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Ice Lake
 
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Ice Lake [Paperback]

John Farrow
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 10.99
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As John Farrow's Ice Lake opens, a corpse, shot through the neck, is found under the ice in a fishing hut on a frozen lake near Montreal. It's the dead of winter in a region that Farrow (a pseudonym for literary author Trevor Ferguson, whose critically acclaimed novels include The Fire Line) knows like the back of his hand: its back alleys and distant suburbs, its ethnic diversity and big city evil, the long black nights and searingly bright days of its unrelenting winters. He also reveals intimate knowledge of the diverse power groups that drive the novel's plot: the biker gangs, the Mohawk Warriors, the Mob, the bigwigs in the lucrative pharmaceutical industry looking to cash in on an AIDS cure, the various police forces with their petty animosities and territorial conflicts.

Since the advent of Sherlock Holmes, though, most detective thrillers stand or fall on the qualities of their lead character. In Detective Émile Cinq-Mars (whom he introduced in the bestselling City of Ice), Ferguson has created a man of genuine emotions, highly ethical yet thoroughly practical, an old-style, straight-ahead cop. He doesn't leap tall buildings (or frozen lakes) in a single bound, but he knows how to keep digging in his own dogged style. A likable lead detective, a wintry ice maze of a plot, and a supporting cast of characters some of whom are patently vicious and others satisfyingly complex all make Ice Lake a captivating thriller. --Mark Frutkin

Books in Canada

The English just love a literary tempest in a teapot. Starting in the spring and sputtering on through the summer, critics for such decent publications as The Observer, The New Statesmen and Granta harrumphed about—wait for it—the 'death of the English novel.' Yes, it sounds like a case of déjà vu all over again, but the key argument is worth noting. Andrew Marr in The Observer provoked the bun fight when he claimed that even the best British fiction is mere entertainment, "competing with the telly or PlayStation." Marr said that the authors of history, biography and science books are more brilliant and more 'dangerous' than current novelists; furthermore, non-fiction writers are the ones who bring us urgent news of our times. A reply by novelist Jason Cowley in The New Statesmen, got me thinking about crime fiction and about John Farrow's detective, Emile Cinq-Mars. Cowley said British novels are 'clever but empty,' that few writers can do 'character and narrative.' In fine high falutin' style, Cowley concluded that "fiction in Britain long ago ceased to be an act of moral inquiry."
In that sweeping comment, Cowley sneered at a whole array of fine writers, like P. D. James. If he had put aside his genre snobbery and looked beyond the motherland, Cowley might have noticed that U.S. and Canadian mystery/thriller writers are offering 'urgent news' arising from 'moral inquiry, character and narrative'. James Lee Burke's detective, Dave Robichaud, trolls the American South and finds racism still endemic. James Ellroy sets his noir novels against backdrops like the Vietnam War or probes the machinations behind the Kennedy assassination. In City of Ice and now Ice Lake, Montreal's Trevor Ferguson (under the pseudonym John Farrow) offers a priestly detective engaged in a moral quest, colorful gangsters and story lines arising from contemporary calamities, such as biker warfare in Quebec, the after-shocks of the Oka crisis and the AIDS epidemic.
Sergeant-Detective Emile Cinq-Mars is in his late 50s and something of a celebrity on the Montreal police force. He has a 'beaky' nose and is overly fond of bacon and eggs. He lives on a horse farm with his younger, sexy wife, Sandra. Part Native, part French, Cinq-Mars is engaged in a secular battle against evil. In a memorable scene from City of Ice, Cinq-Mars sits in his car atop Mount Royal lit by a nearby electric cross; Ferguson describes him as "the last, the very last to erode." In Ice Lake, Ferguson plays more elaborately with the priest metaphor. Cinq-Mars' father had yearned to become a priest and failed; Emile was raised knowing the priesthood might be in his own future. Instead, he became a cop who breaks the rules in complicated games against the 'bad' guys: "As a police officer who carried with him a sense of the world's need for redemption, and not merely justice, there were times.when he would act on his own, preferring to answer to the angels and the saints. His work was every bit as precious, every bit as ordained, every bit as consecrated as a life in the priesthood."
Cinq-Mars is a powerful creation but largely absent from the first third of Ice Lake. The novel opens with Cinq-Mars and his partner, Bill Mathers ice-fishing on Lake of Two Mountains, a couple of hours from Montreal. A body is discovered under the ice in a nearby shack. Much of the ensuing action takes place in this rural community which is surrounded by a Mohawk reserve known for its act of resistance during the Oka crisis, a monastery and two rival pharmaceutical firms. The story loops back in time and the focus shifts to Lucy Gabriel. She is a lab technician at Hillier-Largent Pharmaceuticals but also a Native who was briefly famous for her courage on the barricades during the Oka crisis. Seductive, beautiful and a deeply moral woman, Lucy rapidly transforms into a kind of Florence Nightingale helping desperate AIDS patients in New York and New Jersey. In a series of economical scenes, Lucy secretly travels in a mobile lab across the border and treats the patients with highly experimental drugs. Hillier-Largent is desperate to hit the financial jackpot by discovering a cure for AIDS. Stirred into this mix are a number of other characters: Andrew Stettler, a mobster who becomes—of all things—head of security for Biologika, a rival firm. Werner Honigwachs, the brilliant boss of Biologika, who uses mob money to fund his research, and Camille Choquette, a single mom, who is sleeping with both Werner and a local cop, Charlie Painchaud.
The drama initially unfolds at a modest tempo; some readers will grow impatient with Cinq-Mars' absence and the ultimate meaning of Lucy's forays into New York. Farrow, however, is neatly setting up a serpentine hall of mirrors; when the story comes forward in time with the murder, and Cinq-Mars gets on the case, events start to ricochet and our assumptions fracture.
Farrow cranks up the narrative torque considerably with an attempt on Cinq-Mars' life. In the remainder of the novel we are treated to sudden twists and revelations, and sporadic bouts of sex and violence. The Mohawk Warriors are drawn more directly into the story along with Jacques, a vicious gangster fond of white cadillacs. Like Dennis Lehane's recent Mystic River, the most evil character in Ice Lake is acting out a deadly script that originates in a traumatic childhood ordeal. As a result, several victims turn up with their mouths sewn firmly shut. The climactic shoot-out comes, suitably, in a monastery. Farrow allows us to eavesdrop on 'mind games,' whereby individual characters try to anticipate behaviours and discern motivation. Cinq-Mars himself eschews the fancy trappings of modern police work like computer analysis and scientific craft. He prefers "to get into the heads of criminals, figure them out, trap them by anticipating their behavioiur." For readers, these speculations can resemble imaginary chess games that are sometimes absorbing and sometimes lacking in crediblility.
A weakness of City of Ice was the relationship between Cinq-Mars and Mathers, his younger, English-Canadian partner. In Ice Lake somewhat archaic words mar the chemistry. Would hard-boiled detectives and cons 'chuckle' or 'chortle?’; Farrow's use of 'jalopy' and 'caterwaul' doesn't exactly lend authenticity to a contemporary tale of gangster warfare. Still, in some ways the banter between Cinq-Mars and Mathers is a vast improvement over City of Ice. There's a wry, buoyant humour here that's often amusing and Cinq-Mars takes himself less seriously. When Cinq-Mars gobbles too much breakfast and suffers with cramps during an interrogation and then stumbles with mispronunciations of Honigwachs' name, we feel the prick of sharp satire. Overall, the set piece interrogation of Honigwachs is a fascinating encounter as the wary, sophisticated adversaries interweave metaphors of space and time with chat about horses and crime. Farrow also reveals a more emotional side of Cinq-Mars here, as he copes with the approaching death of his father.
Less ambitious than City of Ice, Farrow's Ice Lake offers more subtle pleasures than those to be found with 'Playstation or the telly.' Rumour has it that Ferguson, after fulfilling his pricey contract for two thrillers, is eager to work on another literary novel. Books like The Fire Line and The Timekeeper are worlds away from Ice Lake, though all of Ferguson's work wrestles with moral choices in a world where redemption is only a remote possibility. Now that Ferguson has enjoyed the sight of his thrillers on the racks at Costco and Price Club, it's time for his neglected literary work to be recognized by a similarly large audience. --Keith Nickson (Books in Canada) --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Important Canadian Literary Thriller ----, July 16 2001
By A Customer
Born and bred on the shores of Montreal, I cannot but feel the "draw" of these two beautiful "thrillers" so incredibly placed, and most certainly, incredibly characterized. What more is it that we are all to be looking for? As a former female English-Quebec-Canadian, and now a most integrated Chicagoan native, I have become to feel myself sadly alienated and foreign to all that goes on in that incredible "City of Ice". Who is John Farrow--OR--Trevor Ferguson that he may tantalize us such, and bring us home with this wonderful character that he has created. Can he! or does he exist !? - Cinq-Mars. I must tell you, that he is in my heart.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Cool off in the summer with this one., Sep 10 2001
By A Customer
The setting and the character of Cinq-Mars make this a better-than-your-average detective-mystery series. Cinq-Mars, a bit larger than life, loves his city of Montreal, which makes me want to visit someday, even without the chance of meeting the curmudgeonly detective.

The way the plot unfolds is different and interesting. Most of the characterizations are very good, with the exception of Camille, the reason why I gave this a 4 star rating. Read the book and decide for yourself - wouldn't want to give away anymore of the plot than the reader already gets in the first chapter!

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Amazon.com: 4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)

5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Important Canadian Literary Thriller ----, July 16 2001
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Born and bred on the shores of Montreal, I cannot but feel the "draw" of these two beautiful "thrillers" so incredibly placed, and most certainly, incredibly characterized. What more is it that we are all to be looking for? As a former female English-Quebec-Canadian, and now a most integrated Chicagoan native, I have become to feel myself sadly alienated and foreign to all that goes on in that incredible "City of Ice". Who is John Farrow--OR--Trevor Ferguson that he may tantalize us such, and bring us home with this wonderful character that he has created. Can he! or does he exist !? - Cinq-Mars. I must tell you, that he is in my heart.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Saint Lucy, dupe or conspirator?, Sep 26 2002
By Doris Lane - Published on Amazon.com
The ice-ridden locale is ideal for the cold hearts at play here. The lake is a frozen wasteland where danger and confusion, snow and ice, compete in masking and unmasking and masking again a criminal conspiracy that is tundra vast. What we don't know is this: Saint Lucy, dupe or conspirator?

Lucy's lover and partner in crime is found dead underneath an ice hole in a fishing shack on the lake, (but who is he, really?). Nefarious Québécois mobsters, police from competing jurisdictions, industrial spies, a femme fatale in Camille Choquette, who makes Lizzie Borden look a sweetheart, all skate in biotech espionage, psychopathic murder, Indian Warrior politics, crime syndicates, and the coldest hearted capitalism.

Ice Lake, by respected Canadian novelist Trevor Ferguson writing as John Farrow, follows City of Ice, which introduced the brilliant and charming, moody and maddening police detective Emil Cinq-Mars, a maverick in the Montreal PD, whose heart harkens back to an earlier time in the city's rough past when vice ruled and cops broke heads.


4.0 out of 5 stars Cool off in the summer with this one., Sep 10 2001
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
The setting and the character of Cinq-Mars make this a better-than-your-average detective-mystery series. Cinq-Mars, a bit larger than life, loves his city of Montreal, which makes me want to visit someday, even without the chance of meeting the curmudgeonly detective.

The way the plot unfolds is different and interesting. Most of the characterizations are very good, with the exception of Camille, the reason why I gave this a 4 star rating. Read the book and decide for yourself - wouldn't want to give away anymore of the plot than the reader already gets in the first chapter!

 Go to Amazon.com to see all 3 reviews  4.7 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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