll find hundreds of reviews in every one of those categories on this site.

Look to the right for a rotating random selection culled from throughout this site.

Happy reading!

 

Cover image of "Two Kinds of Truth" by Michael Connelly, a novel about Russian mobsters

Russian mobsters and crooked lawyers in the latest Harry Bosch

Harry Bosch can't catch a break. He was forced into retirement from the LAPD, where he served for more than forty years. His wife was murdered.  Now his integrity is being called into question when a three-decade-old case is reopened by the LAPD. Meanwhile, as a volunteer detective for the...
Cover image of "Rendezvous with Rama," one of the best First Contact novels ever written

The five best First Contact novels

Since the earliest days of science fiction as an established genre, writers in the field have imagined what has come to be called First Contact with a capital F and a capital C. Most of the early speculation in the so-called Golden Era of Science Fiction (the 1930s and 40s) was laughable. But in...
chicago drug lord

The Nobel Prize, the Holocaust, and a Chicago drug lord

Sara Paretsky is my kind of mystery writer. She provides all the usual entertainment -- the suspense, the engaging characters, the cleverly complex plots -- found in all top-notch mysteries and thrillers, but she's political, too. And that's what you'll find in this novel about a Chicago drug...
Cover image of "The Untold Story of Books,"

In publishing, the writer usually comes last

Few people have any idea how many new books there are every year. According to Steven Piersanti, Founder and Senior Editor at Berrett-Koehler Publishers, quoting a 2023 report in Publishers Weekly, 2.3 million books were self-published in the US in 2021. And a recent industry estimate is that each...
Cover image of "Career of Evil," one of J. K. Rowling's excellent adult novels

J. K. Rowling proves she can write excellent adult novels

In Career of Evil, the third installment in J. K. Rowling's pseudonymous series about the detective with the unlikely name of Cormoran Strike, we learn a great deal more of Cormoran's backstory and that of his intrepid sidekick, Robin Ellacott. The one-legged detective, formerly a military police...
Cover image of "The Redbreast" by Jo Nesbo, a novel about an insubordinate detective

Nazis in Norway, a mysterious assassin, and an insubordinate detective

A review of The Redbreast, by Jo Nesbo. @@@@ (4 out of 5). Someone has paid a fortune to acquire what is described as the assassin’s rifle of choice, and Norwegian detective Harry Hole is determined to discover who bought it, and why. His investigation opens up a window on Norway’s troubled World War II history, when many young Norwegians volunteered to fight for Nazi Germany.

The Key to Rebecca

One of the best World War II spy stories

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes Espionage fiction offers us a rich array of smoothly written and suspenseful novels set during World War II or in the Cold War era that followed. The classic work of Graham Greene (1904-91), Eric Ambler (1909-98), John le Carré (1931-2020), and Ken Follett...
Cover image of "Faithful Place" by Tana French, one of the Dublin Murder Squad novels

Reviewing the Dublin Murder Squad novels by Tana French

Tana French's first novel in the six-book Dublin Murder Squad series was In the Woods, which won the Edgar, Anthony, Macavity, and Barry awards for best first novel. She followed that bestseller with The Likeness (2008). I read both books shortly after their publication. That was before I...
Cover image of "Consequence," a novel about peaceful protest and terrorism

Exploring the boundary between terrorism and peaceful protest

Where is the line between peaceful and legitimate protest and terrorism? Though the answer to that question might seem obvious, it's not -- and Berkeley-based author Steve Masover's debut novel, Consequence, explores that territory with skill and sophistication. Consequence tells a tale dominated...
Victim 2117 is a Department Q police procedural.

The latest Department Q police procedural takes on terrorists

Estimated reading time: 3 minutes In the previous seven books in the series of Jussi Adler-Olsen's Department Q police procedurals, we've gotten to know the three, and eventually four, principals in that basement office in Copenhagen Police HQ. There's Inspector Carl Mørck, ostensibly the boss but...

My Most Popular Reviews

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Mal Warwick - Book Reviews

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Mal Warwick

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