Our book for July 25th is Case Histories by Kate Atkinson.
Like Donna Tartt in The Little Friend (2002), 1995 Whitbread winner Atkinson ( Behind the Scenes at the Museum ) here combines a compelling narrative drive with sophisticated psychological portraits and telling detail. Artfully exploiting the conventions of the detective novel while also sending them up, Atkinson gives us Jackson Brodie, the world’s most empathic private eye, who seemingly channels his clients’ grief while attempting to provide closure. Addicted to the plaintive songs of female country-and-western singers and heartsick over the breakup of his marriage and his separation from his daughter, Jackson becomes friend and confidant to the people who seek his aid. One of his cases involves the florid, bickering Land sisters, who, after cleaning out their father’s house upon his death, are stunned to find the bedraggled blue bunny that was their sister’s most prized possession before she went missing 30 years ago. Another case concerns lonely, obese Theo, who, out of concern for his daughter’s safety, insisted that she work in his law office rather than as a bartender, only to find that he put her directly in harm’s way. As Jackson methodically tracks down decades-old clues, Atkinson employs omniscient narration to step in and out of crime scenes both past and present. Playful humor, an impressive technique, and an offbeat detective with a penchant for weeping are the most obvious pleasures of a page-turner that succeeds in being both brainy and thoroughly entertaining. –Joanne Wilkinson Copyright 2004 Booklist