Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts

Friday, November 25, 2022

Highly entertaining unpredictable noir thriller

 

Malibu Burns by Mark Richardson delivers neo noir crime fiction characterized by cynicism, fatalism, and moral ambiguity. It takes place in near-future San Francisco where teen Malibu Makimura stands at the cusp of a life changed forever when she realizes she can sense her father’s thoughts. He leaves his family to pursue his “gifts” and research. Soon after, her mother takes her life leaving Malibu an orphan. The plot follows the journey of this young woman as she tries to survive in a dark world where dimensions overlap and reality is a variable. She discovers she can feel people’s emotions but it does little to help keep a roof over her head. 



 

She finds a place to live in the seedy part of town and lands a job drawing caricatures at a women’s nightclub while trying to ignore a portentous black-hearted voice growing inside her. One night, while creating a caricature she senses a sinister emotion projected by an older, well-put-together woman dressed in a leopard print dress. She learns the woman’s name is Luciana and is warned to steer clear of her by the bartender, but when she is invited to the woman’s Presidio Heights mansion she decides to go. The woman offers Malibu a peculiar criminal opportunity, the girl accepts and the evil inside her grows. Malibu thinks she can control it, but soon finds herself wondering if she will ever be in control of her life again! And on a base level, she is not sure she wants to be.

Malibu Burns Book Review

Richardson sets the grim, gritty, and matter-of-fact tone in the first few pages and does an impressive job with his dystopian worldbuilding. The backdrop is futuristic, fantastically surreal, realistic enough to believe and at times horror-worthy. It makes sense like a bad dream that scares you but you want to still know what happens. This tactic works well with Malibu’s mental state as she juggles her allegiance to the authoritative Luciana with her own better judgement, while the sinister voice grows more frequent and dominant.

Malibu Burns is a highly entertaining noir thriller like few others with excellent pacing, an unpredictable story, with complex characters. I recommend this book to people who enjoy the sinister feel of the noir crime genre. Think of The Arrangement by Robyn Harding. Fast-moving engrossing read, though it did take me a few chapters to get into the mind-bending direction of overlapping dimensions and changing realities, but then I was hooked. My one word of caution is that there is explicit sexual content sprinkled here and there that is necessary to the development of the story.

As Book Hookup, I am a longtime book reviewer, and I received this book as a free review copy and have not been compensated for reviewing or recommending it. This review is posted in collaboration with BookTasters. Some links in this post are affiliate links. We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to amazon.com and affiliate sites.

 


About author Mark Richardson

Mark Richardson is the author of the novels Malibu Burns, The Sun Casts No Shadow, and Hunt for the Troll.

His short stories have appeared in numerous crime and literary publications, including Hobart, Fugue, Segue, Crime Factory, Switchback, and Nth Position.

Born in the Chicago area, he graduated from the University of Iowa, and promptly escaped the midwestern winters for sunny California, first living in Los Angeles and then San Francisco. He spent thirty years working as a writer and marketer for tech companies in Silicon Valley.

Mark now lives in the East Bay with his wife, two children, and the world’s cutest dog. He spends his time writing fiction, obsessing about the Chicago Cubs, attending his daughter’s softball games, and reading stacks of books. He loves genre-bending fiction, especially speculative writing with a noir flavor. In 2019, he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, and supports the Michael J. Fox Foundation. Check out his website at www.authormarkrichardson.com.

 

Saturday, September 24, 2022

Gritty intergalactic PI whodunit

Hot Ash by Russ Colchamiro is an intergalactic sci-fi mystery that melds urban grit, futuristic technology, and crime into fast-paced pulp fiction you can’t put down. The story is told through the classic first-person narration of the protagonist, intergalactic private spy for hire, Angela Hardwicke.

 

Hot Ash


Hardwicke and her partner-in-training, Eric Whistler, are hired by Camile Engquist following the mysterious death of her wealthy, elderly husband, Iggy, who built a real estate development company from the ground up. The widow had worked by his side for years and was set to step in and run the company but somehow the will was changed without her knowledge just before he passed. The stepkids get it all and pushed her out without a cent. Camile claims her stepkids stole her inheritance and Hardwicke thinks there may be some merit to the woman’s claims and takes the case.

 

Hardwicke works the case with her young protégé, Eric Whistler. Their relationship provides another layer of interest to the story. He’s like a dog that wants to be let off the leash to prove himself and she says he isn’t ready. As the story progresses there’s much more to it than that.

 

Russ Colchamiro does a masterful job of creating a dystopian Sci-fi backdrop in this fast-paced mystery that dives into the real estate development taken over by the wealthy Engquist kids. The case takes Hardwicke and Whistler down the path of corporate succession where they find themselves deep in the world of the haves and have-nots. Clues raise questions that take the case in a whole new direction pointing to synthetic concrete and a drug known as Hot Ash. What does one have to do with the other, if anything? And what do they have to do with Iggy Engquist’s death, if anything? The answer to those questions takes Hardwicke and Whistler off-world to an imposing domed city with clean air and a sinister underbelly. What they find is more dangerous and runs deeper than they could have imagined.

 

This story is superbly written with an authentic gritty PI who-dun-it feel. It’s unpredictable, action-packed, and fast-paced with well-developed characters, including a strong female protagonist in Hardwicke. She’s an engaging hard-boiled but vulnerable sleuth. Clever but second-guesses herself at times, and Whistler makes a perfect complementary sidekick. Another big positive in my mind is that the Sci-fi techno-babble makes sense. It delivers a futuristic setting filled with out-of-this world technology, shady characters, fistfights, shootouts, double-crosses, and backstabbing. The thing I enjoyed most about Hot Ash is that I couldn’t figure it out until the author tied things up in a tidy package at the end and delivered them to my lap. 

 

I give Hot Ash a solid five stars and recommend this book to Sci-fi enthusiasts who enjoy a good murder mystery with a PI who fights to stay alive while prowling the shady parts of town and the dark minds that govern them. I think those who enjoy crime thrillers, in general, will be happy with this story. As a word of caution, this book does contain plenty of strong language and violence. It’s not excessive and befits the story.

 

While Hot Ash is a stand-alone mystery, it is number three in a series that can be read in any order, and now that I’ve read it, I’ll be checking out Crackle and Fire (Book 1) and Fractured Lives (Book 2).

 

As BookHookup, I am a long-time book reviewer and I received Hot Ash as a free review copy and have not been compensated for reviewing or recommending it. This review is posted in collaboration with #Black Phoenix Book Tours. Some links in this post are affiliate links. We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to amazon.com and affiliate sites.

 

Russ Colchamiro

 About the Author

 

Russ Colchamiro is the author of the sci-fi mystery novels Crackle and Fire and Fractured Lives, featuring his hardboiled intergalactic private eye Angela Hardwicke. He is also the author of the rollicking time travel/space adventure, Crossline, the SFF backpacking comedy series Finders Keepers, Genius de Milo, and Astropalooza, editor of the sci-fi mystery anthology Love, Murder & Mayhem, and co-author of the noir anthology Murder in Montague Falls.

 

A member of the Mystery Writers Association, Hot Ash is Russ’s third book in his Angela Hardwicke series and has written more than a dozen short stories for various anthologies. He is also the host of the long-running podcast Russ’s Rockin’ Rollercoaster, interviewing a who’s who of science fiction, crime, and mystery authors. Russ lives in New Jersey with his wife, two ninjas, and his black lab Jinx.

 

Russ Colchamiro's Social Media

https://russcolchamiro.com/ 

https://twitter.com/authorduderuss 

https://www.instagram.com/authorduderuss/