7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Certain to be one of the year's best, March 31, 2007
This review is from: Robbie's Wife (Mass Market Paperback)
"I kept thinking about how much of my life was accidental. I drank with the Stryker brothers and ended up in Maggie's house.... I could have stopped at the second beer and left Glastonbury, gone on to London and, even now, I would be in Los Angeles in a rented room rather than walking a country lane thinking of Maggie.... But it hadn't happened that way. I would not reflect on those events until it was too late." -- from Robbie's Wife
Jack Stone has come from Los Angeles to England to make a new start. To get away from his second failed marriage and possibly write the screenplay that will rejuvenate his career. But he didn't count on falling in love with Maggie Barlow, the wife of a Dorset sheep farmer who offers a laid-back bed-and-breakfast arrangement.
A Hard Case Crime novel by an award-winning poet? Is this another departure on a par with Straight Cut? Well, yes and no. Robbie's Wife is more typical noir than that book (especially in the second half), but author Russell Hill's superb characterizations will appeal to readers of all stripes.
It may be the second Hard Case Crime novel in a row (after Lawrence Block's Lucky at Cards) to feature a newcomer-to-town who takes up with a married woman who is much more than the daily role she plays would lead us to believe, but otherwise Robbie's Wife could not be more different. It is a novel unto its own genre.
I really admired Hill's giving a romantic storyline to characters who are older than the typical genre participants. Jack is sixty, while Maggie is a relative spring chicken at forty. But age really doesn't come into play at all, with Jack still expected to act out the requirements of Hill's surprise-filled plot with the strength and stamina of a much younger man. Love at a certain age is both riskier and more compelling than I had thought possible, but these two make it into quite an attractive proposition (especially during some of the most tastefully erotic sex scenes I've read in some time).
Hill takes his time in offering up the expected noir trappings (essentially an update of familiar James M. Cain territory), but this allows the reader to get swept up in Jack and Maggie's illicit and delicious, heart-lifting and stomach-knotting relationship. Robbie's Wife is a beautiful, painfully tragic portrait of two people who, despite their attempts to the contrary, simply cannot stand to be away from each other. Like Jack states, "She was a magnet and I was nothing more than iron filings on a sheet of paper [darting] toward it, unable to do anything else."
Interspersed among Jack's narrative of real events are pieces of his ongoing screenplay, which uses those real events for inspiration. Hill slips these in at unexpected times, and even uses them to distance us from a particularly harrowing scene as it plays out on the script page. It is a very welcome change of pace in a genre that often depends on the same old setup to get things moving. Things eventually get moving, all right, and they quickly spiral out of control, but never from Hill's point of view. He guides every part of the novel's evocative (and, in the right places, provocative) plotline with a sure hand to its powerfully shocking conclusion. With a fascinating mix of the familiar and the not new but nearly forgotten, Robbie's Wife is sure to be one of the ten best books of 2007.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A welcome departure, March 15, 2007
This review is from: Robbie's Wife (Mass Market Paperback)
This was about the 10th book in the Hardcase Crime series that I have read and it was much different than all of the others. While it had some elements of crime noir fiction, it was much more literary and much more deliberate. It had none of the rapid fire, crackle and snap of other stories, but that is not a bad thing. If you are looking for Lawrence Block or Erle Stanley Garder type fiction, look elsewhere, but if you want a different take on noir fiction read "Robbie's Wife".
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Several nice surprises, February 3, 2008
This review is from: Robbie's Wife (Mass Market Paperback)
This book contains many nice surprises. Here are just a few:
1) The writing quality is considerably more sophisticated than most noir.
2) This book evolves in surprising, but justified ways.
3) The 'writer as protagonist' technique works very well.
4) Hill does a good job of incorporating real life facts (culling of farm animals under Blair)
5) Hill has a good grasp for the under culture in the English countryside
6) Hill's characters are finely drawn. The dialog is rich in character, but moves along nicely.
7) Hill's 'sense of place' for rural England is very strong.
This is a thoroughly enjoyable book that surprises in the end. Well worth picking up.
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