Afbeelding van de auteur.

Catherine Hunter

Auteur van The Dead of Midnight: A Mystery

16+ Werken 88 Leden 3 Besprekingen Favoriet van 2 leden

Over de Auteur

Catherine Hunter teaches English at the University of Winnipeg in Canada.

Werken van Catherine Hunter

The Dead of Midnight: A Mystery (2001) 30 exemplaren
Queen of Diamonds (2006) 8 exemplaren
Latent Heat (1997) 8 exemplaren
Where shadows burn (1999) 7 exemplaren
Necessary Crimes (1988) 5 exemplaren
Lunar Wake (1994) 5 exemplaren
St. Boniface Elegies (2019) 4 exemplaren
After Light (2015) 3 exemplaren
Die Masken des Todes. (2003) 2 exemplaren
Rush Hour (2000) 1 exemplaar
Exposed (2002) 1 exemplaar
After Light (2015) 1 exemplaar

Gerelateerde werken

A/Cross Sections: New Manitoba Writing (2007) — Medewerker — 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1957
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
Canada
Woonplaatsen
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Opleiding
University of Winnipeg

Leden

Besprekingen

I quite enjoyed this book which is set in Winnipeg in the Wolseley area and in the Lake of the Woods area although I thought the plot was a little contrived. I also find it hard to believe that Wolseley, which is called the granola belt, could harbour a serial killer. But that said, the story moved along well and it was fun to mentally envision the area that a book is set in because I know it so well. (I actually lived in the Wolseley area while I was in University and then on the fringes of it for a few years after that.) I wish there actually was a cafe/mystery store there. There are a couple of funky eateries in the district as well as a good book store but not a combination. This book was well worth reading and I thank mrsgaskell for passing it on to me.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
gypsysmom | 1 andere bespreking | Aug 20, 2017 |
I've read a few of this author's other books and I've even attended a talk where she talked about her writing process. So I am no stranger to her work but she blew me away with this novel. I see it has been 10 years since her last novel. I'm sure she hasn't been working on this one for the whole ten years because she is a university professor, an editor and a poet. However, I suspect she spent a large chunk of time on this book and it shows.

This is a family saga stretching over four generations and moving from Ireland to New York City, to Eastern Canada and Europe during WWII, back to Canada after the war with time in Toronto and then Winnipeg and then back to those former habitations trying to find the truth about the family. It starts with the story of Deidre, the daughter of a poor farmer outside of Galway. The story continues as Deidre moves to New York City and has a son, Frank. Frank goes to war with a Canadian regiment and is seriously injured in the Netherlands. After the war Frank and his wife move to Winnipeg and run a nursery business and have two daughters, Von and Rosheen. Rosheen has a son, Kyle, but he is taken away by a child protection agency when he is an infant. We start learning bits and pieces of the family's story after Rosheen's death when Von has to clear up her estate. Rosheen has been working on a showing of her artistic works that deal with the family history. There is a lot to go through and Von begins to understand how talented Rosheen was. Maybe this family that has suffered so much tragedy can finally heal.

Highly recommended.
… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
gypsysmom | Jul 13, 2016 |
In a small town in Winnipeg, Manitoba a book club meats each week at a local restaurant to discuss a mystery novel (and eat dessert). They start discussing a new series of novels in which a murder always occurs at midnight but soon book club members start experiencing events that eerily reflect the plots of the novels. At the same time one of the club members, Sarah Petursson, begins to uncover the mysteries of her own past, including the death of her mother when she was only six years old.

I read this book in a couple of sittings and was hooked from the outset. Although the basic premise, real-life events mirroring those in books, has been done before there were more than enough interesting twists here that I didn’t get any sense of ‘been there, read that’. Undoubtedly this was helped along by the strong focus on Sarah’s exploration of her past. At first she is reluctant to dig into her murky memories of her early childhood but when she came into possession of some journals of her mother’s she became drawn to finding out about her mother’s life, almost all of which was spent on a tiny private island with only her father and sister for company. The inclusion of extracts from these journals was nicely handled and helped build the intrigue. Meanwhile the investigation of the current crop of crimes does not go terribly smoothly, mostly due to the lazy pig-headedness of one of the detectives assigned to the case, and it’s no wonder those book club members who remain alive grow more than a little frightened.

There’s a plethora of characters in the book, possibly a few too many to get into real depth, but even those who appear only briefly are well-drawn. Thankfully Sarah Petersson avoids almost all of the traps of being a female in danger in a mystery and her self-discovery and the way it impacts her character is surprisingly engaging. Her flighty (and flirty) cousin Morgan turns out to be made of tougher stuff than I imagined at the outset and the many possible culprits provide red herrings and entertainment in equal measure. The only real downfall was with the depiction of the police who seemed either to be lazy or a little too willing to break rules inconvenient to plot advancement but as they didn’t feature heavily in the story it wasn’t a terribly big issue.

Perhaps I was particularly drawn into this novel because I too belong to a crime fiction book club (though ours is not nearly as organised as this one in which members took it in turns to write presentations on the themes raised by the books they read) (and none of our members have been horribly murdered) but whatever the reason it certainly hooked me in from the outset. I found the book genuinely suspenseful and its evocative sense of location and the merest hint of something paranormal was reminiscent of some of Daphne du Maurier’s stories. I think this one would have appeal beyond die-hard mystery fans.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
bsquaredinoz | 1 andere bespreking | Mar 31, 2013 |

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Statistieken

Werken
16
Ook door
2
Leden
88
Populariteit
#209,356
Waardering
3.8
Besprekingen
3
ISBNs
25
Talen
1
Favoriet
2

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