The Bone Man - Melville International Crime Novel | Mystery Thriller Book for Adults | Perfect for Crime Fiction Lovers & Book Club Discussions
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DESCRIPTION
The wry and rueful Columbo of Austria investigates a grisly murder at a beloved restaurant where snooty Viennese gourmands go to eat … fried chicken. At a wildly popular chicken shack in the Austrian countryside, a gruesome discovery is made in the pile of chicken bones waiting to be fed into the basement grinder: human bones. But when former-police detective now private eye Simon Brenner shows up to investigate, the woman who hired him has disappeared …Brenner likes chicken, though, so he stays, but finds no one will talk. And as he waits for the disappeared manager, there’s one ghastly find after another.Perhaps the most raucous book in the series, The Bone Man manages to make fun of institutions from high cuisine to soccer while nonetheless building relentless suspense based in all-too-real social issues. Smart, tense, and funny, the book makes clear why Carl Hiaasen called Wolf Haas “the real deal.”
REVIEWS
****** - Verified Buyer
4.5
In "The Bone Man" by Wolf Haas, former detective Simon Brenner no sooner gets on the job than his client goes missing. Foul play (or fowl play - pardon me) is suspected, of course, because the reason for hire was the discovery of unidentified human bones in the grinder room of a chicken restaurant. There is more going on in this restaurant than one thinks. The premise is about finding the daughter-in-law of the chicken shack empire owner (the woman who hired him), but the story is anything but.Brief, sparse. That's the best way to describe the novel. Storytelling style reminds me of Hemingway's "Old Man and the Sea," but that's where the similarity stops. This is a distinctively German novel taking place in the actual location of Klöch, a municipality in Styria, Austria. I was never sure who was telling the story or the person's relationship to Brenner, but it comes across in the tone of an old man in a bar recounting a tale to a fellow stool-holder. It's easy, it flows, it's natural, and it's packed with asides as though the narrator were inserting his own observations into the tale. Being European (I know I'm stereotyping so my apologies), the story starts slowly by American standards, but quickly grows addictive the further you go (which is also one of the elements that interested me for today's Book of the Day over some of our more formulaic American counterparts). For those who are writers, this is an excellent book on how to plot, a great one to tear apart after you've read it a time or two.- Clay Stafford is an author / filmmaker ([...]) and founder of Killer Nashville ([...] Stafford's latest projects are the documentary "One of the Miracles" ([...]) and the music CD "XO" ([...]
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