One of Maxim Jakubowski's Books of the Year 2013.
Maxim Jakubowski's October 2013 Book of the Month.
There are quirky detectives and there are even quirkier sleuths, but Claire DeWitt is the most bizarre and endearing of them all. As a teenager she came across a bizarre detection manual by an apocryphal early 20th century French master detective and set herself up as a modern incarnation of Nancy Drew alongside a close friend, who later disappeared. Her whole life since has followed the enigmatic rules of the book. Following her introduction in CITY OF THE DEAD in which a case in New Orleans unfolded in the most surreal way, she is now back in San Francisco and more than ever struggling with her inner devils, drugs and the presence of the past. Colourful cohorts and a zen-like approach to investigative work characterise her progress through a devious plot with hidden treasures, thrills and surprises, but more than the actual meandering story, it is this most unique sleuthette who will stay in your mind for a long time. I can't wait for her next case and secretly hope against hope she will find some form of peace.
July 2013 Book of the Month.
The Lovereading view...
The Bohemian Highway is the eagerly awaited second book in the Claire DeWitt series that began with City of the Dead and introduced us to a smart, hip detective whose expertise and methods derive from a unique source; a certain book she cherishes called Detection written by the great and tragic French private detective, Jacques Silette.
Her second case is a lot more personal as it is the murder of her ex-boyfriend. An extraordinarily powerful, mystical and moving literary thriller from a talented author who is well worth discovering.
In addition to our Lovereading expert opinion for Claire De Witt and the Bohemian Highway a small number of Lovereading members were lucky enough to be invited to review this title - 'I set this novel alongside those of Chandler, Hammett, Millar and Macdonald without hesitation, and recommend it to any fan of the PI genre who wonders how Marlowe, Spade, Sands and the rest of them would have coped with the twenty-first century' - Cath Humphris. Scroll down to read more reviews.
Primary Genre | Crime and Mystery |
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