Tuesday, 27 May 2014
The Dark Return Of Time by R.B. Russell, Swan River Press
Early on in R.B. Russell's second novella, it becomes clear this 
is to be a taut, conventionally constructed thriller of the old 
school. And yet . . .
  In present-day Paris, a bookseller's son bears witness to a
brutal double kidnapping; as does a second, well-dressed
observer who swiftly makes himself scarce. This mystery 
witness then visits the son's father's bookshop, and, with 
insinuating charm, uses a ruse by which to now observe this 
increasingly wary lad. This is particularly well-handled as 
Russell succeeds in placing the reader in the role of the book-
seller's slightly spoiled and whinging son.
  Russell - a known authority on strange and uncanny fiction -
revealed his 'strange' influences in his first notable novella, 
'Bloody Baudelaire.'  I say 'revealed'; glimpsed might be a 
better noun. For Russell is one of those quiet conjurors whose 
uncanny moments are often three-quarters-hidden behind a 
slatted blind of noonday normalcy. So here, where the book of 
the title is the space of semi-recall amid the plot's otherwise 
hard-boiled, Simenonesque setting. (The title itself the banner 
to an anonymously penned memoir, its hidden significance leading 
to a revelatory twist).
  One false note latterly sounds from Candy; the abused but 
gutsy femme-fatale, whose initially credible duality finally 
descends into a cliched pay-off. One, you feel, this emotionally 
authentic tale should have bettered. Still, Russell excels in 
enticing the necessary feeling of jeopardy in the reader using a 
focused economy of language right up to its breathless end.
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