Reviews

Contemporary, Appealing And Fresh: Reviewing the Evidence

2019-02-06T12:20:54-05:00May 5th, 2018|Categories: Buffalo Jump, Reviews|

Jonah Geller would not call himself a nice Jewish boy. He never finished college, he works as a private detective for an agency that largely does surveillance work, he likes ham and eggs for breakfast and doesn’t call his mother enough. He suffers from intense and troubling nightmares about his service in the Israeli army, as [...]

A Must Read for Summer: Hamilton Spectator

2019-02-06T12:24:56-05:00May 4th, 2018|Categories: Buffalo Jump, Reviews|

Blunt action, realistically and graphically described and paced with just enough time to catch your breath before the next sudden eruption. Add the right feel for dialogue, a plot and writing that’s just the ideal temperature for a mystery-thriller and you have Buffalo Jump–a debut novel winner by Howard Shrier. Toronto PI Jonah Geller arrives home [...]

A Top-Notch Page Turner: Guelph Mercury

2019-02-06T12:22:30-05:00May 4th, 2018|Categories: Buffalo Jump, Reviews|

Jonah Geller is a man with many troubles. His wife has just kicked him out of their home and he has screwed up a major smuggling case in his role as security officer for a Toronto company. So after recuperating from a gunshot wound, Geller finds himself doing minor jobs for the security firm. And he’s [...]

Continues The Tradition Of Parker And Crais: Quill And Quire

2019-02-06T12:28:47-05:00May 4th, 2018|Categories: Buffalo Jump, Reviews|

Contemporary Canadian crime writers are not exactly plentiful in number, and Toronto’s Howard Shrier is a welcome addition to their ranks. Shrier, a former broadcaster, knows his way around genre conventions: his protagonist, detective Jonah Geller, cracks wise at every opportunity about his tenuous employment with investigative firm Beacon Security and his slippery hold on relationships [...]

A Great Debut Novel: Globe and Mail

2019-02-06T12:29:52-05:00May 4th, 2018|Categories: Buffalo Jump, Reviews|

Buffalo Jump is a great debut novel from Montreal-born Torontonian Shrier, and it introduces PI Jonah Geller in what is certainly going to be a fine series. The plot is tight, the characters engaging, and this one even has a believable - and sympathetic - bad guy. The story opens with Geller, a consultant with Beacon [...]

The Menacing World Of Howard Shrier

2019-02-06T12:30:50-05:00May 4th, 2018|Categories: Buffalo Jump, Reviews|

Guns, knives, bats, and the Don. Welcome to the menacing world of Howard Shrier’s Toronto! Welcome to Buffalo Jump. There’s even a Mafia Don or two thrown in, to balance out the threat of the river. Jonah Geller is a nice Jewish boy who can’t seem to live up to the promise his mother sees in him. [...]

Clever And Thought-Provoking: Women’s Post

2019-02-06T11:30:38-05:00March 20th, 2018|Categories: Boston Cream, Reviews|Tags: , , |

Howard Shrier’s private eye, Jonah Geller, is as hard-boiled as they come. This latest book in a series about a Canadian secular Jew, trained in the Israeli army, proves that not even the need to recuperate from a serious concussion can keep a tough guy at home in Toronto. Geller is hired to search for a [...]

So Glad To Have Discovered Him: A Bookworm’s World

2019-02-06T11:34:03-05:00March 19th, 2018|Categories: Boston Cream, Reviews|

Boston Cream is Howard Shrier’s third novel featuring PI Jonah Geller, but a first read of this Arthur Ellis award-winning Canadian author for me. It definitely won’t be the last. Geller is just back to work, still feeling the effects of a severe concussion, earned on his last case. If Ron Fine wasn’t a family friend, [...]

A Killer Read: Village Post

2019-02-06T12:45:35-05:00March 23rd, 2010|Categories: Buffalo Jump, Interviews, Reviews|Tags: , , , , |

Howard Shrier likes his crime fiction hard-boiled, no chaser. So, after nearly three decades as a writer in one capacity or another, from journalist to corporate communications, when it was time to develop the lead character of his debut novel, Buffalo Jump, it was rough and tumble all the way. "I love the classic American private [...]

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