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13 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Blacklist, Sara Paretsky, 9 Jul 2005
Dear oh dear, Crime Writers' Association of Great Britain, what IS going on? Blacklist, Best Crime Novel of 2004? Nonsense. The CWA has got a little...wilful, with its past couple of choices for the Gold Dagger award. I was a little surprised when Blacklist won, I must admit, but I hadn't read it so I had to reserve proper judgement until I had. To prepare myself, I read one or two from Paretsky, and then got started on this... My concerns were, annoyingly, justified. Well, to me, anyway. Blacklist, like the previous year's winner (Minette Walters' Fox Evil), is not a bad novel. Not by any means. Indeed, both are GOOD novels. But, while they are good, to make a claim that they're, individually, the best of their year is a rather obviously ludicrous. Neither have the style, prose, character, innovation, themes, originality, luminescence, freshness - whatever it is that contributes to a great crime novel - to set them out from the pack. I enjoyed both enough to mean that they're worthwhile reads, but nothing more. But, as well as having nothing to make them absolutely brilliant, they are also too flawed to be considered anything close to Best of the Year. Blacklist suffers from a number of problems, some bigger than others. Mainly, it's just too long. At 556 pages, it could easily be a hundred less and a far better book (I found the same problem with Paretsky's last, Total Recall). The fact that its too long means: you loose interest somewhat in both he plot strands, and because they're relatively complex, this doesn't do you any favours. In the end, I largely gave up trying to understand the ins and outs of who did what when and why, and just accepted whatever Paretsky happened to be telling me at the time. This ain't a good groove to get into. There are really too many characters, too many families and intertwined histories - with their concomitant relationships and other complexities to make sense of - to give the book the effortless flow that Gold Dagger winners should normally have. It would be okay if Paretsky's writing or voice was involving or engaging enough, but it isn't. Now, don't get me wrong: there's nothing wrong with the writing OR the voice (both perfectly adequate; the writing is actually rather good; her witticisms are sly and clever and funny), but neither's special enough to absolutely grip you to the extent that any complexities just iron themselves out with the clarity of the writing (as would happen with a writer like Sarah Waters, whose wonderfully clear writing means that the complexities of books as labyrinthine and complex as Fingersmith are almost unnoticeable). Warshawski is admirable, a fiery and attractive protagonist. But nothing spectacularly special. Serviceable, entertaining, engaging and human, yes, but she lacks the fascination of characters like Rebus or Javier Falcon, who can win awards by themselves alone. Mostly, my complaint is that it's just a good book, rather than a great one (look for Mo Hayder's Tokyo, if you're looking for the great novel that should have probably won instead). It's very enjoyable until it starts to get too long, very easy to read until it gets too complex. It's been criticised for being too political, but I don't think that's really valid. It's not too political at all: in that respect, it's actually an excellent book (I've doubt that its political thematics were what won it the Gold Dagger; had it been published four or five years ago, it wouldn't have come within sniffing distance even of the shortlist, I doubt). It's a brilliant scream of rage, a cry for sanity. At times, it bristles with anger, anger at the way American society has been turned inside out, the way power has been seized on the back of a great tragedy by the stirring up of irrational hysteria. In that respect, yes, this book is excellent. As a crime novel, though, it's just good.
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