Book Review: A Strange Professor With A Strange Mind

The House of Love and Death is the third intriguing novel by Andrew Klavan to feature Cameron Winter, a college professor with a dangerous path and something he calls “a strange habit of mind”. Winter has the sort of imagination where he can place himself in a horrific crime scene and mentally dissect it with more detail than most people could fathom. Winter currently works as an English professor at a university; however, he was once a government operative who manipulated others into their own demise.

Klavan has an interesting set-up in these Winter novels. The good professor has been seeing a therapist. The book is usually divided into four parts. The beginning of each section reveals a first-person narrative as Winter discusses some aspect of his troubling past with this therapist. The subsequent chapter will then chronicle the therapist’s reaction to what she has just heard and how she guides Winter into some personal epiphany.

Winter also has the peculiar tendency to insert himself into cases that intrigue him uniquely. This time, a family just outside of Chicago had been shot, and their house was set on fire. Some details of the matter bother Winter enough to motivate him to a closer look at the situation where he finds supposedly well-respected people engaging in some pretty shady and lascivious behaviors. Although there are some dangerous people coming to light by Winter’s investigation, they have little idea that Winter himself could very well be more dangerous than they imagine.

This is the third and most recent novel in this series. Klavan has set a pretty predictable pattern on how his plots unfold. There is quite a bit of imagination when it comes to this story. I am getting to know Cameron Winter a little better, and he is an interesting and likeable character, although it’s a little far-fetched. Winter is described as basically being ethereally handsome, which makes him a little hard to picture in the mind’s eye. The relationship between Winter and his much older therapist sometimes seems just a little odd and distracting. There is nothing really inappropriate going on there, but there are some thoughts being revealed which are not quite as professional as expected at times. Still, the therapist seems to have some pretty sharp insights herself which does make her interesting to this reader.

I think I am starting to understand this “strange habit of mind” concept a little better. Klavan isn’t really trying to convey that Winter has some sort of supernatural ability, but that this gift is more of a strange sort of deduction and imagination. Klavan isn’t likely going to be considered to be some master of the mystery genre, but he manages to tell a pretty compelling tale. Also, I am already looking forward to following Cameron Winter’s next caper.

I think it’s time to revisit 221 B Baker Street with the help of author Frank Thomas, who has tried his hand at continuing the exploits of Sherlock Holmes. In 1980, Thomas managed to get Sherlock Holmes and the Sacred Sword on the shelves, and a copy has recently found its way to my hands..

Book Review: When The Dam Breaks, The Dead Will Rise

The Chill is a supernatural thriller published in 2020 by Scott Carson and is one of the better reads for me in 2024. A village known as Galesburg, New York was drowned many decades ago, yet the souls of that lost town live on within the Chilewaukee Reservoir, and the town of Torrance is about the face them.

There is a dam that is about to break due to the onslaught of a relentless rainstorm, and it may release the spirits of the drowned Galesburg. A ghost is already influencing the engineer evaluating the integrity of the dam. A young man, who was recently discharged from the US Coast Guard Academy believes he had killed someone accidentally, however the apparent victim turned up alive. The spirits are still working under the reservoir to complete a work that was to be done while they still lived. The living and the dead meet when the dam breaks as prophesied.

I wish I had the gift of eloquence such as this author, Scott Carson, but I really enjoyed this novel. I dip into the horror genre occasionally, but I am often frustrated with resolutions in many tales in this form. This one really works. The characters are people I could like and stay interested in following. There are plenty of truly suspenseful scenes throughout. The twists were not that predictable. Carson is noted to be the pseudonym of an already well-known author. That does make sense in that this does appear to be written by someone with experience.

The Chill refers to the waters in the reservoir, but there were some chilling scenes that were quite effective. This particular novel is certainly a candidate for one of the better ones I am to read for 2024.

Next up, I was given the key to The House of Love and Death by author Andrew Klavan, so I will see what secrets await me.