Meath Chronical Article on KT McCaffrey
View the 2 page article which appeared in the Meath Chronicle's magazine supplement in 2007. Click here to download this article as a pdf file.
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McCaffrey, K T - 'Bishop's Pawn'
Hardback: 224 pages (Jan. 2007) Publisher: Robert Hale Ltd ISBN: 0709082622
If it's linguistic pyrotechnics you're after, you'd be advised to look elsewhere: KT McCaffrey writes in a quiet, measured and very effective fashion that reflects the way his main protagonist, journalist Emma Boylan, goes about her business.
Set in Dublin, BISHOP'S PAWN is a sequel-of-sorts to McCaffrey's first novel, REVENGE (1999). It opens with Emma discovering that the newspaper she works for is about to publish her obituary. Other newspapers follow suit, and - as corpses begin to pile up - it soon becomes apparent that the practical joke has sinister overtones. In REVENGE, Emma was one of a number of eyewitnesses to the suicide of a woman whose life had been destroyed by an elaborate cover-up partly engineered by the Catholic Church. Now the woman's daughter has come of age, and seems hell-bent on nothing less than divinely inspired retribution.
The thrill of KT McCaffrey's writing is the juxtaposition between that finely modulated downbeat style and the apocalyptic scenario it describes. Emma is an Everywoman who is not particularly tough or hardboiled, and whose domestic concerns run parallel to the CSI-style bodycount. The tension that builds relentlessly from the early stages is derived from Emma's very ordinariness, which includes a penchant for logical thinking appropriate to an investigative journalist, and the outrageous machinations of the psychopathic murderess she finds herself pitted against. Certainly McCaffrey can do pithy humour - "there's a breeze out there that'd freeze a pawnbroker's balls" - and his multiple-character narrative that drives with tragic inevitability towards an explosive finale has all the components of a blockbuster movie script. But once the dust has settled, the abiding and poignant memory is of McCaffrey's skill in evoking the nuances of Emma's plight as she finds herself at the heart of a maelstrom that threatens to destroy everything she once believed in. The ability to mine the extraordinary from the ordinary, as the Irish poet Patrick Kavanagh once put it, is not one that should be underestimated. BISHOP'S PAWN is a superb addition to the canon of Irish crime fiction.
Declan Burke, Ireland
June 2007
REVENGE
Review in ‘Books Ireland’ Autumn 1999
Revenge. K.T. McCaffrey. Marino. 400pp £5.99 pb 1-86023-083-0
A suspense thriller ‘not for the squeamish’ about a woman in her thirties intent on getting even with the powerful businessman who raped her when she was eighteen. The detective figure is a female investigative journalist who goes where the police fear to tread. Unusual for Marino Books to put a toe in the mass paperback market, but they do it well, and at the end there’s sixteen pages providing the first chapter of McCaffrey’s next book(staring the same journalist) as a come-on – something we haven’t seen done before.
We’re told nothing about K.T.McCaffrey, and somehow guess it’s a nom de guerre, perhaps of a more serious writer? Though what could be more serious than making money by keeping you on the edge of your deck chair.
END OF THE LINE
‘An Irish writer to watch
Deadly Pleasure
‘A well plotted book with strong momentum and an engaging heroine.’
Susanna Yager, Daily Telegraph
‘A new Irish author who slots comfortably into the Ruth Rendell
Peter Lovesey – Reginald Hill school of crime writing -TIME OUT
‘A welcome addition to the ranks of superior crime writers
Peter Guttridge, The Observer.
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