Tuesday, 13 October 2009

The Hidden Man


I was asked by Shots Magazine to review The Hidden Man by David Ellis, and reading the book made me think again of the qualities necessary for a thriller. Ellis is someone I haven’t met, but he’s a successful American attorney whose photo is handsome and whose books sell in large quantities. These attributes might, just possibly, have prejudiced me against him! However, I have to say straight away that I thought his book was good and deserves to do well. Not quite in the Lee Child or John Grisham class, perhaps, but a very efficient piece of work.

Essentially, it’s a story about an attorney who is coming to terms with family tragedy when hired by a mysterious stranger to defend a schoolboy friend on a murder rap. There is a lot of no doubt authentic legal detail, and the characterisation is careful, but the great strength of the book lies in the plotting. I thought this was very good, with plenty of questions to answer and plenty of twists. Definitely a cut above the standard associated in my mind with the average courtroom thriller, which can be a bit samey. So I will certainly be happy to read Ellis again in future.

As with a number of other thrillers I’ve read in the past year or so, though, Ellis juggled with viewpoints, not always in a way I found entirely successful. There’s one chapter towards the end, where the hero (who tells most of the story in the first person) features in the third person in a critical scene. For me, that didn’t entirely come off. I’m coming round to the opinion that selection of viewpoint is one of the central challenges in constructing a thriller. And it is far from easy to get it absolutely right.

5 comments:

  1. Too much head-hopping? Or just a poor choice of heads in which to hop?

    Elizabeth
    Mystery Writing is Murder

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  2. Martin,
    You are absolutely right about point of view! It is, indeed, a major challenge. Having different points of view allows the reader to see the same situation from a braoder perspective, and to understand the characters better. However, it can easily fall flat. Interesting to think about - thanks!

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  3. A poor choice (in my opinion) Elizabeth.
    Hi Margot - a classic example of multiple viewpoint in my opinion is The Moonstone.

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  4. Using more than one point of view is such a great opportunity to cheat the reader, but of course it can be overdone - or just not mastered.

    My poor students still have a lot to learn as many of them tend to trust a first-person narrator blindly, but perhaps when they have read crime fiction for thirty years ...

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  5. Yes, Dorte, the dodgy narrator needs careful watching!

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