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CRIME BOOKS

From Saturday's Globe and Mail

UNDONE

By Karin Slaughter, Delacorte, 438 pages, $30

Ten books in, some series start to falter. Not the Sara Linton saga. First, Karin Slaughter killed off Linton's husband. Then she introduced a pair of new detectives with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. Now she has moved Sara to Atlanta and brought her into a whole new scene.

No longer a pediatrician, Sara is working in the emergency room of Atlanta's biggest, poorest hospital, and that brings her into contact with the GBI team of Will Trent and Faith Mitchell, in a case as complicated and sophisticated as crime fiction gets.

Judith and Henry Coldfield are driving home from a family celebration of their 40th wedding anniversary. Judith is musing over their family history when a naked woman runs into the road in front of their car. She is incoherent and terribly injured; she has been systematically and viciously tortured for days. The ambulance takes her to Sara Linton's emergency room.

Trent and Mitchell are called to assist the local police, and Will uncovers a cave where the tortured woman was held. Worse, she wasn't alone there. There is someone abroad who is not just bad or mad, but purely and simply evil. The search for the torturer makes for a great if grim story with a twist ending.

Slaughter always has great plots and characters, but Undone is one of her best. She also manages to leave us with a little cliffhanger for the next Linton episode. Perfect midsummer mystery reading.

JERICHO'S FALL

By Stephen L. Carter, Knopf, 355 pages, $32

Stephen L. Carter's first three novels have explored the inner byways of the United States' insular black aristocracy, but in Jericho's Fall, he departs from that carefully constructed world. We still have his trademark mannered prose, and complex, rich characters engaging in convoluted plots, but at its heart, this is an ordinary suspense novel with a dash of espionage.

Jericho Ainsley is a former secretary of defence, former national security adviser and former director of the CIA. He served several presidents for many years, and made a fortune on Wall Street to boot.

Then, 20 years ago, he threw it all away, becoming the "former everything." The reason was his affair with Princeton undergraduate Rebecca De Forde. The relationship lasted less than two years, after which Ainsley retired to Colorado. Rebecca left Princeton, drifted into marriage, had a child, and is now working at a dead-end job in Washington, D.C.

Then a call comes that Jericho is dying. If Beck wants to see him before he goes, she must journey to Colorado. But Beck's farewell trip to her ex-lover's bedside becomes a mad thriller. There are lots of unexpected (and somewhat unbelievable) side trips, and some dodgy characters in the best melodramatic style.

Someone is out to get the old man, but they want something from him first. And is Jericho's illness a fake? At least one of his old friends thinks he's crazy, and that the first manifestation of that madness was his affair with Beck.

Carter can be wordy, and he never met a subplot he couldn't incorporate. Still, I skimmed along and, despite the irritation at the had-I-but-known references and cliffhanger chapter endings, I didn't put this one down once. It's not Carter's best, but it's still pretty good.

WIFE OF THE GODS

By Kwei Quartey, Random House, 312 pages, $28

Wife of the Gods, an ambitious and auspicious debut by California physician Kwei Quartey, is the perfect foil for the cuteness of Precious Ramotswe and the No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency. It introduces Detective Inspector Darko Dawson of the homicide division of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Ghana Police Service. Dawson is a real copper, in a Third World country where computers are unavailable, telephones unreliable and "charm" more likely means a curse than a pleasant personality trait.

When Dawson is sent to the village of Ketanu to investigate the death of a local woman, it's a chance for him to reconnect with his mother's family. A visit to Ketanu years earlier remains one of his last good memories of childhood.