Justice Done by Jan Burke
Friday, April 17, 2015 at 9:48AM 
Published digitally by Pocket Star on September 15, 2014
Justice Done is the fifth of six short collections of Jan Burke's crime  stories. Although the collection is uneven, the stories are  representative of Burke's unusual and engaging approach to crime  fiction.
Boniface "Bunny" Slye, a shell-shocked veteran of the  First World War, stars in "The Quarry," a murder mystery narrated by his  friend Dr. Max Tyndale. They are sort of a Holmes/Watson duo who are  featured in other stories by Burke. The story is reasonably entertaining  although it goes on a bit too long. 
A party on the  Queen Mary provides the setting for "Miscalculation." A nerdy girl named  Sarah confronts the mystery of a death that occurred two generations  earlier, when the Queen Mary was used as a troop carrier during World  War II. The story is unconvincing and its ending is disappointingly  uneventful.
"Two Bits" is a quiet story of a boy who  was kidnapped while his brother roamed through a store in a strange town  with the shiny new quarter the kidnappers gave him. Not a conventional  crime story, "Two Bits" is an affecting examination of the crime's  impact on the brother who was duped.
Written from the  perspective of a man living in horse-and-carriage days, "An Unsuspected  Condition of the Heart" tells of a man who married for money, whose  in-laws openly plot each other's murders, and whose new wife finds  herself in an unhappy situation. The story fits within the book's title  and reveals the charm with which Burke often writes.
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