Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Book Review: House Witness by Mike Lawson (2019 Edgar Nominee - Best Novel)



House Witness

Author: Mike Lawson
Publisher: Grove/Atlantic Inc.
Date of Publication: February 6, 2018
Pages: 368


     This is one of the six nominated for the 2019 Best Novel Edgar Award by the Mystery Writer's of America.  I have previously read and reviewed The Liar's Girl by Catherine Ryan HowardHouse Witness is my early on favorite to win it (of course I need to read the other four).

    This book is primarily set in New York City and has a very intriguing premise.  How does a lawyer, no matter how good he is, get a jury to deliver a "Not Guilty" verdict in a murder trial when there are five credible eye witnesses who saw the accused shoot a man in a Manhattan bar?  That's the conundrum faced by attorney David Slade.  The only thing that his client, ne'er-do-well law school graduate (but can't pass the bar exam) Toby Rosenthal has going for him is that his corporate attorney Dad is filthy rich.  That's when Slade makes some discreet calls and hires the ultimate "jury consultants" Ella Fields and Bill Cantwell.

    Complicating the case is the fact that the victim, Dominic DiNunzio, is the illegitimate son of  the current minority leader in the U.S. House of Representatives, John Mahoney and his former legislative assistant, who is now an influential political power broker in New York state.  Mahoney sends his own fixer, Joe DeMarco, to New York to ensure that Rosenthal is convicted.  A cat and mouse game ensues between DeMarco, Ella Fields and the five witnesses.

     The back stories of all of the main characters are cleverly introduced through flashbacks.  The story of Ella Fields is particularly captivating.  She is a small town country girl who won't accept her lot in life decides she wants a lot more.  She leaves her family and moves to the big city of Charleston, South Carolina.  She learns the ways of the more cultured and aristocratic, eventually catching the eye of Bill Cantwell, a disbarred lawyer who specializes in making impossible situations become possible .  Mike Lawson actually has you rooting for the bad guys (although who the bad guys are in this book is a fluid notion).  The plot is so believable, the characters are so exceptionally well developed, the pace is so fast (though not hurried) and the dialogue is so genuine that the book is nearly impossible to put down.  Add to this the New York setting and in my opinion you have the perfect crime novel!  If Ed McBain was alive and writing, he would have written House Witness.  This book is that good!

     There are ten more Joe DeMarco novels by Mike Lawson.  I'm tempted to punt the last four Edgar nominees and jump into the Lawson back list instead!

Monday, February 18, 2019

Book Review: The Liar's Girl by Catherine Ryan Howard (2019 Best Novel Edgar Award Nominee)



The Liar's Girl

Author: Catherine Ryan Howard
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Date of Publication: February 27, 2018
Pages: 332


     The Liar's Girl is one of six novels nominated for the 2019 Best Novel Edgar Award by the Mystery Writers of America.  It is the first of the six which I have read.  The author was born in Cork, Ireland in 1982 and graduated from Trinity College in Dublin.  This novel is set both in Cork and Dublin and the descriptions and settings ring with a clear authenticity.

     Howard is able to weave a very intricate and fast moving plot, telling the story in the present day as well as 10 years previous.  This is a serial killer story, but one that keeps you guessing until the very end.  The perpetrator was dubbed "The Canal Killer" because all of the young women were found drowned in the Grand Canal near elite St. John's College in Dublin.    Will Hurley was a St. John's student who is now serving life imprisonment in a psychiatric hospital after admitting to the murders.  His girlfriend at the time, a freshman from Cork named Allison Smith, has tried to build a new life in Amsterdam in the 10 years since the murders.

    The book opens with two new murders which closely resemble the original those of the original Canal Killer.  It is truly creepy and scary the way the new (?) Canal Killer uses social media to select and stalk his victims.The police try to enlist Will to help in the investigation, but he will only talk to Allison, who at first is reluctant to get involved.  Is this a copy cat at work, or is the wrong man in jail?  The author goes back and forth between the present day investigation and the time of the original killings.  The plot moves forward at a brisk pace and the author throws enough curve balls to keep the reader guessing.  The characters are very likable and the reader can't help but hope that Will is innocent.  Allison plays a pivotal role in the investigation of the contemporary crimes.  There is a very nice twist of plot at the end (although I did see it coming).

     I really enjoyed the author's descriptions of Dublin and Cork, two places I have never been but would love to visit.  They added a lot to what is a very enjoyable and entertaining mystery.  This is a worthy nominee for the 2019 Best Novel Edgar.