Friday, January 26, 2018



Briarpatch by Ross Thomas: A Review by Warren Bull

Briarpatch won the Edgar Award in 1985. The novel is worthy of the award. When Detective Felicity Dill is obliterated by a car bomb, her brother, a consultant to Senate subcommittee, flies to his hometown for her funeral. He wants to find her murderer and to get a deposition from his best friend as a youngster. The friend worked for the CIA in Vietnam and accumulated a fortune as an arms dealer.

The author created memorable characters throughout the book. Every character was distinct and unique no matter how small his or her role was in the book. His description of hot weather had me sweating. Benjamin Dill was only slightly less tarnished than the others who populate the corrupt environment. His task was to find the killer from a host of characters all of whom had the ability and inclination to carry out the crime. As Jack Nicholson said in the movie Chinatown Dill is, “…the leper with the most fingers left.”

 My guess is that Thomas enjoyed throwing surprises into the novel. They certainly popped up unexpectedly. And I will not give them away. Unfortunately the blurbs on the book do. I am becoming convinced that someone wanting to enjoy a book should not read the back cover description or any blurbs.  The author once said, “What is eavesdropping to others is research to the novelist.”


Read this and enjoy it. I certainly did.  I recommend this vey highly.

6 comments:

  1. How did I miss this? Something was in the air in the 1980s that created great fiction. Thanks, Warren for reminding us.

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  2. This sounds familiar. Very eighties. I'll look for it at the library.

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  3. It sounds like Thomas Ross made the hot weather another character in the book, and from the sounds of it, most effectively.

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  4. Thanks, Warren. I appreciate you pointing out books I seem to have missed (although adding to my TBR list is an ongoing problem.)

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  5. This sounds terrific. And I’m with you on blurbs and covers that give away plot points. What are the publishers thinking?

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  6. Warren, another book I'm writing down to read. Thanks for reviewing so many books that
    sound like something I'd like to read.

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