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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not a typical crime novel, 23 Nov 2006
It's no secret that the author of this book, Benjamin Black, is actually Booker prize-winning novelist John Banville in disguise. Which partly explains why I rushed out and bought this in hardcover. I'm a longtime Banville fan and was intrigued as to how he would handle the crime genre given he's largely made his name on the back of (high brow) literary fiction.
Christine Falls is certainly an intriguing and arresting read. I might have been holed up in my sick bed at the time, but I think my reaction would have been the same regardless: I just could not bear to put this book down and finished it in one sitting.
Essentially the story, which is set in 1950s Dublin, is about a pathologist, the love-worn Quirke, who discovers a colleague, Griffin, altering a file to cover up the cause of death of a young woman called Christine Falls. Seeking to discover the real cause of the woman's death, Quirke finds himself in the midst of a conspiracy, which involves not only Griffin but the upper echelons of Dublin society and the Catholic Church. Its tentacles stretch across the Atlantic to New England, and goes back several generations. The closer Quirke gets to unravelling this conspiracy, the more dangerous his investigation becomes and before long he's being warned off in no uncertain terms.
Black/Banville adds additional layers to this quite straightforward storyline. He makes Griffin the foster brother of Quirke. This is further complicated by the fact that Quirke and Griffin married a set of sisters and that Quirke, who is widowed, has always carried a torch for the other sister. Quirke is especially close to his niece and is often accused of leading her astray, so there's a lot of family tension to propel the story along.
Throw in a second narrative about a young American couple in New England who adopt a baby from a local Catholic orphanage and you get a well-rounded, multi-layered narrative with enough depth and breadth to keep even the most jaded reader interested.
And, as you would expect from such an experienced and accomplished author, all the various threads of the book are neatly tied together at the end, although I largely guessed the conclusion long before I reached it. Despite this, I found Christine Falls a deeply satisfying read.
This is aided, no doubt, by the Quirke character, who is beautifully realised and all too human. His tragic past adds a certain depth, and I especially liked his strong moral compass.
Setting the story in 1950s Dublin is yet another stroke of genius: it lends Christine Falls the required claustrophobia to make the novel a little darker, a little edgier than having set it in modern times.
But ultimately, I'm not sure this is a typical crime novel. It's certainly no police procedural and it's not exactly a detective story. Perhaps literary 'mystery' might be a truer description.
And for those of you who might have struggled with Banville's style in the past, I can report that he has toned down his usual feats of literary flamboyance: the writing is very immediate and easy to comprehend, so there's no need to keep a dictionary at hand. Good news, no doubt, for those of you who read on public transport!
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
"We all have our own kinds of sin.", 30 Oct 2007
With the same care that he devotes to his "serious" fiction, Booker Prize-winning author John Banville, under the pen name of "Benjamin Black," plumbs Dublin's Roman Catholic heritage in a mystery which examines the question of sin. The result is a vibrantly alive, intensely realized story of Dublin life and values in the 1950s--a mystery which makes the reader think at the same time that s/he is being entertained. Unlike most of the characters, Quirke, the main character, holds no awe for the church. In his early forties, "big and heavy and awkward," Quirke is a pathologist/coroner at Holy Family Hospital, a man who "prizes his loneliness as mark of some distinction." A realist, he has seen the dark side of life too often to hold out much hope for the future, his own or anyone else's.
His vision of humanity is not improved when he goes to his office unexpectedly one evening and finds his brother-in-law, famed obstetrician Malachy Griffin, altering documents regarding the death of a young woman, Christine Falls. Quirke's autopsy of Christine shows, not surprisingly, that she has died in childbirth, a "fallen woman" in the eyes of the church. The nature of Christine's sin, however, does not begin to compare to the sins that Quirke uncovers during his investigation of her death and the fate of her child.
John Banville (Black) has always been at least as interested in character as plot, and this novel is no exception. Quirke lived in an orphanage before being unofficially adopted by Judge Garrett Griffin, father of Dr. Malachy Griffin, who is obviously involved in the case. Developing on parallel planes, the novel becomes a study of Quirke and his personal relationships, at the same time that it is a study of Christine Falls and what she represents about Dublin society, the medical profession, and the church and its influence. Gradually, the reader learns about the Knights of St. Patrick, a conservative Catholic organization; the association of the Knights with American charities; the behind-the-scenes administration of orphanages and convents; and the nature of power in upper-echelon Dublin.
Murders, torture, beatings, and violence keep the action level high (and a bit melodramatic), in keeping with the great, old-fashioned tradition of 1950s mystery-writing. A change of location from Dublin to Boston broadens the scope, connecting the Dublin mystery to the history of the Irish and their traditions in Boston. The author's use of parallel scenes emphasizes contrasts and similarities (a Christmas party in Dublin vs. a Christmas party in Boston, for example), and he maintains a conversational voice appropriate for Quirke. After this fine debut mystery, one can easily imagine Banville developing the character of Quirke in future mysteries and becoming, like Graham Greene, a writer of both serious literary fiction and "entertainments." Mary Whipple
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13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
As a 'detective' or 'crime' novel it gets only 1 star, 8 Mar 2008
I note that other reviewers really liked this, so you might too. But if you're anything like me you will be terribly disappointed.
I bought this off the shelf in a supermarket because it says on the back cover "Booker Prize-winning author John Banville introduces the irascible pathologist Quirke, an unforgettable new crime-fiction detective" This told me (a) that Black is a 'good' writer and that (b) this is a mystery novel involving pathology. I read a lot of what's usually described as crime or mystery writing from Patterson and Kernick at the almost unreadable end, through Coben, Connolly, Connelly, Cornwell, Deaver, Gerritsen, Kellerman, Rankin, Slaughter, etc. They all have different strengths and all have much from which Black could learn.
Perhaps I was led to expect too much. The cover quote suggests it's "Superb ... almost unbearably moving" and other reviewers are almost as gushing. I even heard the literary reviewer on Classic FM describe a subsequent Benjamin Black as 'perfect'. Clearly in literary circles, a very literary novel with some semblance of plot or narrative is a rare and treasured thing. If indeed you like John Banville's work and you like 'literary' novels, you will like this as much as other reviews suggest, but if you do come to this from the same position as me - a fan of mysteries looking for something more 'literary' in the sense that it effortlessly and beautifully describes scenes, events and emotions, then you could well be disappointed.
My first disappointment is that it contains no pathology. Quirke does not use his supposed professional skill at all. He might as well be a librarian.
My second disappointment is that 1950s Dublin could be anywhere at any time. I was hoping to get a real sense of the people, the place and the era, but I clearly missed something.
My third disappointment is the plot. There are no surprises left in what the Catholic Church got up to in the 1950s. There are no amazing revelations here. I wasn't expecting a high body count, or graphic detail of homicides or autopsies. Just a decent plot, maybe with a twist or two, perhaps a surprise here and there, something - anything- that makes the narrative a mystery. Black should watch a few episodes of Scooby Doo to get the idea, which is a simple one.
My fourth disappointment is the suspense, or total lack of it. At one point, Quirke fears for his safety as a couple of sinister criminals watch him from the shadows. Yeah? I wasn't too bothered myself.
In a detective novel, narrative is paramount. Black doesn't seem to care. In a detective novel, the skillful writer will evoke scenes and moods with a few carefully crafted phrases. Black rambles to no great effect.
If you like proper, normal, detective novels, you get a far better evocation of people's minds and emotions from Jonathan Kellerman. You get a far better sense of place in Ian Rankin's Edinburgh, or John Connolly's Maine. And you'll actually get some pathology in Cornwell, if little else (go for Gerritsen instead). If you want some detective work, a little mystery and suspense, then read anything but this.
The back cover quote from Marcel Berlins reads, "Succeeds sensationally ... An absorbing plot, beguiling characters and evocative settings ... His pacing is impeccable." Either Berlins was reading a different book, or we have very different tastes. He is quite wrong. "Christine Falls" fails dismally. The plot is unconvincing, the characters uninteresting, the settings insipid. The pace is leaden.
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