Reviews for Athenian blues

Library Journal
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Stratos Gazis has been officially dead for years, but the 35-year-old hit man hides in plain sight in Greece as "a caretaker." He only takes jobs in which the intended victim deserves to die. With his latest case, though, Stratos can't decide who is lying-the model who wants her wealthy husband killed, or the lawyer husband who claims he's trying to protect her. Stratos enlists his friends, including a police detective and a transgender sex worker, to help him discover the truth. If Stratos is going to take care of business, he'd better hit the right target. Like Jeffrey Siger with his "Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis" series (Santorini Caesars), Koutsakis, a Greek novelist now living in Australia, draws on the troubled Greek economy and current political situation as background for this violent and gritty mystery. VERDICT With a narrator on the wrong side of the law who admires film noir, this dark novel will attract fans of international crime fiction with an edge. Admirers of Lawrence Block's "Hit Man" series may also want to try this book about a killer with a conscience.-LH © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Koutsakis makes his English-language debut with an intriguing crime novel, his first to star Stratos Gazis, a virtuous hit man who boasts of killing only people who deserve it. Glamorous supermodel Aliki Stylianou hires Stratos to kill her jealous husband, celebrity super-lawyer Vassilis Stathopoulos, before he can murder her. Aliki claims that during their three-year marriage Vassilis has regularly beaten her, sending her to the hospital twice with fractures. When Stratos finally meets Vassilis, the lawyer offers to employ Stratos to protect his deluded wife from an unknown killer. Aided by his three best friends, including homicide detective Costas Dragas, Stratos tries to cut through the tangle of lies and delusions, while people who should be on the periphery of the case start dying violently. American film noir shaped Stratos's view of life, and Koutsakis effectively translates that half-lit, morally ambiguous milieu to seedy modern-day Athens. Noir fans will look forward to the next installment. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Sharp, methodical Stratos Gazis thinks of himself as a caretaker, someone who handles situations by eliminating evildoers. Yes, the end results and the astronomical fees he charges suggest a hit man's job description, but Stratos only takes jobs that target proven killers. When Greek supermodel Aliki begs Stratos to free her from her abusive, celebrity-attorney husband, Stratos agrees to consider taking the assignment. But, just after their meeting, a look-alike is found dead in Aliki's car, and Aliki disappears. Vassilis, Aliki's husband, also wants to hire Stratos to find Aliki and determine who has been trying to kill her. Neither story adds up, and Stratos can't extricate himself from the mess until he ferrets out the truth. Stratos narrates with bare honesty and unexpected wit, revealing Athens' gritty side and introducing readers to his endearing and resourceful tribe of lifelong friends. Equal parts intense action, clever detection, and a compelling survival story, this makes a great match for Dan Smith's The Darkest Heart (2015) and Derek Haas' A Different Lie (2015).--Tran, Christine Copyright 2017 Booklist


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

An unlikely Athens "caretaker" meets his match when both members of an estranged couple seek his help in a domestic dispute that turns homicidal.Vassilis Stathopoulos and Aliki Stylianou are quite a pair. He's a celebrated lawyer; she's a model-turned-television actress. She claims that the bruises on her body are from the beatings he's inflicted; he claims that she cuts herself. Or maybe, just maybe, they're badges of the couple's no-boundaries sex life. The one thing the two of them agree on is that someone's trying to kill her. Aliki, convinced that that someone is her husband, wants to hire Stratos Gazis to kill him first; Vassilis wants Stratos to protect Aliki from the killer by nailing him before he succeeds. Before he can decide which client he wants to accept, Stratos, who acutely observes that "at least one of them was lying. Maybe they both were," comes upon the corpse of Elsa Dalla, an untalented supporting player on Aliki's TV show, in Aliki's BMW. Clearly these are deep waters, and it's lucky that instead of diving into them alone, Stratos has help from his old friend Costas Dragas, an Athens homicide cop, and his even older friend Teri Berikis, a transgender prostitute. The trio will need all their varied skills to get to the bottom of the unexpectedly dark secret at the heart of the case. Koutsakis' first appearance in English translation is more interested in multiplying oddball suspects than in giving them anything to do. But it's hard to resist his hero, a freelance killer who describes himself as "a kind of social worker, except I get properly paid." Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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