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Dead Man's Share (An Inspector Llob Mystery)
 
 
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Dead Man's Share (An Inspector Llob Mystery) [Paperback]

Yasmina Khadra (Author), Aubrey Botsford (Translator)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

An Inspector Llob Mystery October 1, 2009
Superintendent Brahim Llob is bored. Nothing seems to need his attention in an unusually peaceful Algiers. Then suddenly peace is shatterd in ways Llob could never have imagined. His subordinate, Lieutenant Lino, falls for an entirely unsuitable woman, and is devastated when she returns to a previous lover, the wealthy and influential Haj Thobane. Thobane survives an attempted murder that kills his chauffeur and Lino's gun is found at the scene. With Lino languishing in prison, it is up to Llob to face down the corrupt echelons of the Algerian goverment to find the truth about what happened the night of the murder. The search will take the world-weary Llob down avenues even he has never encountered and will force him to delve into his beloved country's brutal past.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Khadra again proves to be Camus's heir apparent in this searing prequel to his Algerian trilogy featuring Supt. Brahim Llob (Morituri, etc.), set in modern Algiers with its dual personality (one that used to inspire poets vs. one where minstrels are locked up in jails). Llob is dismayed to find his latest case involves a subordinate, Lieutenant Lino, who has become obnoxious, spending money he doesn't have to impress a new girlfriend. Lino is devastated when the woman humiliates him in public by returning to Haj Thobane, her rich former lover. Lino is later arrested after his gun is found near the body of Thobane's limo driver shot during an attack on Thobane. The pseudonymous Khadra (Mohammed Moulessehoul), a former Algerian army officer now living in France, expertly depicts a country succumbing to cruelty but buoyed by its people's hope in the future. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

One of the rare writers capable of giving meaning to the violence in Algeria today. --Newsweek Yasmina Khadra reconnects with the crime novel, reviving the famous superintendent Llob of his earliest books. In the Algeria of 1988 described here, the honest superintendent embarks on a rigged investigation that sends him back into the bloody history of his country. --Michele Gazier, Telerama

This prequel to Khadra s Algerian Trilogy surprisingly caps the series, adding a psychological depth and narrative breadth worthy of the authors mainstream thrillers. --Kirkus Reviews

Product Details

  • Paperback: 341 pages
  • Publisher: The Toby Press (October 1, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1592642691
  • ISBN-13: 978-1592642694
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,187,326 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Of all the hydra-headed monsters, man is the only one that knows how to cross the line into animalism while remaining lucid.", October 7, 2009
This review is from: Dead Man's Share (An Inspector Llob Mystery) (Paperback)
(4.5 stars) Twenty-five years after Algeria's independence from France, the country is still suffering from political instability, corruption, and the residual rivalries and hatreds between those who supported French rule during the war (1954 - 1962) and the FLN and other groups, socialist and otherwise, which fought for independence. The devastated economy at the end of the war has not improved, people are living in poverty, religious fundamentalism is growing, the young have no future, and citizens everywhere are casting jaded eyes on those who reek of success.

In this newest installment of the Inspector Llob series, chronologically the "pre-quel" to the series, set in 1988, author Yasmina Khadra (in reality, a male Algerian army officer/writer who moved to France in 2000) turns a spotlight on Algeria's crumbling country and its demoralized citizens. Superintendent Llob, also a writer, is an honest police official who does not compromise. Smart-mouthed, with a cynical sense of humor and an understanding of the ironies of everyday life, Llob manages to stay afloat in the murky waters of Algerian bureaucracy. His assistant, Lieutenant Lino, is absent as this novel opens. He has fallen in love with a gorgeous woman, and as a result, he is spending lavishly on his clothes and appearance, calling in sick when he is not ill, and creating disturbances while drunk. In the meantime, SNP, an urepentant serial killer with no family name, has received a presidential pardon and is about to be released after spending seven years in an asylum and additional years in jail, and Llob cannot stop the release.

When the chauffeur of an influential Algiers bigwig is shot to death with Lino's gun, Lino is arrested and kept incommunicado, even from Llob. Additional murders, suggesting connections to the war-time past, send Llob to rural Sidi Ba with journalist/history professor Soria Karadach, a researcher studying atrocities which occurred in August, 1962, the month following the end of the war. A horrendous massacre occurred in Sidi Ba, and Llob interviews harkis (Muslim Algerians who worked with the French), maquisards (guerrillas who worked with the French Resistance), mujahids, and people claiming to be members of the FLN, socialist "freedom-fighters," to learn more about the massacre and those who might have been responsible.

Eventually, the events of Sidi Ba and the arrest of Lino converge, and though the details of the plot are extremely complex, the novel is carefully constructed, and the mystery is satisfactorily resolved. Khadra creates well-developed characters, endowing them with human failings and often giving them a kind of dark humor which allows them to survive the violence and irrationality of everyday life in Algiers. His unique imagery gives depth to the atmosphere: A road is "orphaned by the loss of its paving stones," while a light rain "weeps into the city." Multiple levels of betrayal all contribute to the darkest of noir fiction and a vision of Algiers which makes one want to weep for the victims. For those who enjoy complex mysteries set in unusual locations with main characters one comes to care about, this mystery is both challenging and enlightening. n Mary Whipple

Morituri (Toby Crime), US pub. date 2003
Double Blank: An Inspector Llob Mystery (Toby Crime), US pub. date 2005
Autumn of the Phantoms, US pub. date 2006

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5.0 out of 5 stars Complex, involving, engaging, excellent, July 19, 2010
This review is from: Dead Man's Share (An Inspector Llob Mystery) (Paperback)
Yasmina Khadra is an Algerian author, the pseudonym of a relatively senior Algerian army officer named Mohammed Moulessehoul. When he started writing he was still in the army, and so he adopted the pseudonym to avoid trouble in his country. Back then, reviewers and readers were uncertain even of the gender of the author, and certainly no one knew his identity.

He wrote short, serious, sharp books, some of them detective stories, others examining fanaticism and religious intolerance. At some point he went into exile in France, and revealed his name to the world. While he was still incognito, however, he wrote three mystery novels which followed the adventures of Supt. Brahim Llob, a malcontent who works as a senior police officer in Algiers. He's a veteran of Algeria's war for independence, which ended in the early 60's, so he has to be pretty old, but he's stubborn and at times energetic as he pursues justice wherever the case leads him. The books are short, really novellas, but they're very good anyway, even if they're not constructed exactly to Western tastes.

So flash forward a decade. Khadra is now established as an author, and he has more things to say. He ended the Llob series in such a fashion that he can't write a sequel, so he instead writes a prequel, a much longer book. I expect that someone at the publisher told him that a longer, more complex, plot-driven novel would reach a wider audience, and I certainly hope it does. Dead Man's Share is longer and more complex, yes, but it's also a much better novel. The author's disgust with the leadership of his country is palpable here, as it was in his previous books, but the addition of a serious plot that actually works makes the book much more readable and interesting.

So the book starts with Llob worrying about his subordinate, Lieutenant Lino. Lino's a bit of a naif, and he's been seduced by a beautiful woman. He's making a fool of himself, borrowing money he can't repay from everyone in the station house to buy gifts and clothes and meals he can't afford, all to impress this young woman. When her lover shows up unexpectedly and it turns out Lino was just being used by the lady to stir jealousy in her boyfriend's heart, Lino pretty much falls to pieces. The next thing anyone knows, Lino's in jail, accused of trying to kill the boyfriend, and of course the boyfriend is really a very powerful old man with a lot of friends in high places.

Meanwhile, Llob is also approached by a university professor he knows. The man teaches psychology, and he also treats patients. One particular one, a serial killer no one ever properly identified, is about to be freed by Presidential pardon. The professor is worried that if the man is pardoned and he's allowed to wander around free, he'll go back to killing. He's hoping Llob can do something to keep the prisoner in jail, or failing that maybe Llob can watch the man and prevent a repetition of the earlier crimes. Llob duly tries to prevent the release, fails, and then has the man watched, with disastrous results. Eventually the two plots converge, and things get even murkier, as Llob is unsure who he can trust. Eventually the answer turns out to be almost no one.

I really enjoyed this novel, with all of its cynicism and jaded disgust at the political climate of the era. Imagine an Arab Raymond Chandler, with more philosophical overtones than Chandler perhaps but still, a Chandler, and you have an idea of what Khadra's writing is like. Highly recommended.
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