“I rattled through AZC. It’s highly original, witty, laugh-out-loud at times, thought-provoking and sprinkled with cracking dialogue that, I think, is a hallmark of Declan’s writing. AZC is a terrific read.” - Alan Griffiths, Brit GritI thank you kindly, sir. Incidentally, Michael Malone also has some rather nice things to say about AZC over at May Contain Nuts …
Elsewhere, the general thrust of the AZC reviews have run something like this:
“Karlsson is a thrilling creation, up there with the Patrick Batemans of literature … a masterpiece of unsavoury reflection on history and Darwinism blended with a hefty dose of sociopathy, yet always leavened with pitch-black wit … Funny and disturbing, it also straddles a fine line between the absurd and the profound. It never forgets the conventions of crime fiction, while simultaneously subverting them. A triumph.” - Sunday TimesFor more in the same vein, clickety-click here …
“Thus begins a fascinating hybrid of MISERY, AT SWIM-TWO-BIRDS, THE FRENCH LIEUTENANT’S WOMAN, and who knows what else … ABSOLUTE ZERO COOL isn’t quite like anything else you’ve read, in any genre. It’s clever, intimate, passionate, and funny: altogether a wonderful achievement.” - Irish Times
“What is most refreshing … is its ambition. It is rare that a so-called genre book attempts to wrest free of its constraints and do something entirely different. ABSOLUTE ZERO COOL is a genre-buster. Clever, funny, challenging, surreal, unexpected and entirely original.” - Irish Independent
“Declan Burke plunges into surreal realms in this exhilarating, cleverly wrought novel … Comparisons to Flann O’Brien’s AT SWIM-TWO-BIRDS are obvious, yet Burke’s canny control of his novel means they’re positive ones.” - Sunday Business Post
To be in with a chance of winning a signed copy of ABSOLUTE ZERO COOL, just answer the following question:
What’s the best crime novel you’ve read in 2011?Answers via the comment box, please, leaving an email contact address (using [at] rather than @ to confound the spam monkeys) by noon on Thursday, November 10th. Et bon chance, mes amis …
Finally, if you’ve read AZC, and would like to vote for it in the Irish Book Awards (you don’t have to be Irish, by the way, or living in Ireland), then clickety-click here …
24 comments:
Hey Dec, thanks for the mention. Appreciate it. As for my fave of 2011 so far, I'm going with The End of Everything by Megan Abbott.
Outstanding.
Thanks for the hat-tip, Dec. Congrats again on AZC and best of luck in the awards. Hey, any news on old Harry Rigby?
As for 2011 reads: I’ve just finished LA Confidential. Ouch, that James Ellroy has a future all right.
Cheers.
Declan, thanks for this chance to win a signed copy of AZC. My favourite books this year: (tough question) but I'll choose Alan Glynn's Winterland.
My contact address: jiescribano[at]yahoo.es
All the best.
There were so many good books this, Declan, but I'll go with Ken Bruen's HEADSTONE.
jerry_house(at)hotmail.com
Best of luck with the IBA.
michaelfrmurray(at)gmail.com
Favourite 2011 ,Pike by Benjamin Whitmer
Good Luck with IBA
My favorite book - Apostle Rising by Richard Godwin.
My email - mxyzptlk77 (at) comcast.net
Best crime novel'11 for me is Smokeheads by Doug Johnstone.
(my e-mail is garraty87@gmail.com)
Congrats on all those kudos!!
My favourite, so far, in 2011 is: Hakan Nesser's Borkmann's Point.
This year, Out There Bad by Josh Stallings. Blew me away.
oops. forgot my email:
mrbadexample [at] gmail . com
Favorite book of the year: Collusion by Stuart Neville. I thought The Ghosts of Belfast could not be topped, but Mr. Neville did with Collusion.
Favourite book read so far this year: The Ghosts of Belfast by Stuart Neville. Picked it up on a whim and have been reading almost exclusively Irish crime fiction since.
Thanks for the great contest, looking forward to seeing everyone else's picks to add to my reading list!
E-mail: ccseifert[at]gmail.com
read a ton of good ones but fave probably
DEVIL ALL THE TIME
Donald Ray Pollock
Sounds like a wonderful book! My favorite crime novel of 2011 was A Trick of the Light by Louise Penny. llrodriguez(at)sbcglobal(dot)net
I agree with all your reviewers, and I am tempted to vote again, and again, every time I see your blog header. The best crime novel for me would be Stolen Souls by Stuart Neville, Adrian McKinty's books a close second.
lilhmb(at)sbcglobal.net
Best book I've read this year is Tomato Red by Daniel Woodrell. Awesome. If you need a newer book I also loved Dark Blood by Stuart MacBride.
lhawken(at)comcast.net
Best read in 2011: THREE SECONDS by Rosslund & Hellstrom. Intricate plotting, gritty sweedish thriller in which the hero keeps one step ahead of both the chasing authorities, and the readers!
Eoin.l.Healy(at)gmail.com
Plugged, by Artemis Colfer
brianjosullivan (at) gmail (dot) com
I'll have to eliminate myself from the competition as I already have an ARC and am hence already a winner. Someone else needs to experience AZC for themselves and thus add to the buzz.
Best crime novel? Tough call, as there were a lot of excellent crime novels this year (as we all know).
To narrow it down, I first have to eliminate all the good ones I've read this year that were published last year or before, that might have made the cut if they were in this year's contention.
I have to put away prejudices toward authors I personally know and like, and toward those who rendered their books to me free of charge, and toward those who are vastly under appreciated and thus so deserve promotion.
Then I have to ask myself to balance each novel's technical merits with the visceral pleasure and intellectual delight afforded by my personal reading experience itself--and the rereading experience.
Then too, I've so many more crime novels by distinguished authors to read before the end of this month when I'll post my bests lists.
With all those disclaimers in mind, I can't yet narrow it down to one best crime novel until December. But two of my top ten are definitely going to be ORCHID BLUE and ABSOLUTE ZERO COOL.
Best one I've read this year would be Rob Kitchin's The Rule Book.
wildebyrd(at)gmail(dot)com
THREE SECONDS by Rosslund & Hellstrom,
Johnbsheridan(at)accamail.com
I don't know if it even counts as a proper crime novel but I absolutely loved Eoin Colfer's Plugged. It was so clever and funny. Once I started reading I couldn't stop until I reached the end a day or so later. Definitely one of my favourites of 2011.
Bernard
bernardorourke1[at]gmail.com
I hate questions like this. I can rarely choose one single book. I either enjoy something, or I don't. I don't try to rank them or give them an A-F designation.
If it counts at all, I'm currently enjoying delving into the Charles Todd books. Can I choose a particular book over any others? Not there, or anywhere else, I'm afraid.
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