A big thank you to Rowena Hoseason of murdermayhemandmore.net for her review of Catalyst. It's interesting that both she and Jack Owen (see yesterday's blog) refer in their reviews to Emma Peel from The Avengers TV series. Maybe there was some subconscious tribute working there when I created the character, since I was in my formative years when I watched that highly original ground-breaking series in the 1960s!
Here is the Amazon review; a slightly longer review can be found at Rowena's site (above):
Catherine is a talented woman. Smart enough to be a biochemist.
Beautiful enough to be a top-class catwalk model. Physically skilled and
strong enough to free-climb a sleek city office block. Determined
enough to avenge the financial ruin and deaths of her parents. Yup,
she’s a thoroughly modern girl.
But Cat is also a wonderful
throwback to Emma Peel of The Avengers TV series. Indeed, the whole
atmosphere of Catalyst is resoundingly retro and it shares a lot of
style with The Avengers and The Saint, and even the early Bond movies.
Catalyst is not a pastiche nor a parody but feels instead like a loving
tribute to the sensibilities and sly humour of those 1960s spy series.
Yet it’s most definitely set in the 21st century and it doesn’t lampoon
its influences so much as cherish them.
There’s a coherent plot to
push the action along, one which touches on animal rights, science
running amok, corporate abuses of the environment and human trafficking
alongside good old-fashioned love, jealously, betrayal, intrigue and, of
course, murder. The writing is straightforward and easy to follow,
although occasionally it gets bogged down a little bit in everyday
minutiae.
Author Nik Morton can deliver a gripping action set piece;
the opening sequence involving Cat’s incredible climb is outright
excellent and skilfully pulls the reader straight into the fray.
I
particularly enjoyed: the role reversal which gleefully subverts gender
stereotypes and sees the leading man tied helpless to railway track
(yes, really), relying on the all-action heroine to come to his aid.
I
was also intrigued by the police officers who follow Cat's path as it
zigzags across the UK and onwards to Spain. One of them is known as
‘Inspector Mushroom’ because he only comes out after dark – can’t wait
for that back-story to be explained in a future episode. In fact, he’s
such an interesting character that he probably deserves a spin-off story
all of his own.
Catalyst made for an enjoyable afternoon’s
light-hearted entertainment. It’s wry and witty, well observed, and fast
paced. The violence and intimate action all leans towards the delicate
end of the scale so there’s nothing here to shock or horrify. Good, old
fashioned fun, in fact. Steed would certainly approve.
Note: I was very pleased that Rowena picked up on the two NCA characters, Pointer and Basset, 'the dogs of law'. Yes, Pointer's strange origin is explained in the prologue of Catacomb!
Catalyst can be obtained from Amazon sites worldwide.
Showing posts with label Emma Peel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emma Peel. Show all posts
Tuesday, 27 September 2016
Monday, 26 September 2016
'It's one of those most wicked of things...'
A big thank you to Jack Owen across the Pond, writing an Amazon review of Catalyst:
A nice nostalgic drop of mayhem, sex and fashion with an avenging poster-child for haute couture fighting murderous conglomerates. It is a welcome escape from insoluble world affairs.
Nik Morton's fashionably correct antagonist 'Cat' (Catherine Vibrissae) is the smartest avenger since Emma Peel was teamed with John Steed.
I enjoyed dipping into Morton's smorgasbord of tidbits which reintroduced me to southern England, Wales, Spain and a splash in the Med. All the while following the scent of blackguards tormenting caged furry pets; then sadistic scientists using refugees to test-drive a sex cocktail which would shame Viagra's prowess.
Not sure if my Granny would approve, but its a great read for frequent flyers stuck at airport terminal, bathers at the beach or coffee shop habituates. It might also rock the chairs of 'Enquiring Minds' readers of a certain vintage.
I should caution you it's one of those most wicked of things – a series.
And this is just Cat's first recorded adventure.
Catalyst - obtained at these Amazon sites worldwide.
A nice nostalgic drop of mayhem, sex and fashion with an avenging poster-child for haute couture fighting murderous conglomerates. It is a welcome escape from insoluble world affairs.
Nik Morton's fashionably correct antagonist 'Cat' (Catherine Vibrissae) is the smartest avenger since Emma Peel was teamed with John Steed.
I enjoyed dipping into Morton's smorgasbord of tidbits which reintroduced me to southern England, Wales, Spain and a splash in the Med. All the while following the scent of blackguards tormenting caged furry pets; then sadistic scientists using refugees to test-drive a sex cocktail which would shame Viagra's prowess.
Not sure if my Granny would approve, but its a great read for frequent flyers stuck at airport terminal, bathers at the beach or coffee shop habituates. It might also rock the chairs of 'Enquiring Minds' readers of a certain vintage.
I should caution you it's one of those most wicked of things – a series.
And this is just Cat's first recorded adventure.
Catalyst - obtained at these Amazon sites worldwide.
Labels:
#Catalyst,
#crime,
#e-book,
#fashion,
#KindleBargain,
#Paperbacks,
#sex,
#thriller,
Amazon reviews,
Avengers,
Emma Peel,
John Steed
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