#BookReview Second Sister by Chan Ho-Kei, trans. by Jeremy Tiang

About the Book

Wun Wah Tower, Kwun Tong district, Hong Kong. When Siu-Man jumped from her window on the twenty-second floor, everyone assumed it was suicide. But Sui-Man’s sister, Nga-Yee, a quiet and unassuming librarian, is determined to prove it was murder. The police aren’t interested in re-opening a solved case so she contacts a man known only as N – a hacker, and an expert in cybersecurity and manipulating human behaviour.

What follows is a cat-and-mouse game through the vibrant city of Hong Kong. The pair’s investigation takes them from creepy commuter-train gropers to Siu-Man’s gossipy friends to the dark corners of the city’s digital underground – where online bullies, sexual predators and shady tech businesses stalk their prey…

Format: ebook (528 pages) Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 18th February 2020 Genre: Crime, Thriller, Literature in Translation

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My Review

Second Sister is an incredibly clever high-tech thriller set in Hong Kong. If you are at all concerned about the invasiveness of technology, its potential for misuse or worry we are becoming a surveillence society then you may be alarmed at the extent to which the enigmatic N – part detective, part hacker – is able to insinuate himself into the lives of others. And bear in mind, the book was written in 2020 so technology has progressed (if that is the right word) since then. It may well make you want to move off-grid, grow your own food, communicate only by letter and adopt a disguise whenever you go out in public. Some of the tech stuff I’ll admit went over my head but I wasn’t alone there as Nga-Yee struggles with it too, much to N’s impatience. By the way, kudos to Jeremy Tiang for being able to translate all the tech stuff from Cantonese into something understandable by English-speaking readers.

The book definitely immerses the reader in the fast-paced environment of Hong Kong with its high-rise apartments, shopping malls, karaoke bars and noodle shops. For the more affluent Hongkongers it’s all about having the latest phone, looking the part and achieving your career aspirations. I think it would definitely be an advantage to have an idea of the geography of Hong Kong as the plot takes the reader to many different districts of the region, many of which have their own distinct economic and social characteristics.

The book exposes some of the darker features of modern day society including sexual harassment, online bullying and teenage suicide. It also explores the desire for revenge and whether this can ever be justified or even bring happiness if finally exacted.

My main criticism of the book is it’s about 150 pages too long and, at times, it does get bogged down in the technology stuff. Having said that, the increasingly frequent twists and reveals make it difficult to stop reading. It is incredibly well-plotted with the two main storylines coming together very cleverly in the final chapters.

I received a digital review copy courtesy of Head of Zeus via NetGalley.

In three words: Complex, ingenious, immersive

Try something similarNo Place To Hide by J. S. Monroe


About the Author

Chan Ho-Kei was born and raised in Hong Kong. He has won the Mystery Writers of Taiwan Award for his short stories, and In 2011 he won the Soji Shimada, the biggest mystery award in the Chinese world. He lives in Taiwan. (Photo: Goodreads author page)

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#BookReview Mrs Whistler by Matthew Pamplin #MrsWhistler

About the Book

Chelsea, 1876. Struggling artist Jimmy Whistler is at war with his patron. Denied full payment, he and muse Maud Franklin face ruin.

As Jimmy’s enemies mount, he resolves to sue a famous critic for libel, in a last-ditch attempt to ward off the bailiffs. Although she has no position in society, Maud is expected to do her part.

But Maud has a secret that forces her to choose between art and love.

Format: ebook (465 pages) Publisher: The Borough Press
Publication date: 3rd May 2018 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

Based on actual events, Mrs Whistler is the story of artist James MacNeill Whistler, a man so convinced of his own genius that he embarks on an ill-advised libel action against art critic, John Ruskin, who has been less than complimentary about his work, falls out with the wealthy and influential Frederick Leyland over a room known as ‘The Peacock Room’ he has been commissioned to decorate, and is gulled by individuals he thought were friends but who turn out to be anything but. It’s a story of hubris in which you feel all along that things are not going to turn out well although, to a certain extent, you do have to admire someone whose overwhelming self-confidence enables them to view what anyone else would see as a disaster as a mere temporary setback. I’m afraid that was the only thing I found to admire about the James Whistler revealed in the book. Sure, he’s good company and hosts lavish parties but mostly using other people’s money. And he is completely self-centred. ‘Jim was not known for his perceptiveness when it came to the thoughts and feelings of others…’ Too right.

There’s really only one ‘official’ Mrs Whistler in the book, James’ mother, the subject of probably his most famous painting. Maud, the young woman who starts off as his model, then his muse and then his lover, never achieves that status. Maud has artistic talent of her own but is destined to remain in Whistler’s shadow, supporting him through one scrape after another, enduring the penury that follows the outcome of his disastrous libel action and putting up with his moods. ‘When in the dumps, he was but a husk – a despondent child, a tired old man.’ Time and again, I found myself thinking, ‘Maud why on earth are you with this man?’ particularly when she is forced to make an unbearably sad decision on not just one, but two occasions purely so Whistler’s artistic life can continue unimpeded.

It’s Maud who finally puts two and two together and discovers just how ruthlessly Whistler has been manipulated – and betrayed – by a person he thought his closest friend (although I suspect most readers will have had their doubts about them from early on).

The reader gets a fascinating insight into the artistic community of the period with walk-on parts for artists such as Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Edward Burne-Jones. There’s even an appearance towards the end of the book by Oscar Wilde (described as ‘a fleshy, rather flamboyant young Irishman’) who of course also embarked on an ill-fated libel action.

In the author’s Historical Note he references the biography of Whistler written by American art critic Elizabeth Pennell and her husband Joseph, published in 1911. He describes how, whilst writing the book, they felt certain details about Whistler’s life were missing. However, although Maud was still alive, she refused to talk to the Pennells. As they described it: ‘Maud could tell the whole story, but she will not.‘ Mrs Whistler is Matthew Plampin’s very engaging attempt to fill in the gaps in that story.

I received a digital review copy courtesy of The Borough Press via NetGalley.

In three words: Fascinating, moving, insightful

Try something similarEcstasy by Mary Sharratt


About the Author

Matthew Plampin was born in 1975 and lives in London. He completed a PhD at the Courtauld Institute of Art and now lectures on nineteenth-century art and architecture. He is the author of four other novels: The Street Philosopher, The Devil’s Acre, Illumination and Will & Tom. (Photo credit: Karolina Webb)

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