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Die Again, the 11th volume in Tess Gerritsen's crime/mystery/thriller series featuring Jane Rizzoli, Boston cop, and Dr. Maura Isles, M.E., is another tautly paced novel with a rather unusual serial killer and lots of clues that need to be processed before the real killer is identified.

Fortunately, this time around there were no personal links to Rizzoli or Isles, and neither one finds herself alone and in mortal danger - they're just two investigators working a case, and the intense jeopardy scene falls, as is proper, to the person who holds the one piece of information that could crack the case.

We also see new developments in our intrepid investigator's personal lives, which in my opinion do not bode well for Jane and Maura, but we will have to wait for the next installment to find out where those are taking us.

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Trss Gerritsen started her career as an author with a string of romantic suspense novels; she later switched to writing medical thrillers, drawing on her own experience as a physician, before beginning her highly successful crime/mystery novels featuring police officer Jane Rizzoli and medical examiner Maura Isles. Harvest was the first of her medical thrillers, with a plot centred around a second year surgical resident who uncovers a series of mysterious heart transplants using untraceable donors have been taking place in the hospital she works in - and that the people responsible will go to ant lengths to discredit, or if necessary, silence her.

A fast-paced read, with the requisite surprise plot twists and a just-in-the-nick-of-time resolution. And there's even a touch of romance.

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Tess Gerritsen, Girl Missing
Kathy Reichs, Bones of the Lost
The Detection Club, The Floating Admiral
Rory Clements, Martyr

I'm never quite certain what is going to make a mystery series interesting to me. Obviously, the protagonist matters quite a bit, the setting and time period matters as well, and I seem to prefer crime-solvers who actually have to make observations and reasoned deductions rather than just race about with a gun until they find a killer. Even knowing that, some characters that you'd think would intrigue me, just don't.

However, two series that do appeal to me - at least in part because the sleuths are female and forensic science is a key part of the equation - are Kathy Reich's Temperence Brennan novels and Tess Gerritsen's Rizzoli and Isles series.

So naturally, I devoured Reich's most recent novel with dispatch and delight. Gerritsen did not have a new nivel out last year, so I thought I'd try one of her medical thriller standalones, Girl Missing. Protagonist was a female medical examiner, so I thought it likely that it would appeal to me, and it did.

I also read and enjoyed a rather unusual detective novel, The Floating Admiral. Wikipedia has this to say about it:
The Floating Admiral is a collaborative detective novel written by fourteen members of the Detection Club in 1931. The twelve chapters of the story were each written by a different author, in the following sequence: Canon Victor Whitechurch, G. D. H. Cole and Margaret Cole, Henry Wade, Agatha Christie, John Rhode, Milward Kennedy, Dorothy L. Sayers, Ronald Knox, Freeman Wills Crofts, Edgar Jepson, Clemence Dane and Anthony Berkeley. G. K. Chesterton contributed a Prologue, which was written after the novel had been completed.
The various authors did not know who their collaborators had tagged as the killer and no loose ends were allowed. These strictures were ably dealt with, producing a consistent and highly readable mystery with both a number of plot twists and a fully satisfying conclusion. Fun read.

Having enjoyed historical mystery series such as the Brother Cadfael mysteries by Edith Pargeter (writing as Ellis Peters) and much more recently the Dame Frevisse and Player Joliffe mysteries by Margaret Frazer, I went in search of other series set in interesting time periods. My first choice was Rory Clements' John Shakespeare novels, set in my beloved Elizabethan England, in which the master playwright has a brother in the service of the Queen's spymaster Sir Francis Walsingham. And It was a good choice. Well-written, with a good sense of the history and politics of the time - including the religious turmoil - and a finely realised protagonist. I will be reading more of the investigations of John Shakespeare.

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This year I got bitten by the mystery bug. I have tended to go through periods of reading a lot of mystery/detective/crime novels, and then reading very little in the genre for years before finding myself in the mood again.

What got me started this time was reading the very excellent novels written by Nicola Griffith featuring private investigator Aud Torvingen. These are not your typical thriller - the quality of characterisation and plot, and the vividly and beautifully detailed prose, make there books something special indeed.

Nicola Griffith, The Blue Place
Nicola Griffith, Stay
Nicola Griffith, Always


Left with a hankering for more of the genre, it struck me that lately I'd been watched several TV shows that had their genesis in mystery series: Bones, Rizzoli and Isles, and Murdoch Mysteries. So that's what I turned to next.

The novels of forensic anthropologist Kathy Reichs are, as we are informed in the afterwards of a number of her books, inspired by her own experiences. Her protagonist, Temperence Brennan (like Reichs herself) is a professor of anthropology, and a forensic anthropologist who works with the Laboratoire des Sciences Judiciaires et de Médecine Légale for the province of Quebec and is often called in as a consultant by a variety of American organisations. The character shares little with the protagonist of the TV show, but that's fine, because the differences are so marked, you really don't think about the connection. These novels are enjoyable both for the mystery and the forensic science, but there can be a lot of infodumping, and Reichs has a habit of making the crines in too many of the novels materially linked to Brennan's friends and family members.

Kathy Reichs, Déjà Dead
Kathy Reichs, Death Du Jour
Kathy Reichs, Deadly Decisions
Kathy Reichs, Fatal Voyage
Kathy Reichs, Grave Secrets
Kathy Reichs, Bare Bones
Kathy Reichs, Monday Mourning
Kathy Reichs, Cross Bones
Kathy Reichs, Break No Bones
Kathy Reichs, Bones to Ashes
Kathy Reichs, Devil Bones
Kathy Reichs, 206 Bones
Kathy Reichs, Spider Bones
Kathy Reichs, Flash and Bone
Kathy Reichs, Bones are Forever


Tess Gerritsen's novels about Boston homicide detective Jane Rizzoli and coroner Maura Isles are rather more faithfully adapted in the TV show names after the lead characters, although there are some significant changes in Isles' backstory. The novels are fun to read, and Gerritsen's experience as a physician grounds the forensics in scientific fact. Well written and quite enjoyable.

Tess Gerritsen, The Surgeon
Tess Gerritsen, The Apprentice
Tess Gerritsen, The Sinner
Tess Gerritsen, Body Double
Tess Gerritsen, Vanish
Tess Gerritson, The Mephisto Club
Tess Gerritsen, The Keepsake
Tess Gerritsen, Ice Cold
Tess Gerritsen, The Silent Girl
Tess Gerritsen, Last to Die


And last but not least are the novels of Maureen Jennings, which I am just starting to read. Set in 1890s Toronto and featuring Detective William Murdoch of the Toronto Constabulary, the first three books were fairly faithfully adapted into made-for-TV movies starring Peter Outerbridge, and were then further transformed into a TV series starring Yannick Bisson.

I quite thoroughly enjoyed the two novels I've read so far and am looking forward to reading more. The historical aspect of the novels - and the fact that they are set in my home town - adds to their entertainment value.

Maureen Jennings, Except the Dying
Maureen Jennings, Under the Dragon’s Tail

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