I recently finished reading
Kahawa by Donald Westlake. Kahawa is Swahili for "coffee" and a train loaded down with six million dollars worth of coffee is the subject of this book, as our mercenary heroes (such as they are) are planning to steal said train. The trick is that the setting is Uganda during the late 1970s and the train belongs to the dictator Idi Amin, so in addition to getting a top notch heist novel Westlake also gives us a fascinating setting and a lot of grim, historically accurate detail. At just over 500 pages, this is the longest Westlake novel I've read yet, but it's absolutely fantastic from beginning to end, with a tone that's more serious than the other work I've read that was published under Westlake's own name. Highly recommended; you can get used print copies off Amazon for the cost of shipping and there's also a Kindle edition available.
I recently saw William Gibson speak at Duke, and before he showed up I tried to finish reading
Spook Country, his 2007 follow-up to
Pattern Recognition. I didn't succeed, but I did get a fair way into the book and have been enjoying it quite a bit. The plot hasn't quite emerged from the multiple character viewpoints just yet, but so far it's about a former musician turned journalist, Hollis, who has been hired by a mysterious magazine to cover several augmented reality artists. It turns out that at least one of these artists may have more going on with his work than just art, and at some point it's going to intercept with the other two viewpoint characters: a young member of a small Cuban/Russian criminal family and a detached tranquilizer addict who is being used as a translator by someone who may or may not be a cop. Even if the plot hasn't emerged entirely, the characters are interesting and Gibson's prose is, as ever, excellent. I'm looking forward to getting back into Spook Country and already have his latest novel,
Zero History, ready to go when I'm done. Well, not immediately; there's a one-two punch of
Lois Bujold and
Jim Butcher hitting in the next few weeks, and those are going to demand my immediate attention.
FnordChan