If life's too short to drink bad wine, it's definitely too short to read mediocre mysteries. Here are my recommendations for a few of the best this month: WHEN WILL THERE BE GOOD NEWS?
by Kate Atkinson. Little Brown, 400 pages, $24.99
According to Jackson Brodie, the ex-policeman in Atkinson's crime novel, "a coincidence is just an explanation waiting to happen," and as if she were writing a classic Greek tale, characters crash into each other, chance rules and fates are twisted. In the end, this novel is so satisfying it'll make you believe the gods had their hands in it.
Joanna Hunter witnesses her family's brutal murder when she's 6 years old. She then spends 30 years "running from the nightmare only to crash headlong into another."
She hires Reggie, a 16-year-old orphan who reads Homer and Aeschylus, as her son's nanny. Fate has not been kind to Reggie, but she's a survivor. Throughout the novel, she's the only one who seems to grasp what's really happening.
Meanwhile, Brodie is tracking a son he's never met while pining for Detective Chief Inspector Louise Monroe, who is searching for meaning in her fractured marriage. When all their lives intersect in absurdly brilliant ways, characters concede "there are no rules -- we just pretend there are." Sophocles would be proud.
THE ARCHANGEL PROJECT
by C.S. Graham. Harper Paperback, 384 pages, $7.99
Since the "X-Files," the fringe sciences have been creeping in from the margins in our culture's zeitgeist. Graham's fast-paced thriller will help their cause.
Along with a conspiracy that's as convincing as anything Dan Brown has given us and a level of plausibility, that, well, is as convincing as anything Dan Brown has given us, the book has a heroine, October Guinness (Tobie for short), who makes this chase mystery one you really want to catch.