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The Blackbird Papers by Ian Smith — book cover

The Blackbird Papers

by Ian Smith
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Overview

A rainy night . . . A stranded motorist . . . A Good Samaritan passerby … a Nobel Prize–winning professor . . . The setup for a shocking murder designed to cover up an even more sinister crime . . .

The Blackbird Papers marks the debut of Ian Smith, a major new talent in crime fiction, and of Sterling Bledsoe, his smart and occasionally combative sleuth.

World-renowned Dartmouth professor Wilson Bledsoe is returning from a party celebrating his latest honor when he encounters a broken-down pickup on the secluded country road to his home. The next day, the discovery of his body with a vicious racist epithet carved into his chest leads to the quick arrest of two loathsome white supremacists. The local authorities seem ready to accept the case at face value as a racial hate crime. But the murdered professor’s brother, FBI agent Sterling Bledsoe, has inserted himself into the investigation and isn’t ready to buy into this pat solution. A look around his brother’s lab and brief interviews with his students and colleagues pique Sterling’s curiosity about Wilson’s pet project: a nearly completed paper on the mysterious deaths of hundreds of local blackbirds.

Fast-paced and cleverly constructed, The Blackbird Papers introduces a major new talent in mystery and crime fiction.

Synopsis

A rainy night . . . A stranded motorist . . . A Good Samaritan passerby … a Nobel Prize–winning professor . . . The setup for a shocking murder designed to cover up an even more sinister crime . . .

The Blackbird Papers marks the debut of Ian Smith, a major new talent in crime fiction, and of Sterling Bledsoe, his smart and occasionally combative sleuth.

World-renowned Dartmouth professor Wilson Bledsoe is returning from a party celebrating his latest honor when he encounters a broken-down pickup on the secluded country road to his home. The next day, the discovery of his body with a vicious racist epithet carved into his chest leads to the quick arrest of two loathsome white supremacists. The local authorities seem ready to accept the case at face value as a racial hate crime. But the murdered professor’s brother, FBI agent Sterling Bledsoe, has inserted himself into the investigation and isn’t ready to buy into this pat solution. A look around his brother’s lab and brief interviews with his students and colleagues pique Sterling’s curiosity about Wilson’s pet project: a nearly completed paper on the mysterious deaths of hundreds of local blackbirds.

Fast-paced and cleverly constructed, The Blackbird Papers introduces a major new talent in mystery and crime fiction.

Publishers Weekly

NBC News medical correspondent and nonfiction author Smith (Dr. Ian Smith's Guide to Medical Websites, etc.) leaps headfirst into the thriller pool and comes up flailing with this mediocre tale of a renegade African-American FBI agent, Sterling Bledsoe, and his investigation into his estranged brother's apparently race-motivated murder. Dartmouth College professor Wilson Bledsoe is driving home from a party celebrating his recent winning of the Devonshire Award, the most lucrative prize in science, when he stops to help two rednecks having truck problems. Soon enough, he's dead. Cut to his brother Sterling, who's awakened, along with girlfriend Veronica ("She was gorgeous, like all his women"), by a phone call from the Hanover, N.H., police department. Even though Sterling hated his brother, he hops a plane and races to the scene in a rented sports car. Once there, he wows the local cops with his big city, FBI sleuthing techniques. Smith's attempts at stylish writing are painfully misguided: "Sterling stretched his eyes across the valley," and his characters tend to scream, groan, sob, growl and shriek. Sterling's not only smart and tough, he's sensitive, as evidenced by all the weeping he does: "Sterling Bledsoe didn't just tear up, he cried. Big sloppy tears." The mystery hinges on Wilson's recent discovery of hundreds of dead blackbirds and the method of their mass demise. The eventual denouement is labored, and Sterling's last-minute rescue relies on a technological trick that has become a clich in the thriller field. Smith's medical background serves him well here, but he needs to familiarize himself with the genre and acquire a good editor if he expects veteran readers to take him seriously. Agent, Jennifer Rudolph Walsh. (June 15) Forecast: Smith's celebrity status and a strong publisher push will give the book a good start, but look for a weak finish, as readers are unlikely to follow up with positive word-of-mouth. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Ian Smith

Ian Smith, M.D., has been an award-winning medical correspondent for NBC News and a contributor to the Today show.  He is a medical columnist for Men's Health magazine and a commentator for NPR’s Tavis Smiley show and for the nationally syndicated TV talk show The View.  He lives in New York City.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

NBC News medical correspondent and nonfiction author Smith (Dr. Ian Smith's Guide to Medical Websites, etc.) leaps headfirst into the thriller pool and comes up flailing with this mediocre tale of a renegade African-American FBI agent, Sterling Bledsoe, and his investigation into his estranged brother's apparently race-motivated murder. Dartmouth College professor Wilson Bledsoe is driving home from a party celebrating his recent winning of the Devonshire Award, the most lucrative prize in science, when he stops to help two rednecks having truck problems. Soon enough, he's dead. Cut to his brother Sterling, who's awakened, along with girlfriend Veronica ("She was gorgeous, like all his women"), by a phone call from the Hanover, N.H., police department. Even though Sterling hated his brother, he hops a plane and races to the scene in a rented sports car. Once there, he wows the local cops with his big city, FBI sleuthing techniques. Smith's attempts at stylish writing are painfully misguided: "Sterling stretched his eyes across the valley," and his characters tend to scream, groan, sob, growl and shriek. Sterling's not only smart and tough, he's sensitive, as evidenced by all the weeping he does: "Sterling Bledsoe didn't just tear up, he cried. Big sloppy tears." The mystery hinges on Wilson's recent discovery of hundreds of dead blackbirds and the method of their mass demise. The eventual denouement is labored, and Sterling's last-minute rescue relies on a technological trick that has become a clich in the thriller field. Smith's medical background serves him well here, but he needs to familiarize himself with the genre and acquire a good editor if he expects veteran readers to take him seriously. Agent, Jennifer Rudolph Walsh. (June 15) Forecast: Smith's celebrity status and a strong publisher push will give the book a good start, but look for a weak finish, as readers are unlikely to follow up with positive word-of-mouth. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

A black professor's murder may or may not be racially motivated. NBC medical correspondent Smith writes his first novel. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

The murder of a beloved Dartmouth biologist opens a window to a whole new kind of mass murder in NBC News medical correspondent Smith's debut thriller. One minute Professor Wilson Bledsoe is driving peacefully home from the posh reception the Dartmouth president threw to honor him for winning the Devonshire Award, the richest prize in science; the next, he's running for his life from a pair of hijackers who aren't interested in his money or his car. When Bledsoe loses his race, his brother, an FBI agent who's teaching anatomy at Hunter College, insists against Bureau policy on taking charge of the investigation into his disappearance, which swiftly morphs into a murder case. Even though the corpse is discovered defaced by an ethnic slur and the signature of the tiny, nutsy White Liberation Army, Sterling Bledsoe doesn't believe that the two WLA lowlifes picked up for the crime killed his brother. But who else would have it in for a universally popular biology professor? And what's the meaning of "CHOGAN," the last clue Wilson managed to leave in the moments before he was killed? Still wrestling with his long-standing jealousy of the impossibly successful big brother he'd come to hate, Sterling painstakingly follows the clues-Wilson's fascination with blackbirds, his friendship with German engineering student Heidi Vorscht, a posthumous visit to his lab by an unscheduled cleaner caught on videotape, the fact that his killers knew exactly when and where he'd be passing-until, as he puts it, they start talking. But the tale they tell will cut Sterling off from the Bureau colleagues certain that he's the perp. He'll have to go on the lam to catch the real killers, though he'll get anawful lot of help along the way. Familiar fare-the heavy breathing, the red herrings, the innocent on the run, the unmasking of the real killer-expertly prepared. Agent: Jennifer Rudolph Walsh/William Morris

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2005
Publisher
Crown Publishing Group
Pages
336
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780767920445

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