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Featured Reviews!
Critical Mick Review of Lake of Sorrows by Erin Hart
Lake of Sorrows by Erin Hart


Critical Mick Review of 24/7 by Susan DiPlacido
24/7 by Susan DiPlacido


Critical Mick Review of Song for Katya by Kevin Stevens
Song for Katya by Kevin Stevens


Critical Mick Review of Death in the Desert by Francine Biere
Death in the Desert by Francine Biere

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NFG Magazine- Writing With Attitude!
NFG Magazine- Highly Recommended


Books Ireland Magazine- News and Reviews
Books Ireland- Also Highly Recommended


The Dublin Quarterly: International Literary Review
The Dublin Quarterly

Other Review Sites!
Midwest Book Review- Jim Cox Rocks
The Midwest Book Review


Reviewing the Evidence- Mystery Reviews, and a Cat
Reviewing the Evidence

Podcasts Worth A Listen!
Escape Pod- Short Fiction. From Weirdo Imaginations, Straight to Your Ears
Escape Pod


writingshow.com, Paula B's weekly interviews about elephants. NO! LIES! About writing.
The Writing Show

Mick's Fave Bookstores
Read Ireland- Clicks and Mortar, plus a whole lot more
Read Ireland


Mystery Ink, The Mystery Bookstore.
Mystery Ink
15 Dawson Street
Dublin 2

Critical Mick

Reviews Free of Rules.

Reviews by the Clown that All Other Critics Want to Strangle with a Black Turtleneck

Nominations for the best book Critical Mick read in 2009


   Critical Mick Best Book Read in 2009


 

Critical Mick's shortlist for Best Book Read in 2009...

Critical Mick Review of The Bloomsday Dead by Adrian McKinty

 

The Bloomsday Dead by Adrian McKinty
Critical Mick Review of Dark Times in the City by Gene Kerrigan

 

Dark Times in the City by Gene Kerrigan
Critical Mick Review of Cannibalism, Headhunting and Human Sacrifice in North America: A History Forgotten by George Franklin Feldman

 

Cannibalism, Headhunting and Human Sacrifice in North America: A History Forgotten by George Franklin Feldman
Critical Mick Review of Bleed A River Deep by Brian McGilloway

 

Bleed A River Deep by Brian McGilloway
Critical Mick Review of The Dark Place by Sam Millar

 

The Dark Place by Sam Millar
Critical Mick Review of The Ghosts of Belfast by Stuart Neville

 

The Ghosts of Belfast by Stuart Neville

 

  • Books were added to the shortlist whenever they goddamned well move me to.
  • Every bugsmacker read in the year 2009 is eligible, regardless of its year of publication.
  • Rather than an Edgar, an Agatha, a Shamus, these Critical Mick Best Book Read awards are called an "Oo," as in "book" or "unrooly." You know, the sound made when impressed?
  • The awards look like this: and the year's winner gets to tattoo it on their foot.
  • And the most unruly is...

    Critical Mick Review of The Ghosts of Belfast by Stuart Neville

    The Ghosts of Belfast by Stuart Neville.

    Stuart Neville's writing is fast-paced and character-driven, with more depth, pressure and rapid turns than a submarine battle. Great forces are engaged, and things long buried come exploding to the surface.

    Critical Mick review free of rules of Stuart Neville's The Ghosts of Belfast .
     

    2009: The Year in Unruly Review

    For those with short attention spans and a fondness for bullet points:

  • Interviews: 5 (6, if one with a character from a book counts!)
  • Reviews: 34 (14 of them Irish crime related)
  • Classes of German students forced to read Mick's reviews: 1
  • Villains named after Mick Halpin: 0 (come on, how many more authors do I need to annoy before I get my heart's eighth-fondest wish-?)
  • The best number of all: €1205.50 was raised for The Alzheimer Society of Ireland in the first annual Critical Mick Charity Auction. Generous online friends helped with the publicity and three of the signed editions on my groaning shelves found new homes. Many thanks to all who assisted! There was a large contribution from a sordid and mysterious source. Where'd that come from? The incredible story's accesable via a link hidden somewhere on this page.

    A trend in 2009 was for consumers across the Republic to road trip it up over the border into Northern Ireland where grocery and other items cost about half of what the price gougers down South are charging. (Besides, such trips provide access to lovely exotic microbrews like Belfast Ale and Clotworthy Dobbin) My reading tastes seemed to jump on that bandwagon, with an unusually high number of excellent novels set in Northern Ireland- Family Life by Paul Charles, The Dark Place by Sam Millar, Bleed A River Deep by Brian McGilloway, The Bloomsday Dead by Adrian McKinty, Ulterior by Darryl Sloan and Stuart Neville's The Ghosts of Belfast.

    Four of those authors found a place on the Best Book Read shortlist. Other exciting new authors encountered in 2009 include Rob Kitchen and Alan Glynn. From the US, Mick read new novels from CJ Box, Karen Dionne and Michael Loyd Gray. Long-time friend of the site Linda Weaver Clarke concluded her five-part historical family saga set in Bear Lake Valley, Idaho with Elena, Woman of Courage. Exploring a darker side of the past was fellow history nerd George Franklin Feldman- there is much that is airbrushed out of the discovery and development of the Americas. Enormous statues have been erected to honor some figures who, in stature as well as virtue, stood four feet high.

    The auction aside, my notable misadventure of 2009 was the night I got brained by a mammoth. (I am not making this up. That sucker hurt. Wiping handfuls of blood off my forehead, I probably should have gone for stitches. The guy felt so bad about it, though, I had to spend the rest of the night just reassuring him that I was alright. Sheesh. What a bizarre year.)

    Good books aside, I managed to find some scattered marshmallowy bits of bliss in what's widely regarded as one of the sourest, mealiest coven of months since the Great Depression. Three trips to the US, and the toddler behaved on each one of them! The Miracle of Not Getting Booted Off the Plane. I connected with some old friends via one of those social networking sites, that was good. And last spring, my text entry was the lucky one chosen in a contest on Phantom 105.2. The prize: a classy set of Raymond Chandler reissues.

    Cooooooooooool.

    Nevermind another week of freezing weather, the forecast for reading in 2010 is great. New titles by Ken Bruen, Stuart Neville, Arlene Hunt, Declan Hughes, Ian Sansom, John Connolly, Erin Hart, Ellen McCarthy, Ava McCarthy (no relation) and Brian McGilloway will be released this year. Personal fave authors Roddy Doyle and David Mitchell also have new books in the works.

    So, stay tuned for more unruly reviews in 2010 and throughout the coming decade. (Teenies? No. Tweenies? Nah. I'm pushing for this new decade to be called the Maxies. Look at the Roman numerals and think positive, all: MMX.)

    Peace

    Yer Friend Mick Halpin

     

    Past The Oo Award, given by Critical Mick to the Best Book Read that year. Winners
    Black Swan Green by David Mitchell. Best book read in 2008 by Critical Mick Click for Critical Mick's 2008 Year in Unruly Review

    Black Swan Green by David Mitchell.
     



     
    The Last Place by Laura Lippman. Best book read in 2007 by Critical Mick Click for Critical Mick's 2007 Year in Unruly Review

    The Last Place's Tess Monaghan is a heroine of Buffy proportions, reinvigorating a stale genre- namely, serial killers- and taking Crime Fic somewhere it had never been before- Maryland!
     



     
    A Star Called Henry by Roddy Doyle. Best book read in 2006 by Critical Mick Click for Critical Mick's 2006 Year in Unruly Review

    This novel knocks into maggoty bits many inventions (dare Roddy say: fabrications) that have been guarded by long-standing Irish patents. Mad, wonderful and true.
     



     
    McCarthy's Bar by Pete McCarthy. Best book read in 2005 by Critical Mick Click for Critical Mick's 2005 Year in Unruly Review

    Don't take it from me, what it means to be Irish. Take it from Pete McCarthy's McCarthy's Bar. The dude rocks!
     



     
    Cosi Fan Tutti by Michael Dibdin. Best book read in 2004 by Critical Mick Best Book Critical Mick Read in 2004

    Michael Dibdin's Cosi Fan Tutti does for crime fiction what O Brother, Where Art Thou? did to The Great Depression. Classic!
     



     
    Disgrace by J.M. Coetzee. Best book read in 2003 by Critical Mick Best Book Critical Mick Read in 2003

    The truths and tragedies of Disgrace by J.M. Coetzee have remained vivid, even years later. Tattoo-worthy.

     
     
     
    Juan Ponce de Leon. Mick drank from the Fountain of Youth in 2009. It did him no more damn good than that Blarney Stone.
    Juan Ponce de Leon.
    Short Little Maggoty Punk.
     
     
     
    A nice pint of Guinness.  Much better than what ol' Ponce is serving up. Click to enjoy the larger image.
    Gene & Guinness.
    Satisfying Shtuff.
    And now for an important disclaimer from Critical Mick

    Yo! All content on the DFA Guide site are copyright 2009 Mick Halpin. All links to other sites and documents are copyright to whatever source wrote something cool enough for Mick to give it a referral. Try to claim them as your own work and bad karma will catch up with you, baby. Believe it.

    Irate, huh? Managed to piss off another one? Direct your hatemail to mick @ mickhalpin dot com.


    This Page Was Last Updated On 30 Decemer, 2009.

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