From the name, you'll guess that I'm a Hitchcock fan. Well, now I'm a Sheldon fan too. Like Hitch's movies, this novel works its way into your head and then your heart. To begin with, it feels like most other mystery stories - an ironic loner hero, lots of zappy dialogue and monologue, a case, a sexy-but-vulnerable femme fatale - but before too long you realize that all these familiar components have been put together in a completely surprising way.
And then you relaize you're hooked, desperate to find out how it's all going to end up and unprepared to put the novel down...
One of the discussion forums I visit - palimpest.org - posted this review from "Time Out" magazine which probably puts it all into words better than I can:
THE SMILING AFFAIR - by JEREMY SHELDON
(Time Out review by Henry Archer, July 2005)
"Part detective story, part supernatural thriller, Jeremy Sheldon's first novel boasts some extremely skilful story-telling. You almost feel guilty for sitting back and letting the pages flutter past of an afternoon. However, "The Smiling Affair" is so absorbing that the guilt, and indeed the afternoon, are quickly forgotten. Jay Richards is a paranormal investigator - a sort of cross bewteen Jonathan Creek and Mike Hammer. Ghost-hunting, pot-smoking and bill-dodging, he scrapes his living from San Francisco's terminally stupid and lamentably lonely. But among the faulty plumbing and heavy-footed stalkers, he encounters the odd genuinely inexplicable case.
"Take Zelda Smiling, the twin sister of an ex-lover. She approaches Jay becasue the sister, Helena, has apparently run away with the neighbour, leaving her husband and a group of guests under duress at her family mansion. When ghosts start scaring the housekeeper and ancient portraits move in the night, Jay arrives with his EMF scanner and Geiger counter to investigate. And it's extremely good fun. As the story twists, the concentrated drive of the narrative is astounding - not many words are wasted, each efficient chapter thrusting hard to the point. This does mean, however, that the novels lacks resonance. Jay's relationship with Helena Smiling is recalled in scattered first-person chapters which do little to elucidate the nature of their love. The set-up, too, is naggingly formulaic in places. But such criticisms are neutralized by the force of the storytelling. "The Smiling Affair" might be light, but it's thoroughly entertaining."