In Quintin Jardine's Screen Savers , Oz Blackstone attempts to put the past behind him, before crime comes creeping back to meet him. Perfect for fans of Ian Rankin and Peter May.
' Screen Savers is a novel that engages you from the start' - Dundee Evening Telegraph
For Oz Blackstone, the days of getting into trouble for a living, otherwise known as being a private enquiry agent, could soon be behind him. An undercover stint posing as a TV wrestling Master of Ceremonies has convinced him that he might just have a bit of a hidden theatrical talent. So when Oz gets the chance of a bit-part in a movie, it seems like an offer he can't refuse - even though his own life is fast developing a dramatic storyline of its own, with a frightening series of accidents befalling people close to him. And when the female lead is kidnapped from the set in a bizarre echo of the movie's rollercoaster plot, fiction and reality come together in a terrifying climax. But has Oz got what it takes to save the day?
What readers are saying about Screen Savers :
'A book of so many twists and turns ... what an outcome , would never have worked that one out'
Quintin Jardine (born 1945) is a Scottish author of three series of crime novels, featuring the fictional characters Bob Skinner, Oz Blackstone, and Primavera Blackstone. He was educated in Motherwell and in Glasgow where he studied at what was then the city’s only University. After career as a journalist, government information officer and media relations consultant, he took to the creation of crime fiction.
His first wife, Irene, with whom he shared over 30 years, from their teens, died in 1997. He is married, to his second wife, Eileen. They live in both Scotland and in Spain
Oz’s job opportunities grow in the tale. Oz seems to be under a black cloud as people he is close to are being involved in accidents while in Oz’s company. Oz can’t stand for this and embarks on a case to find the person screwing with him. Some interesting reveals are made in the final chapters of the book. All in all a very entertaining read. On to book 5.
Not one of his best, even in this thud'nblunder persona. It's an early one, dealing with how Oz first gets into the movies, via radio and TV ads. The 'can't stop money falling in my lap' insouciance is overdone (millions in a lottery win, followed by golden boy offers of work). The reluctant hero isn't at all, and the dialog and characterization's a bit thin, compared to later books. As for the ending - picking the target out of dozens of options, and the subsequent rescue op having Special Boat Service (aka Brit Marines) letting a rank amateur like him along - the willing suspension of disbelief crumbles altogether. No humor, no distance from the silliness makes Bond's tongue-in-cheek heroism look like serious satirical literature! A very fast read indeed.
Prim and Oz are back together almost by accident. Oz has changed and is not the likely-lad he was in the first few books. He is also working as an actor with Prim's brother-in-law an Australian movie star/director (who is at the top of his game). All good luck seems to fall his way, winning lottery money, falling into a plum acting job, living in a fabulous house, back with Prim- though that is not feeling right at all.
I am beginning to see a pattern of Oz's friends/lovers dying. It's like a new character is introduced and we start to really like this person,then in the next book they are dispatched.