The Welsh Man by Dave Lewis

 


Our Rating 3⭐s

You can buy The Welsh Man...here
About the author...here

  • The Blurb..

An authentic British road trip and old-fashioned love story. A violent but compelling tale of grim landscapes and dark morality. Paul Thorne is no angel. A hard man with a troubled past, his mistake was to fall for the wrong girl. When he said yes to love, he opened the door to death.

A tragic accident finds him running for his life from a vicious London crime boss. He seeks sanctuary in a sleepy, Welsh seaside town but instead of solace, he finds jealousy and betrayal.

A brutal journey through the underbelly of 80s and 90s Britain. Violent and sad. Powerful, beautiful prose lingers like a bruise, haunting the mind, long after the last page is read.

  • Our Review...
The Welsh Man tells the tale of Paul. Big  lovable but rough man from a lovable but rough part of the world. The Welsh Valleys are a place like no other. To most brits going to the valleys is like going back in time 50 years, which can be a good thing or a bad thing.

 Due to their weird geography they are not your average urban rough area. Most valleys run north–south, roughly parallel to each other, creating a “hand and fingers” pattern of development. flanked by steep hillsides, often covered in open moorland or dense forest. Between the valleys lie high, relatively remote plateaux that contrast with the busy valley floors. The topography restricts movement between valleys, with only a few high passes connecting them. Settlements stretch along the valley bottoms and lower slopes, forming long, narrow towns rather than compact cities.The geography shaped the rise of coal and iron industries in the 18th and 19th centuries, with mining communities built into the hillsides. Railways and roads snake through the valleys, linking communities but rarely crossing the uplands. 

The result is often ribbons of semi autonomous urban wasteland. very different to the rougher areas of London, Manchester or Glasgow. I often thought of the valleys as being like heroin. Amazing but cruel and can even drag you down to despair. But I love it (The valleys not drugs obv) 

The humour is self deprecating. eg. more blown out windows than Beirut, twinned with Mordor. Being a valley commando (as locals are known within Wales) is akin to being a member of the mafia, or the IRA. Once you're in you're never out. Fierce enemies and fierce friends, they will rob your last penny but will give you their last penny. They are honest and honest to your face, which some find rude. 

It is hard to find novels set in the valleys. As always Wales flies under the radar. So I chose this novel to read in part to see how the author (a fellow valley boy) portrays the mothership. And he's got it bang on. Hard as nails with a heart of gold.   

We follow Paul from Porth. A kind but tough kid from a broken home who finds his way into being a bouncer back in the 90s. He meets and falls in lovely with Charley. So far so good, but Charley one day just leaves, leaving Paul heartbroken. He eventually drifts to London and ends up working for some very serious gangsters. I'll leave the story there to avoid spoilers.

The story isn't a particularly complex one, but then not all stories have to be complex. The novel is very violent, as the subject matter dictates. The prose is sparing but accurate. Reminded me of Cormac McCarthy but from Wales with better punctuation.

 Overall I though it was OK and nice to read about the valleys.  

  • Selected Quotes...

The valleys left a mark on you for sure and I’ve certainly inherited the sick sense of humour and extraordinary spirit about the place. Deprivation and hardship became a badge of belonging. You know what I mean? Everyone’s had to suffer something; otherwise you wouldn’t fit in.

The bouncers know the clubs are swimming with drugs, the punters know, the dealers know, the manager knows and of course the cops know. Nobody does anything though. There is just too much money to be made and it’s too much hassle to try to stop it. Everyone knows this except the poor, law-abiding parents of the unfortunate sods that get poisoned every weekend.

It’s getting late and Charley decides it’s time Cara was safely tucked up in bed. Michael wasn’t arguing and was keen to do the tucking, with a capital F.

The legacy of the Tory policy to divide and conquer, leaving the hapless and hopeless to scrounge around for the scraps thrown to them by those lucky enough to have been dealt a better hand in life’s sick poker game.

I decided enough time had elapsed to risk it. I’d go home. Back to the land of my father. The father who was god knows where.

  • If You Liked This Then You May Like...
East of England by Eammon Griffin (review here)

Get Carter by Ted Lewis

He Died With His Eyes Open by Derek Raymond

Close To Death by Anthony Horrowitz

 


Rating 4⭐s
You can buy Close To Death...here
You can find out about the author...here

  • The Blurb...
Riverside Close is a picture-perfect community. The six exclusive and attractive houses are tucked far away from the noise and grime of city life, allowing the residents to enjoy beautiful gardens, pleasant birdsong and tranquility from behind the security of a locked gate.

It is the perfect idyll until the Kentworthy family arrives, with their four giant, gas-guzzling cars, a gaggle of shrieking children and plans for a garish swimming pool in the backyard. Obvious outsiders, the Kentworthys do not belong in Riverside Close, and they quickly offend every last one of their neighbours.

When Giles Kentworthy is found dead on his own doorstep, a crossbow bolt sticking out of his chest, Detective Hawthorne is the only investigator that can be called on to solve the case.

Because how do you solve a murder when everyone is a suspect?

  • Our Review...
I like Anthony Horrowitz as an author. He is both prolific and dependable. He never delivers anything less than about an 8 out of ten. He is my go to guy when I'm in a reading slump. In rugby when an outside half is trouble, going backwards and cornered invariably he just ships the ball out to his inside centre. A big ball carrier who dips his shoulder and drives forward to get the team back on the front foot. A good centre has good decision making skills coupled with clarity of thought and the nous of years of experience. Horrowitz is my inside centre, my literary Jamie Roberts. He is also recognised as a safe pair of hands by both the James Bond publishers and Sherlock Holmes publishers. He now writes officially sanctioned novels for both franchises. I digress, back to "Close To Murder (COM)." Once again he does not disappoint.

The beauty of the Hawthorn and Horrowitz (H&H) novels is the relationship between our mismatched protagonists. The character Horrowitz is indeed the very same as the author. Is it narcissistic to write yourself into your own book? He is very self deprecating about though, often portraying himself as a bumbling, out of his depth but essentially nice bloke. For the vast majority of the series he writes in the 1st person. Although for a large part of this novel, he writes in the third person as he is recounting a time before he met Hawthorn. Hawthorn, Played in my head by Phillip Glenister (of Life on Mars fame,) is a taciturn curmudgeon who doesn't play well with others. He does however have one magnificent redeeming feature. He is a genius at solving complex criminal cases. Horrowitz sadly lacks even the basic crime solving skills of Hawthorn, he does however possess the skills so lacking in Hawthorn. Namely those of openness, empathy and the ability to engage and communicate with others. So Hawthorn is the brains of the outfit while Horrowitz is basically the scribe recording events as they happen for later novelisation. Keen eyed bibliophiles would have spotted the obvious inspiration of Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson. Well if it isn't broke don't fix it, update it and sell it again.

This tale, the 5th in the H&H series centres on Riverside Close, a residential area in the posh, middle class area of Richmond London. Incidentally where the author lives. (I bet his neighbours are scanning this book for possible references to them!)
So far, so peaceful until the Giles Kenworthy moves in to the area. Definitely not one of their recognised social strata. A self made hedge fund manager, right wing borderline racist who blocks peoples drives with his multiple vehicles, has numerous parties and barbecues, gets planning permission to build a pool and generally recognised as being an awful neighbour. As time goes by he gives all the neighbours a cause to hate him. Which in the end gives the police far too many suspects to handle when he is found dead at his home with a cross bow bolt protruding from his neck.. Which one of them did it or did they go full Orient Express. DCI Khan suspecting a potential political banana skin calls in Hawthorn. He is to either solve the case and give the plaudits to Khan or in the event of failure to be a scapegoat. A no lose situation for the media savvy, upwardly mobile career policeman.

Hawthorn is unleashed on the suspects and along the way, he solves a few side quests. What is up with the two elderly reclusive spinsters? why does everyone employ a gardener who is not very good at gardening? Who was John Dudley, Hawthorns previous no2 and why hasn't Hawthorn ever mentioned him? These are the starters to whet the appetite for the main course of who killed Kenworthy and why. We are fed juicy red herrings a plenty. The author is very cunning, he shows us the obvious path to a solution and another hidden trail and yet another more deeply camouflaged trace but wrapped up in these and buried deep like Vietnamese sniper in the jungle is the actual solution. I must admit he had me caught up in one of his rain forest booby traps. But when the investigation concludes it becomes embarrassingly obvious. A real fore-heading slapping "of course" moment

Wonderfully intricate and plausible plotting, with more threads than Jeffrey Epstein's contact list. It also boasts well developed and distinct characters. With so many players it was a possibility that they merge in readers head. It is teastament to the writer's skill that they do not. If she were alive today Agatha Christie would be reading Anthony Horrowitz books

  • Selected Quotes...
“Did he think he was about to be arrested?’ Hawthorne asked. ‘He didn’t say. But the police wouldn’t have arrested him for something he hadn’t done.’ ‘I’m sure that’s never happened,’ Dudley agreed.”

“Surely that’s just semantics.’ ‘The trouble with you, Tony, is that you’re great with long words, but you never think them through. The semantics! It’s the small things that matter. That’s how criminals give themselves away.”

“But you will give me the solution!’ ‘No. I won’t.’ ‘Why not?’ ‘You never know the solution, mate. That’s what makes your writing so special. You don’t have a clue.’ Had any compliment ever been more backhanded?”

It was part of the charm of the place that it existed in the world as it had been fifty years ago, when neighbours left their doors open or their keys under the mat and burglaries were rare enough to be news.”

“Most murderers don’t really think about what they’re going to do,’ he said. ‘You get the fantasists, the husbands who hate their wives, the kids who hate their stepdads, and they may think about murder for years . . . but they’re never going to do it. Planning it is enough. You know as well as I do that most murders are acts of passion – spur-of-the-moment things. One drink too many. A fight that gets out of control. But then, just now and again, you get the genius, the killer who’s not going to get caught, who sits down and works it all out. These are what you call the stickers, the crimes that are like no others because there’s an intelligence behind them. That’s where I come in. That’s sort of my speciality.”

  • If You Liked This Then You May Like...
"The Thursday Murder Club" by Richard Osman, 

"The Marlow Murder Club" by Robert Thorogood,

"How to Solve Your Own Murder" by Kristen Perrin,

Freebourne By Salman Shaheen

 


Rating 4⭐s
You can buy Freebourne...here
You can find out about the author here

  • The Blurb...
After learning of his wife's affair with his best friend and business partner, divorced and unemployed MindTech entrepreneur Dr Harry Coulson arrives in the idyllic English town of Freebourne, looking to start a new life. But any hopes of quietly picking up the pieces of his broken world are shattered when he steps off the train to discover the body of a young woman lying in the snow. It's almost as if she'd been left there for him to find. Harry does everything he can to help. But as a stranger arriving on the night Freebourne witnesses its first murder in over a century, he not only becomes a suspect in the woman's killing but finds himself caught in a deadly game between science, faith, and free will - in a secret far darker and more terrifying than anything he could have imagined.

  • Our Review...
I found this to be a very interesting book in many ways. I try not to read the blurb or reviews of books that I review until after I have reviewed them. I like to come to the story without preconceived ideas.

So for me this tale started as a murder mystery. Initially I thought the writing too fast paced for my taste. e.g. (Slight spolier here...) in the story within  about a month there the had been several murders and our protagonist had set up and funded a company staffed by people he had only just met and found love. All this when our protagonist had only just arrived in his new environs! With the fast pace there comes a lack of opportunity to develop depth of characters. So far so OK but nothing to set my reading world alight. At this stage had it carried on it was probably going to a solid 3 star read for me. Ok but probably wouldn't remember any part of it in a few years time.

However as we progress and begin hitting the twists the reasons behind the fast forward love affair and the spree deaths not to mention the quickfire tech empire building become apparent. This book is a shape-shifter what starts as murder mystery evolves into a mash up of black mirror and House of Cards and Frankenstein. It is here that the narrative kicks on. I sat up in my chair my interest piqued and began reading more voraciously. 

I feel the author has two (at least) strengths. His plotting is very clever. Seasoned readers are experienced in spotting the tropes that lead to the twist, so much so that part of fun of reading is spotting the twist. If reading is like going on Safari then spotting the twist is akin to the thrill of shooting the Lion at the end! (NB we do not condone big game hunting obvs.) I did see one twist but not the subsequent emerging one so well played sir, well played.

The other element of his writing is political commentary. The author is politician so no doubt operates in a world of cunning, subterfuge and dare I say manipulation. He writes about these and his fears for the future in a heartfelt and striking way. As can be seen in selected quotes. Orwell is obviously an influence. He has a good turn of phrase. "Tourists in the misery of others" is a wonderful way of describing internet trolls and paparazzi.

In the end I enjoyed this book, it gradually morphed into a thought provoking cautionary tale that we as a society will do well to take on board.

  • Selected Quotes...
in politics those who wield the knife, no matter how well they buried it and where, rarely get to wear the crown.

It would be all over the metaverse soon. Fear and outrage traded for clicks, views, shares, likes, influence, vanity. A young woman was dead and all these people cared about was collecting experiences. Tourists in the misery of others.

those of us who have the privilege of building the future also have the duty to preserve our past.

The whole system is geared towards producing compliance. Replicating a set of values held by a tiny elite because having a bigger stick is so passé. We know the state has a monopoly of violence, and it will deploy it against its own citizens if it needs to, but it rarely does. Why? Well, we’re recorded over 300 times a day simply going about our daily lives. The whole world is one giant panopticon now. That we know we are constantly watched unconsciously changes our behaviour. That’s another form of violence, against our minds, but it’s far from the most insidious. The mass media, almost exclusively owned by the same sliver of society who rule us, tell us what to think, what is acceptable, permissible, within established parameters;

Seventy years ago, most of the world’s countries were dictatorships. Today, hardly any survive. Because they don’t need to. That’s real hegemony. The biggest lie people are told in the free world is that they are really free.”

power relies on controlling and corrupting the institutions of society, not destroying them.

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