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Book Reviews of A Most Peculiar Malaysian Murder (Inspector Singh, Bk 1)

A Most Peculiar Malaysian Murder (Inspector Singh, Bk 1)
A Most Peculiar Malaysian Murder - Inspector Singh, Bk 1
Author: Shamini Flint
ISBN-13: 9780749929756
ISBN-10: 0749929758
Publication Date: 4/23/2009
Pages: 304
Rating:
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
 7

3.7 stars, based on 7 ratings
Publisher: Piatkus Books
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

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BoysMom avatar reviewed A Most Peculiar Malaysian Murder (Inspector Singh, Bk 1) on + 737 more book reviews
Engaging characters and a vibrant locale set the stage for this exciting mystery to play out.

A Most Peculiar Malaysian Murder is the first book in Shamini Flint's Inspector Singh Investigates series. It is a superb beginning with a curious lead detective, a colorful and exotic Malaysian setting, and an intriguing, surprise-filled plot. Interestingly, we don't learn much about the main character; he's even addressed as Singh or Inspector Singh throughout, never a first name. We know he is married, a Sikh, has a widowed sister living in Kuala Lumpur whom he ends up staying with during the extended investigation, and that his Singaporean colleagues would love to have him gone. Physically, he's short, rotund, sweats profusely, smokes, and snores like a freight train, according to his sister. He's just not a very engaging sounding lead character, but somehow, he is just that, and very much so. He coaxes witnesses to tell all and wins over his Malaysian counterparts quite handily. The missing pieces to the puzzle of his backstory, though, will act like catnip on me; I will need to read further in the series for sure. In addition, I enjoyed both Shukor and Inspector Mohammed, the Malaysian connections, one for his genuineness and the other for his elegance and grace. I hope they reappear in series down the road.

The Malaysian setting was exotic; I haven't run across any other mysteries using this location as a backdrop. The descriptions immersed me in the place. I felt I had a reasonably good image of what the inspector and other characters were experiencing. And although the story doesn't linger in Borneo, I thought I got a clear impression of that place and a good idea of the events of the time with the logging industry, palm oil, and the Penan people (which continues today.)

Along with its engaging characters, multiple points of view, and vibrant locale, the plot provides many viable suspects and red herrings to dismiss before getting to its final resolution. I never saw the answer until a tiny action clued me in, thinking, "No, really?" Not that the suspect was implausible but that I'd been had - completely. Having admitted that, I will say the resolution also satisfied me - completely.

I recommend A MOST PECULIAR MALAYSIAN MURDER to readers of mystery fiction who would enjoy a different sort of police detective, competent for sure but with flaws and perhaps storied background. Also, this book might fit the bill for mystery readers who, although they aren't into the cozy subgenre, don't care for a lot of blood and guts in the details of their crime stories.