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Hardcover Black Fly Season Book

ISBN: 0399152555

ISBN13: 9780399152559

Black Fly Season

(Book #3 in the John Cardinal and Lise Delorme Mystery Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Winner of Britain's Silver Dagger and Canada's Arthur Ellis awards, shortlisted for Bouchercon's Hammett, Anthony, and Macavity prizes, Giles Blunt returns with this third intensely disturbing crime novel. When a beautiful young woman stumbles into a rough Algonquin Bay tavern covered in black fly bites, bits of leaves stuck in her curly red hair, the bartender knows she is either dumb or high. No one in Algonquin Bay goes out unprotected in black...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A Classic Page-Turner

"Black Fly Season" was my first Giles Blunt novel and, after reading it, I'm surprised Blunt is not a runaway best seller. "Black Fly" has all the right stuff of a perfect mystery/thriller: interesting characters, a well-tuned plot, crisp dialogue, and an unlikely but effective northern Canadian setting. Blunt's writing style is similar to Lee Child - high praise - while the content is reminiscent of Ken Goddard, who has written some fine crime novels ("Balefire", "Prey"...) featuring the US Fish and Wildlife Department. Giles and researched his subject material well, and throws in some neat forensics to boot, making for the classic summer read that will keep you up long after you should be sleeping. A young girl his wandering around the local Algonquin Bay watering hole, incoherent and obviously suffering from amnesia. With good reason, it turns out - she has a bullet lodged in her brain. Homicide detective John Cardinal and his partner Lise Delorme are on the case, trying first to identify the redheaded young victim and then try and find those behind the attempted murder. From there, Blunt takes us on a guided tour of the north woods heroin trade, complete with renegade bikers and a mysterious and evil Voodoo-like religion. Blunt keep the story line clean and the dialog mercifully crisp, focusing his efforts on unraveling the crime while building a uniquely depraved bad guy. The thriller clips along to a suspenseful if predictable climax and high adrenaline entertainment for the whole trip. This is highly recommended reading; I'm looking forward to catching up on Blunt's previous efforts that I've missed.

Exquisite Mystery - Top Of The Genre

Mr. Blunt creates one of the finest mystery novels I have ever read with this book. He has multiple characteristics embedded in his writing that make him one of the very best mystery writers ever. His articulation is excellent. His vocabulary is a few levels up from the usual 8th grade vocabulary used, even by many of the masters. And, perhaps the most interesting technique of all is the "architecture" of the book. The use of small and fast reading chapters; the elegance and depth of character development; the complexity of the crimes and the intricacy of finding the one who was responsible; all combine to make this book a very fine work of Murder/Mystery Authorship. The book is very much centered around the use of Santeria, a Cuban form of Voodoo, but with particularly nasty methods. This version of voodoo believes that one can kill animals, and even human beings and make their spirits do work for you; gather information for you; etc. But in order to make those spirits do their work for you, the sacrifice must be done in the right phase of the moon, and the victim must be horribly tortured to death, while mutilated so that all blood runs out of the body. This is the scene that Officer Cardinal and his partner Officer Delorme are dealing with in this story. The detail, at just the right level is particularly well developed by Blunt in this story. He has a knack of being able to write about a horrifying crime scene just to the right limit, where only the characters actually get nauseous; but not quite the reader. His ability to describe the relevant details of a scene is glorious and his sentences are not over-modified with excessive adjectives and adverbs to create the illusion of literary style. Blunt actually has literary style, which is one of the things that make this book so attractive and interesting to read. The climax is very much climactic. And the development of the story, especially from the reader's perspective is superb. This book is very highly recommended for all readers of the Murder/Mystery Genre, and for any reader looking for a page turning experience that is on the edge of actual classic literature.

Excellent

I have read all three books in this series and they just keep getting better and better. Blunt has created interesting, realistic characters in Cardinal and Delorme. His descriptions are wonderfully written without being overwhelming in detail. The story flowed very well. This is not a "who done it" type of mystery. The story revolves more around who the characters are, why they do what they do, and how the mystery is solved. I would love to see this series of books get the attention they deserve.

Cardinal and Delorme really shine

This novel, the third in the Cardinal/Delorme series continues the action in a small Canadian town with the two dedicated detectives hot on the trail of a vicious and elusive killer. The novel moves along quite well with the reader constantly wondering if the police can outdo the bad guy. Delorme and Cardinal are a great pair of characters and the author really plays them off each other very convincingly. Cardinal seems to be more fleshed out in this story. We learn more about his distrubed wife and other demons he has to deal with. I would like to see more about the Delorme character in the next novel which can't come too soon. This is a really good series.

complex chiller

Near Algonquin Bay, Canada, the patrons are enjoying their drinks at World Tavern when the woman entered. Black fly bites were all over her body and she flitters from one table to the next. When locals try to pick her up starting with asking her name, she says she has no idea. They call her "Red" for obvious reasons. However, another patron local cop Jerry Commando takes the baffled woman to City Hospital. Doctors quickly realize the cause of her perplexity and amnesia has nothing to do with frying her brain on drugs; instead the docile woman was shot in the head as there is a bullet lodged in her brain; she does not remember the incident. Homicide Detectives John Cardinal and Lise Delorme head the investigation that includes keeping Red safe because both law enforcement officials believes that the person who injured her shot to kill and once he or she learns she still lives will be back to correct their mistake. The return of Cardinal and Delorme (see THE DELICATE STORM AND FORTY WORDS FOR SORROW) bluntly means a great time for police procedural fans. Their latest entry is as terrific as usual starting from the moment Red enters the remote local's bar, through a medical procedure to remove the bullet, and continuing as the two detectives know that she is a target, but to insure her safety may have to use her as bait. The motive for the attempted killing will chill the audience much more than winter in Ontario as it is based on real cult murders on the Mexican-United States border. BLACK FLY SEASON is a complex chiller that will shake the audience with its art imitates life premise. Harriet Klausner
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