Showing posts with label Jakob Arjouni. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jakob Arjouni. Show all posts

Sunday, January 12, 2014

New Reviews: Arjouni, Hayes, Kasasian, Malliet, Muir, L Russell, M Russell, Smith, Staincliffe

This first set of reviews for 2014, added to the Euro Crime website today, is a mixture of new reviews and a catch-up of those posted directly on the blog in the last few weeks, so you may have read some of them before if you're a regular :).

Euro Crime took a break over the festive period in terms of reviews however the review team revealed their favourite discoveries of 2013 in a series of posts. Currently we are part-way through unveiling the review team's favourite reads of 2013. After the individual lists have been posted I will tally them all up and reveal the overall favourite Euro Crime authors, titles and translators of 2013.

NB. Keep up to date with Euro Crime by following the blog and/or liking the Euro Crime Facebook page.

New Reviews


Lynn Harvey reviews Jakob Arjouni's final book, the fifth in the Kayankaya series, Brother Kemal, tr. Anthea Bell and she recommends it to "to all lovers of mean streets and wily detectives";

Terry Halligan reviews one of the "big" books of 2013, I Am Pilgrim by Terry Hayes calling it an "absolutely tremendous book";


I review The Mangle Street Murders by M R C Kasasian which is my favourite discovery of the year;

Susan White reviews the seasonal A Fatal Winter by American author G M Malliet which is perhaps one more for cosy fans;
Michelle Peckham reviews T F Muir's Life for a Life the fourth in the St Andrews-set DI Andy Gilchrist series, saying it's a "great read";

Amanda Gillies reviews Leigh Russell's Cold Sacrifice which is the first in a spin-off series featuring DS Ian Peterson;


Geoff reviews The City of Strangers by Michael Russell, the second in the Stefan Gillespie series, set in 1939;

Terry also reviews Anna Smith's Screams in the Dark the third in the Rosie Gilmour series, set in 1999



and Rich Westwood reviews the second of the Scott & Bailey novelisations, Bleed Like Me by Cath Staincliffe.


Previous reviews can be found in the review archive.

Forthcoming titles can be found by author or date or by category, here along with releases by year.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Review: Brother Kemal by Jakob Arjouni tr. Anthea Bell

Brother Kemal by Jakob Arjouni translated by Anthea Bell, August 2013, 192 pages, No Exit Press, ISBN: 1842439650

Reviewed by Lynn Harvey.
(Read more of Lynn's reviews for Euro Crime here.)

“...My name is Kayankaya, and I look the way I look. I don't know how Muslim I am under religious law, but ask any of my neighbours, I'm sure they could tell you.”


Marieke is sixteen; a talented, committed and attractive young woman according to her mother. Her mother is also attractive, a blonde with a slim, toned body who knows the effect she has on a man. And the man in question this time is local private eye Kemal Kayankaya. But although the look in Valerie de Chavannes' eye says “I only ever think of one thing”, her manner is something else. Kayankaya must find her missing daughter Marieke. She refuses to give him the names of her daughter's friends but what she will tell him that the girl recently came into contact with an older man, a photographer called Erden Abakay, and a less than desirable acquaintance. Valerie de Chavannes is convinced that Marieke is with him. Kayankaya must get her back but he mustn't let her know who hired him to find her. Oh – and he must “discourage” Abakay from further contact. At this point Kayankaya cannot help wondering which of the two – mother or daughter – got to know the photographer first. After more sparring, he agrees to take the case and sets off back to his office.

At the run-down apartment building which houses his place of business, Kayankaya is intercepted by a tall, smart woman who introduces herself as Chief Press Officer for the publisher Maier Verlag. One of their authors is due to attend the forthcoming Frankfurt Book Fair to publicise his latest book. He is Moroccan and his novel is about a policeman who begins to question his Muslim faith when he falls in love with a young man. The central love affair and the book's depiction of Moroccan society has led to a hostile reception from certain Islamist quarters. With death threats made against the author, the publishers wish to hire Kayankaya as a bodyguard. In fact the author chose him for the job. Herr Kayankaya is a Muslim, is he not?....

Kayankaya has two cases to handle in BROTHER KEMAL: one is to find a missing sixteen year old girl and bring her home; the second is to protect a controversial author during his appearance at the Frankfurt Book Fair. Both will throw unexpected complications, not least when he finds a freshly dead body in the flat where the missing girl is being held. The shrewd but impulsive Kayankaya deals with the complication quickly, an act which in itself will have repercussions. And being the outsider that he is – he must also handle the assumptions of his clients as to both his Turkishness and his religious beliefs.

BROTHER KEMAL is the fifth in Arjouni's prize-winning series featuring Frankfurt-based, Turkish-German private eye Kemal Kayankaya. Translated seamlessly by Anthea Bell, who in her long career has worked on books ranging from Asterix to Stefan Zweig by way of Kafka, the result is a one hundred and ninety-two page long, tightly constructed gem. Although a different kind of wit in a different society, Kayankaya is a private-eye in the Raymond Chandler tradition. His confrontations with attractive femme-fatale Valerie de Chavannes recall Philip Marlowe's encounters with equally mysterious but tempting clients. So I waited for the inevitable slap in the face and Kayankaya's answering, rueful smile but they didn't happen; this is Jakob Arjouni's writing not Chandler's. Nevertheless the world-weary wit in his two-edged encounters with clients, acquaintances, and police contacts echo Chandler as does the book's pace and vivid characterisations.

But sadly I have found Jakob Arjouni's imperfect hero too late. The writer died of pancreatic cancer in January 2013 and BROTHER KEMAL is his last book. Publishers No Exit Press are releasing the previous four titles simultaneously by way of tribute and they look to be a classic suite of “outsider noir” tales. I hope to catch up with all of them and meanwhile certainly recommend BROTHER KEMAL to all lovers of mean streets and wily detectives.

Lynn Harvey, December 2013.