I am very pleased to share with you all the first guest review on
the blog.
This one comes from author, blogger, musician and all round bloody
good guy, Kit Power. If you haven’t already, then you need to check out a
couple of Kit’s books, Lifeline and also The Loving Husband and The Faithful Wife.
Kit also has a monthly column he writes for Ginger Nuts of Horror
and this is well worth checking out.
I also must publicly pass on a personal thanks to Kit. A few months
ago he recognised something in my reviewing and put his neck on the line for me
and contacted Jim McCleod who runs GNOH. Jim very graciously gave me a chance
and took me on.
If it hadn’t been for Kit taking it upon himself to contact Jim and
mention me, and Jim taking me on, I probably wouldn’t be doing what I’m doing today.
Thanks for having faith in what I do Kit. I owe you some beer.
Genre: Noir / Thriller
Publisher: One Eye Press
Publication Date: 4th March 2014
Pages: 126
KIT’S REVIEW:
‘Federales’ concerns Marcos, a federal police officer working in Mexico City, desperately trying to stay ahead of the corruption and violence. Not a hero. Just a working man trying to make it in an increasingly bleak and desperate situation.
Irvin does a superb job in invoking Mexico. I've never
been, so cannot speak to the authenticity of the details, but it certainly felt
real to this English gringo – in plain, unfussy prose, the claustrophobic
humidity and edge-of-poverty living is vividly evoked. So too the internal
desperation and frailty of our protagonist. The alcoholic cop on the edge –
wife recently left him, yet – is a staple of noir, of course. Still, it's
classic for a reason, and Irvin does a great job presenting the vulnerability
of Marcos, the sense of an essentially decent person just worn down beyond the
point of no return by brutal circumstance.
The pacing I found surprisingly leisurely considering the
overall length of the story, but it's a savvy choice, because it gives Marcos
and his situation room to breathe, to sweat. As he's forced to leave the city,
and takes on his new assignment, we find ourselves dreading along with him the
outcome. Irvin does a superb job of gradually turning the screw, increasing the
stress with each page. Working faithfully within the conventions of the genre,
he nonetheless finds was to surprise, thrill, and shock. It's a bleak and
bloody tale, befitting the subject matter, and I appreciate the lack of pulled
punches. If you're looking for Stallone/Cobra style revenge fantasies, move
along. But if you're looking for gritty, well written noir with heart, a
conscience, and an unflinching eye, you could do a lot worse.
It's an impressive novella, and I look forward to reading
more from this author.
General rating:
★★★★ Kit gives this a 4 stars. Must be good cause this man doesn't post it if he doesn't like it
You can buy Federales here:
Book Synopsis:
Mexican Federal Agent Marcos Camarena dedicated his life
to the job. But in a country where white knights die meaningless deaths,
martyred in a hole with fifty other headless bodies in the desert, corruption
is not an attribute but a scale; no longer a stigma but the status quo.
When Marcos's life is threatened, he leaves law
enforcement and his life in Mexico City behind for a coastal resort town until
an old friend asks him to look after an outspoken politician, a woman who knows
cartel violence all too well. Despite his best efforts, Marcos can't find it in
his heart to refuse, and soon finds himself isolated on the political front
lines of the war on drugs. Inspired by true events, Federales is a story of
survivors' compulsive devotion to a cause in the face of ever-darkening circumstances.
Christopher Irvin has traded all hope of a good night's sleep for the chance to spend his mornings writing dark and noir fiction. He is the author of Federales and Burn Cards, as well as short stories featured in several publications, including Thuglit, Beat to a Pulp, Needle, and Shotgun Honey. He lives with his wife and son in Boston, Massachusetts.
Christopher’s author page can be found here.
Kit Power lives and writes in Milton Keynes, and insists he's fine with that. His short dark fiction has appeared in many venues, including Splatterpunk Magazine, the 'At Hells Gate II' charity anthology and 'Widowmakers: The James Newman Benefit Anthology', and he has a novella out with Black Beacon Books. He's also self published a non-supernatural horror novella, called 'Lifeline', and his debut novel 'GodBomb!' should be arriving in the spring. He also writes a monthly column called 'My Life In Horror' for the Gingernuts Of Horror website.
You can see more of Kit at his website.
Kit’s author page can be found here.
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