By: Simon R. Green
Genres: Thriller Paranormal - Supernatural
Posted: November 2, 2021
I read British crime; I read SF. Strangely, I wasn’t familiar with the ‘Ishmael Jones’ series. The eponymous hero of these stories which feel like a cross between Agatha Christie and The X Files, stars in his tenth book. BURIED MEMORIES also features the reassuringly normal Penny Belcourt. She is the lady friend of Ishmael, who, we learn, is an alien.
Ishmael has been working for secretive agencies for decades, and through some backstory we learn his cases have contained strange occurrences and stranger ray guns – somewhat like Men In Black. Now a personal quest brings him to the sleepy English village of Norton Hedley in wooded countryside. He’s seeking a local historian and author, Vincent Smith, in the hope that the man can tell him more about an alien spacecraft which allegedly crashlanded here in 1963. Murky group The Organization and their counterparts in private enterprise, Black Heir, are looking for it too. If Ishmael arrived on Earth in that ship in 1963, he might be able to overcome his memory loss and discover what he was sent for – if it wasn’t just fluke that he landed in England.
You get the picture. This is a crowded story and much of it has been crowded since the 1960s. Other influences could include Mythago Wood and Doctor Who, and I spotted a couple of lines from James Bond films. I don’t mean to suggest that the story is derivative, because we’ve had urban fantasy crime stories aplenty but alien tech trumps werewolves. As a newcomer I had to get to know the complacent Penny and the man she places her trust in, Ishmael, who is annoyingly unruffled by strangeness, death or danger. Enough is provided for a new reader to dive in, but longtime fans will probably get the most out of BURIED MEMORIES. I think the one real drawback is that the reader never really feels the main characters are at risk. They spend most of their time talking to each other, or a police officer, or secret agents, concocting possible answers to puzzles about who was where when. That’s what I mean by the Agatha Christie aspect – Poirot particularly.
Author Simon R. Green has been writing SF and fantasy since 1979. He’s a British author, hence the setting, and has previously created the Deathstalker series. That sounds too much like horror for me, but I’ll check out some earlier paranormal, slightly tongue in cheek, adventures with Ishmael Jones and Penny Belcourt.
Book Summary
Returning to the small town where he crash-landed in 1963, Ishmael Jones is in search of answers. But his investigation is de-railed by a brutal murder.
“I think something very bad and very dangerous has come to your little town, Inspector . . .”
As long-buried memories from his hidden past begin to resurface, Ishmael Jones and his partner Penny feel compelled to return to the small country town where Ishmael crash-landed in 1963; the place where his memories began.
Norton Hedley is no ordinary town. Apparitions, sudden disappearances, sightings of unusual beasts: for centuries, the place has been plagued by a series of inexplicable events. Ishmael’s first task is to track down local author Vincent Smith, the one man he believes may have some answers.
Ishmael and Penny aren’t the only ones seeking the mysterious Mr Smith. When their search unearths a newly-dead body in the local mortuary – a body that’s definitely not supposed to be there – Ishmael becomes the prime suspect in the ensuing murder investigation. His only hope of discovering the truth about his origins lies in exposing a ruthless killer.
by: Simon R. Green
Severn House
October 1, 2021
On Sale: October 5, 2021
Featuring: Vincent Smith; Penny Belcourt; Ishmael Jones
192 pages
ISBN: 0727890328
EAN: 9780727890320
Kindle: B0971GXFYX
Hardcover / e-Book