I've finished several (many, a gaggle?) since last I posted.
Salvation of a Saint by Keigo Higashino
Japanese detective story, with an interesting twist. By the same author as
The Devotion of Suspect X. Higashino's books are just being translated to English, and evidently are really big in Japan. Rightly so, they are interesting, with great characters, good interplay, and nice twisty plots.
The Twelve by Justin Cronin
Sequel to
The Passage, it covers much of the same time lines as the first, but fills in the gaps left, and cleans up much of the debris left over. I found the first to be more exciting, but this one certainly has it's heart pounding stretches, and a great deal of closure.
Half Blood Blues by Esi Edugyan
I wanted to love this book, it was short listed for the Booker last year, and had extremely good potential, but fell short for me. Too inbred and not enough story. Basically, it covers the story of some black jazz musicians in Germany at the wrong time. 1939. Worse yet, for him, one of them is a German citizen. Not to Hitler's liking At All. The story is told in flash back, so we know at least two of them survive, will they all, and in what condition?
A Walk Among the Tombstones and
The Devil Knows You're Dead by Lawrence Block.
What can I say? It's vintage Block. Master of noir with a humane/moralizing streak. Good stuff. Must read the rest of the Matthew Scudder series.