Welcome

Welcome! I’m Marianne Delacourt alter ego of SF writer Marianne de Pierres. Marianne Delacourt writes contemporary humorous crime/romance with a paranormal flavour. Stories that are fast, funny, furious – and definitely pull no punches.

The Tara Sharp series is published by Allen and Unwin, Australia. All enquiries for interviews and review copies should be sent through the contact form.

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Watch Marianne Delacourt “In Conversation” with crime writer and 13th Street ambassador, Tara Moss.


06.7.09 | Sticky | By admin | Comments Off | Print This Post

Review: A Welcome Grave by Michael Koryta

spacer A Welcome Grave

Written by: Michael Koryta

ISBN: 978-1-74175-617-3

Allen & Unwin

321 pages

Reviewed by: Kylie Fox

“Sometime after midnight, on a moonless October night, one of the men I liked least in the world was murdered … The detectives went looking for suspects – people whose histories with Jefferson were adversarial and hostile. At the top of that list, they found me.”

Disgraced ex-cop, turned private investigator, Lincoln Perry, makes his third outing in this fast-paced and entertaining book. And boy does it open with a bang! With a murder – and a mighty brutal one at that.

Lincoln’s old sins come back to haunt him as the now-husband of his ex-fiancée (the man Lincoln beat up and lost his job over) is killed and he is catapulted straight to the top of the suspect list.

To complicate things, his ex hires him to notify the estranged son of his father’s death – and of his huge inheritance. What should have been a simple, routine job quickly turned to disaster when the son mistakes Lincoln for someone else and commits suicide right before his eyes.

As the only witness, Lincoln is now implicated in two suspicious deaths and the overzealous cops are determined to prove his guilt.

So begins a series of twists and turns as Lincoln fights to prove his innocence. But he soon discovers it’s not only the police he has to worry about – the real killers are determined to see him take the fall.

Lincoln’s character has developed over the course of the series and further still over the course of this latest book as he battles with the police, the killers, his feelings for his ex and with forming a new relationship. Every aspect of Lincoln’s life is challenged, creating a richer and more complex man than readers have previously met, all while still maintaining the humour that has made him endearing.

Every step that Lincoln takes, every time he feels like he’s making a little ground, a new piece of “evidence” is discovered to set him back again. So far as intricate plots go, this one has it all, contrived seemingly not from the author but by the characters themselves in their plot to implicate him.

The supporting cast of characters are equally well developed adding that believability factor that can so often be missing in books of this nature.

The book ends with a massive climax that should have been Lincoln’s shining moment but for the use of a certain character (resurfaced from the earlier books) who was used to save the day. Although I love this particular character, I felt that his use was a little too easy, as though the author had written Lincoln into a corner and could see no other way out.

Despite that, A Welcome Grave was led to a satisfying conclusion that left me waiting for more from both Lincoln Perry and his creator, Michael Koryta.

A highly recommended read for lovers of crime fiction.

07.24.11 | Reviews | By admin | No comments | Print This Post
TAGS: crime fiction, Kylie Fox, Lincoln Perry, Michael Koryta, Welcome Grave

Janette's Keeping It Real: It's In His Stars!

spacer Keeping it Real: it’s in his stars

Have you heard of Bruce Reynolds? No? What about the Great Train Robbery? How about Ronnie Biggs? Now, that name strikes a chord!

What made him so famous? More interestingly, what made him happy to seek out fame, even notoriety, in a situation where most of us would probably keep schtum?

The Great Train Robbery

The Great Train Robbery was the biggest haul of its kind for a century, netting the gang a whopping £2.6 million in 1963 (around £40 million in today’s money).

Ronnie’s role in the robbery was relatively minor. He was to provide and handle the gang’s own train driver, who would move the entire train to the siding where the haul would be unloaded. But it turned out that Ronnie’s hand-picked driver was a dud; he couldn’t drive that particular type of engine. By any standards, Ronnie’s train-robbing skills were dubious.

Why so famous?

Yet Ronnie is the one everybody remembers. Bruce Reynolds, who allegedly masterminded the entire plot, is relegated to relative obscurity, though he did eventually write his own version of events.

Ronnie first hit the public eye when he escaped, first to Australia and then to Brazil, where complex extraditionlaws kept him safe from Scotland Yard. At this stage, you’d think a bloke still on the lam might duck for cover.

But not Ronnie. Not only did his house become a regular stop for tourists, where he’d regale them with (probably exaggerated) stories of the Robbery; he even recorded a hit single with members of the Sex Pistols.

He wrote a handful of books about his experiences, and has had copious numbers of books written aboutspacer him; in fact, an Amazon search on “Ronnie Biggs” nets a list of books long enough to keep even me going for months.

And when he finally returned to Britain in 2001 to seek medical treatment, he continued to make public statements through his son, Michael.

He was clearly not a man to shy away from the public gaze.

But why was Ronnie so keen to keep coming back to the glare of the spotlight? Could it simply be part of a self-created ongoing mini-industry, creating income around his bad behaviour of so many years ago? Or was there more to it?

What the stars reveal

Having recently taken up the study of astrology—especially in relation to an individual’s psychological makeup—I wondered if Ronnie’s natal chart (the position of the planets at his birth) would be revealing. Without knowing the exact time of his birth, there’s a limit to what we can ascertain; but even a basic chart is revealing.

Ronnie has not only his Sun, but also his Mercury, in Leo.

Our Sun sign is the one we all read in the Sunday papers, the one we mention when someone at a party says “what sign are you?”. It’s our centre of consciousness, a key to what will make us truly happy. And Mercury, messenger of the gods, influences our mental processes and the way we think about things.

What does this mean for Ronnie, to have these two major planets in Leo?

Leo LOVES the limelight. Leo is a fire sign, a sign of taking the initiative. Leo is all about self-expression and ego-fulfilment. Leo makes the statement “I WILL”.

Someone with this much Leo in their chart could never be truly happy living the quiet, hidden life. Of course, being a Leo didn’t have anything to do with Ronnie choosing a life of crime; but I think it made a big difference to HOW Ronnie lived that life.

spacer Where is he now?

People in Britain still either love him or hate Ronnie. I think if he’d retired quietly into obscurity, nobody would have cared much either way. But Ronnie was drawn to fame like a moth to a flame, often thumbing his nose at the establishment.

How about you? Have you forgiven Ronnie Biggs for his bumbling role in that long-ago heist; or do you think he did the crime, so he should do the time regardless of how late in life? Or has Ronnie’s Leo energy finally run its course, leaving him at last to decline quietly into an obscure old age?

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