Showing posts with label Boris Akunin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boris Akunin. Show all posts

Monday, October 01, 2012

Event News: Boris Akunin in London (February 2013)

From an email from the London Review Bookshop:
Russian crime writer Boris Akunin will be in conversation with James Meek about how his writing reflects and interacts with literary traditions, as well as Russian culture, history and politics.

A philologist, critic, essayist, and translator of Japanese, Boris Akunin published his first detective stories in 1998 and has already become one of the most widely read authors in Russia. His Erast Fandorin books, full of literary games and allusions, are translated into English by Andrew Bromfield.
The event is on Friday 1 February at 7.00 pm and tickets are £10, bookable here.

Boris Akunin's bibliography on the Euro Crime website.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

New Reviews: Akunin, Brophy, Craig, Ellis, Forshaw, Hannah, Harper, Mallo, Robinson

Win 3 Richard Nottingham mysteries by Chris Nickson (UK only) closes 29 February.

Here are this week's 9 new reviews:
Laura Root reviews the tenth (and final?) Erast Fandorin adventure from Boris Akunin, and translated by Andrew Bromfield: The Diamond Chariot;

Lynn Harvey reviews Kevin Brophy's The Berlin Crossing which is heavier on the love story than the spy story apparently;

Terry Halligan reviews the second in the John Carlyle series from James Craig: Never Apologise, Never Explain;

Lizzie Hayes reviews the newest Wesley Peterson/Neil Watson mystery from Kate Ellis: The Cadaver Game;

Maxine Clarke reviews Barry Forshaw's guide to Scandinavian crime fiction: Death in a Cold Climate;

Susan White reviews Sophie Hannah's Kind of Cruel the seventh to feature her detectives Waterhouse and Zailer;

Amanda Gillies reviews Tom Harper's Secrets of the Dead, calling it "another excellent book";

I review Ernesto Mallo's follow-up to the CWA International Dagger Shortlisted Needle in a Haystack: Sweet Money, tr. Katherine Silver set in 1980s Buenos Aires

and Mark Bailey wants more standalones from Peter Robinson after reading Before the Poison.
Previous reviews can be found in the review archive.

Forthcoming titles can be found by author or date or by category, here and new titles by Kate Ellis, Claire McGowan, Peter Robinson and Robert Wilson have been added to these pages this week.

Tuesday, June 07, 2011

World Book Club - Podcasts

Two new podcasts which may be of interest to Euro Crime readers have become recently available courtesy of BBC World Book Club:

World Book Club invites the globe's great authors to discuss their best known novel.

This monthly programme, presented by Harriett Gilbert, includes questions from World Service listeners.

The most recent author to feature is Val McDermid and prior to that, Boris Akunin. The interview with Jo Nesbo is still available as well as several more at the BBC website.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

New Reviews: Akunin, Cain, Corley, Griffiths, Hague, Hinchcliffe

This month's competition is open to all. Win a copy of The Black Monastery by Stav Sherez.

The following reviews have been added to the review archive over on the main Euro Crime website:
New Reviews:

Fiona Walker highly recommends the Erast Fandorin series by Boris Akunin, including the latest one, The Coronation;

Terry Halligan reviews the second in the 'Accident Man' series by Tom Cain, The Survivor, which is now available in paperback;

Paul Blackburn looks at Elizabeth Corley's newest police procedural, Innocent Blood

Pat Austin is enthusiastic about Elly Griffiths's atmospheric debut The Crossing Places;

Michelle Peckham reviews Steven Hague's debut Justice for All which is the beginning of a series set in America

and Maxine Clarke reviews the psychological thriller Out of a Clear Sky by Sally Hinchcliffe.
Previous reviews can be found in the review archive and forthcoming titles can be found here.

Friday, May 25, 2007

The new Sister Pelagia novel

An email from Orion has kindly reminded me that the new book from Boris Akunin has recently come out - Pelagia and the Black Monk, the second in the Sister Pelagia series.

Synopsis:
"Just as the dust from the case of the White Bulldog begins to settle in the small Russian town of Zavolzhsk, it is shaken up once again by the arrival of a stranger: this time, a desperately frightened monk from the island monastery of New Ararat, who seeks the help of the bishop, Mitrofanii. The monks have been troubled by visions of a dark, hooded figure: a figure that appears to walk on the waters of the vast Blue Lake surrounding their monastery and strikes terror into the hearts of all who encounter it. Sceptical of ghost stories and dismissive of rural superstitions, Mitrofanii dispatches Alexei Lentochkin, his clever young ward, to investigate the mystery, only for Lentochkin himself to appear to fall victim to the phantom. With sightings of the Black Monk occurring with disturbing frequency, and rumours of suspicious deaths reaching his ears, the Bishop decides to send two more of his most trusted advisors, in turn, to New Ararat, but they too meet with unexpected fates. Finally, Sister Pelagia takes matters into her own hands, and, adopting a number of ingenious disguises, she ventures across the Blue Lake in search of answers, and in pursuit of the Black Monk. But as she delves deeper into the layers of secrecy that cloak the island and its strange population, and as the body count continues to rise, Pelagia begins to realise that an encounter with a ghost may be the least of her problems."

If you fancy sampling it, a 30 page PDF extract can be downloaded here.