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This is a picture of Undertow, a novel by Arlene Hunt

Undertow
by Arlene Hunt
Hachette Books Ireland, 2009

http://www.arlenehunt.com

 

Salt Wearing Down to the Bone

In America, QuicK is a powdered chocolate substance used to con kids into drinking milk. In 21st Century Dublin, QuicK is the detective agency in Arlene Hunt's popular series about PI's John Quigley and Sarah Kenny. I know which I fly through quicker, and it doesn't have a rabbit on the label.

This is NOT a picture of Arlene Hunt's novel, Undertow.

Undertow is the fourth Quigley/Kenny mystery, and its references to the sea follow with the certainty of waves. Misdeeds in the painful past- presumably in the previous installment, Missing Presumed Dead- take hold of Sarah Kenny, of reformed burglar Darren Wallace, of pregnant teenager Stacy Power- and drag them back into treacherous deep water.

Stacy Power visits QuicK's offices (in the same run-down Georgian house as a pirate radio station and a hospitalized lawyer) because her Slovak boyfriend, Orie Kavlar, has gone missing. It's only a few weeks until the baby arrives, and Orie would not have left her side unless something terrible had happened to him. In hopes that all will soon be sunny days again, she hands over the pension money her grandma had provided for a pram. As readers already know from the novel's gripping opening scenes, her Orie is not a friendly dolphin but a shark.

When not lying to Stacy about his nation of origin, Orie Kavlar serves as muscle for local gangster Anthony "Mink" Dunlop's human trafficking operation. Undertow, like Bleed a River Deep, explores the hidden laborers beneath Celtic Tiger Ireland's recently-popped prosperity. Without a passport or a friend, those who have been smuggled across the water in the backs of furniture vans find themselves shipwrecked on this island of Ireland- stranded, helpless, and watched over by strange native predators.

Neither is this. It's Arlene Hunt's first novel, Vicious Circle.

Vicious Circle.

Read Mick's August 2008 review.

Sarah Kenny has troubles of her own. She lives in daily dread of a body washing ashore. John Quigley harbors tender feelings for Sarah, but cannot help but notice how hot a young redhead, Caoimhe Wallace, would look in a bikini. Other characters and crimes bob around like bathtoys in a drain's whirlpool. Steadily the current picks up speed and they all start to collide and spin in the race toward blackness.

Arlene Hunt tells an exciting story, and throws in the occasional brilliant phrase or observation. "The Wallace family home was obviously expensive, but what it lacked in style it more than made up for in ostentation. Fortuna House was a mock-Georgian pile, like something a Premiership footballer might consider classy." (pg. 133) Her skills of style, pace, narrative and character show great improvement over her first novel. Undertow is a much bigger sandcastle.

i'm on the beach, oh yeah, to rest my feet, oh yeah, those poets grin, oh yeah

Critical Mick says: There's some sand in this sandwich, and a crab's nabbed the last bite. Still, if seeking a book to stuff in a beachbag, Arlene Hunt's Undertow is just the fast-paced entertainment you need.

Gerard Brennan of CSNI had a Q & A with Arlene Hunt in September 2008.

Declan Burke of Crime Always Pays also interviewed Arlene Hunt upon the publication of Undertow in November 2008.

they fight with russians, oh yeah, and have discussions, oh yeah, with the kgb, oh yeah, at the baltic sea, oh yeah, they know the pope, oh yeah, he's a regular joe, oh yeah
OK so there was a song called Down at the Sea from the same Beat Happening album, the lyrics above with their references to beach and russians and baltic sea still fit an unruly review of Undertow. It's a much better song than DATS for sure.
Equally good would be The Cure, whose 1990 Disintegration album featured The Same Deep Water As You. Though if we're talking obscure 1980's alternative music I guess I should be hiding Suzanne Vega lyrics as she actually had a song called Undertow. My older sister had the cassette. Hey, I'll nab a line from that for this irreverant review's title! Yeah.
And now for an important disclaimer from Critical Mick

Yo! This review and 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 3 November, 2009.

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