Reviews

Mr. Kill by Martin Limón

nelli_lakatos's review

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3.0

It was a first book in this series I read.
First I give four stars but after I thinking about is more I rated as a three star book. Otherwise I think it was a great time, and when I read it I feeled it getting better and better. But it just a three star for me. And I don't really like the ending.

usbsticky's review

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4.0

This was my first Sueno and Bascom book. I read it a few years ago. Now I'm going through the series and I decided to re-read it. The reason why I like this series came to me again. It's just a great character driven book and does a great job of describing 1970's S. Korea from a GI point of view. The police procedural part as usual was quite meh. I won't spoil the book, but I'll just say it was a big jump in logic to figure out who the culprit was and I didn't buy it. But I still liked the book a lot because of the author's writing skill if not plot skill. As I've said somewhere else, Limon is better off writing S and B short stories because that format works better for this style.

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I'm steadily going through the Sueno and Bascom series. Unfortunately, there are only 14 books plus a book of short stories. I started in the middle, then started reading them somewhat in order. I really like this series because they are easy to read and follow and easy to get into. It's best to read them in order if you are starting new.

The setting is 1970's South Korea and the protagonists are two 8th Army CID detectives. Bascom is a bit like Michael Connelly's Bosch in that he doesn't care for protocol and is more likely to antagonize the people he comes in contact with rather than acting like a normal person and that includes his superiors. Sueno is somewhat the same but more level headed. Both are good CID detectives who don't have time for BS and try to solve the crimes they are tasked to instead of slacking off. Another selling point for them is that they try to relate to the native Koreans as people rather than 2nd class citizens to abuse like some other Americans. Limon does a great job of making the characters real (including the bit parts, the GI's and the Koreans). That's the character study part that I like.

The other good part is the setting. Limon was actually serving in Korea and gives a really good depiction of it from the GI point of view. It's like going back in time with the US Army. Not all of it is good; there's a lot of corruption, poverty, booze and sex, yea, some of it actually reads like The Virgin Soldiers (Leslie Thomas). He makes the country and the people come to life.

The army police procedural part is only so-so. There isn't a lot of excitement in the cases. The detectives do their due diligence, do their footwork and solve the crimes. There is mystery but somehow Limon just doesn't get a lot of excitement across. The interest I get from reading the books is from the character development; I care what happens to the people in the story more than I do about the crimes.

That's the basic review. I can't add a lot about this book itself, not that it matters much to me. I find all the stories fairly uniform and as I go through the series I feel like I'm binge watching a TV show - I finish one episode and move along to the next. They are all different stories but in the same format. Overall, I really like the series and highly recommend them.
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