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3 stars for the thriller. I knew from the prologue what the plot would be.
5 stars for the way Maori heritage was written. From the cruel, bloody colonial era to the unfair, complex struggles 21st century Maori have to live with, the entire book was filled with what this means for the people involved.
There is no black and white, only the painful reality that Maori people still struggle. Hana is not a truly sympathetic main character and the killer is not a cold-blooded monster. Everyone deals with this differently, from Hana to the killer, and the shared heritage caused different life decisions in different people.
 
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MYvos | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 14, 2023 |
I really loved this book, even though it made me cry (a lot). It would make a great movie as well.
 
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Smith.erin71 | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 3, 2023 |
Just returned from New Zealand where I bought this book. Loved learning about Maori culture and seeing how it is integrated into this country, Aotearao! This book is a fantastic find for combination Detective Thriller and education on the New Zealand Culture today resulting from past Colonial conquest and rule. In some ways they seem more progressive in integrating the Native people with the European invaders than America, but this book helps the outsider understand for the Maori it is not perfect by any means. Well written and continually intriguing this novel is a stand alone great read!
 
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ZachMontana | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 17, 2023 |
This is a pacy crime thriller that doesn't let up. Set in contemporary Auckland Detective Senior Sargeant Hana Westerman is on the trail of a serial killer. There appears to be no connection between the victims and then the connection is revealed. It relates to the historic murder of a Maori warrior in the 1860's. A modern day descendant is seeking 'utu' meaning revenge or balance. There are more victims to come and the race is on to prevent more deaths.
DSS Westerman soon realises their is a personal connection to the perpetrator, her beloved daughter and ex-husband.
My only reservation is that I felt, at times, that I was being brow beaten as New Zealander of European descent. The ending showed more balance however.
 
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HelenBaker | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 27, 2023 |
Interesting setting and characters. Readers will probably learn something about the indigenous peoples of New Zealand, the injustices they suffered in the past and the systemic racism that keeps them at a disadvantage in the present. The story is well-plotted and puts an ethical twist on the serial killer trope. Assuming this is the launch of a series character, the author has set up a good launch pad for a character who can explore the gray areas of being a female Maori police officer in further books.
 
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bookappeal | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 11, 2023 |
If you're a reader, like me, who loves to solve mysteries in far-flung corners of the world, you're going to want to pick up a copy of Michael Bennett's Better the Blood. (Once you learn the origin of the title, you might feel a chill running down your spine, too.) The opening scene in which a photographer tells his subjects to hold still, that if they move, they "...will be but a smudge on the page of history" is prophetic and compelling. That scene let me know that I was about to read something special. I wasn't disappointed.

Better the Blood is steeped in Māori history and culture and makes Bennett's story incredibly powerful. In the hardcover edition, when the Māori language is used, the translations are right on the same page which I greatly appreciated because their proximity kept me rooted in the story.

There are some passionate, vivid characters in this book. Hana's daughter, Addison, a singer who's fierce in her insistence on the rights of the Indigenous peoples of New Zealand, is one. The serial killer is menacing, frightening, and... surprisingly sympathetic. I do like a bad guy who doesn't always do what you expect him to do.

But the fiercest, most vivid and passionate character is Hana Westerman herself. She's a Māori woman who's been cut off from her family and her people for twenty years. A woman who-- when she knows she's right-- will stand up to her superiors even if it costs her her job. A woman who doesn't know when to quit. Hana is the type of character who's fully capable of joining the ranks of my all-time favorites: Ann Cleeves' Vera Stanhope, Elly Griffiths' Ruth Galloway, Nevada Barr's Anna Pigeon... need I go on?

I want more.
 
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cathyskye | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 25, 2023 |
Better the Blood is the first book in a new series from Michael Bennett.

Hana Westerman is a Detective Senior Sergeant with the Auckland Criminal Investigation Bureau. She receives an anonymous video that leads to the discovery of a secret room - and the dead man inside that room. When there's another murder, Hana realizes they may be linked. And that there's a larger plan at work here...

Bennett has penned a good police procedural featuring a likable, believable protagonist in Hana. I did have issues with her daughter and her actions.

It was the exploration of the culture of, and the injustices done to the Māori people that grabbed my attention. And saddened me more than I can say. For me, this was the larger part of the book, with the current day crime taking a backseat to the historical crimes. Better the Blood is a bit of a slow burn, with some points being referenced many times.

I did choose to listen to Better the Blood. I've often said that I become more immersed in a book when I listen and that was certainly the case with this book. The narrators - Miriama McDowell and Richard Te Are were excellent. Both of them captured the tone of the book's plotting with their voices. Both of them speak the Māori language and the tone of the book is enhanced with that facet.½
 
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Twink | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 18, 2023 |
The past intrudes! Crime Thriller!

An amazing tale blending modern day New Zealand, the past and the Treaty of Waitangi, with a spate of killings that puzzles Māori Detective Senior Sergeant Hana Westerman.
During the investigation, somehow she finds a link between this death and the suicide of someone else a few days later. What the connection points are between the victims she has no idea, but as the situation escalates she is thrown back to her days as a young police officer being forced to break up a land rights rally at Mt Suffolk. Something she’s felt sorry about for years. When the investigation cuts close to home Hana is distressed and determined to fight through.
An amazing story with the past intruding on the present, carrying forward the notion of those of today being held responsible for the past. It seem the Māori tradition of rebalancing, of Utu, might be in play.

A Grove Atlantic ARC via NetGalley.
Many thanks to the author and publisher.
 
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eyes.2c | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 9, 2023 |
BETTER THE BLOOD is one of those novels that I'd been hearing whispers about for quite a while, and should have made it to the top of the reading pile more quickly than my poor priority setting allowed. On the one hand I'm now regretting the delay, but on the upside, maybe I've cunningly given myself a slightly shorter wait until the next in the series is released. (No idea if a series is planned, but if there was ever a cast of characters, and a style and approach that deserved it, it's here.)

If, like me, you've always envied what seems like New Zealand's more integrated society, their embracing of Ma¯ori language, and acceptance of their First Nation's culture and beliefs, and felt a longing for something similar here, the storyline in BETTER THE BLOOD might come as a bit of an eye-opener. There are land rights issues, the Te Tiriti o Waitangi (treaty of Waitangi) isn't universally regarded as fair or the right thing, and there's plenty of tension between First Nations and colonising societies. Tension that was personally heightened years ago, when a Ma¯ori policewoman acted on the side of the authorities in a bitter, and contentious land rights protest over a sacred place.

The story in BETTER THE BLOOD harks back to two points in the past, both of which culminate with New Zealand's first serial killer in Auckland. A photograph taken in 1863 of a Ma¯ori chief hanging dead from a sacred tree, his arms and legs bound, a series of white English soldiers in the foreground, looks like what it is - a sick trophy photograph. In more recent history, the same place - Mount Suffolk - is the location for a peaceful protest land rights protest where Hana Westerman, then a very new recruit, was ordered to help break up the protest, arresting and manhandling an older Ma¯ori woman in the process. Move forward to the current day and Westerman is still a cop, has a teenage daughter, Addison; an ex-husband in the force, DI Jaye Hamilton; and a lot of regrets over that protest, and the fractured relationship with her community that came from it.

There's a number of storylines in BETTER THE BLOOD, including the serial killer, an investigation complicated for Westerman by the threat to her career that she endures when a young, privileged, nasty piece of work rapist ties her up in an alleged assault. Her ex is incredibly supportive though, and they have a good relationship despite their split many years ago. Their daughter has gone backwards and forwards between both homes, living with Hamilton and his now partner with some success, eventually going back to her mother's when she gets herself into some trouble of her own. The family connections are interwoven with the police connections, as the investigation of what becomes a bizarre series of killings instantly pulls Westerman in. The first victim, a man with a questionable past, is found in a secret walled room, hanging, with his legs and arms bound. There's a shape marked out in blood near his body, and the only reason he's discovered quickly is the killer has sent a video of the crime site to Westerman. A subsequent suicide is then pulled into the investigation after another video, and two spiral's carved into what's quickly turned into a crime scene, and Westerman is struggling to find the connection until the photo from 1863 is discovered. She soon realises that there's a connection between the people in this photo and the Ma¯ori concept of 'utu', or reciprocation.

"A system has been forced on us that is not interested in balance. A legal system transplanted here from 20,000 miles away. A set of laws that exist not to provide equality and recompense and honour and balance, but to ensure one side flourishes and the other is kept in the gutter. This we have accepted, like lambs."

"The time of the lamb is over."

The problem for the investigation team is that the discovery of the motive has lead them straight to the perpetrator, although not how to find him, and he's closer than they realise. It's also clearly shown there are going to be more victims and the way they have been selected. The problem for Westerman and her team is they are racing to catch up, identify and protect the people the perpetrator already has in his sights.

It sounds complicated and at points the storyline is. It's also moves at a very fast pace, and there are reasons for the connections which become more complex, and more believable as the story progresses. There's also some very helpful, and informative footnotes to explain some of the Ma¯ori terminology and the impact of the beliefs. At the heart of it all though is a ruthless killer, with a motivation that is simultaneously repulsive and totally understandable. The entire novel casts some bright light into a dark past and comes up with shadows of all sorts of depth and complexity.

Needless to say - cannot recommend this book highly enough. It's exactly the sort of perspective, and subject matter that good crime fiction can do very well. BETTER THE BLOOD is really good crime fiction.

https://www.austcrimefiction.org/review/better-blood-michael-bennett
 
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austcrimefiction | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 21, 2022 |
Hana is caught between the blue world of being a police detective and the brown world of her Maori culture. When a body is found followed by a second one, could New Zealand have its first serial killer? As the bodies count increases and the investigation unfolds, there is an indication that there is a tie between the murders and an historic execution and Hana, her daughter and estranged husband may be in danger.

Over and above an engrossing, well written mystery with strong character development, this is an important story about how NZ (and most other countries) have treated and continue to treat their indigenous peoples. The reader is introduced to Maori customs and language, with well appreciated footnoted translations.

Thanks to #Netgallley and #groveatlantic for the ARC.
 
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vkmarco | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 16, 2022 |
It is unusual for me to read a book in a single day, but that is what happened here. And I came away feeling that I had learnt so much, particularly about what has happened to the Maori people in New Zealand.

The setting is Auckland. The scenario a killer who wants his crimes noticed by one person in particular, so he sens her videos alerting her. And Hana Westerman is clever enough to work where those videos have been shot, and then eventually to learn what is behind them.

An absolutely fascinating read.
 
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smik | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 5, 2022 |
I received a copy of this novel from the publisher via NetGalley.

This was more about the history of the wrongs done by white settlers to the Maori than it was a crime novel. At times I thought the Maori elements were well done (the idea that Maori police officers would be selected against their knowledge and will to lead the removal of Maori protesters from their traditional territories was shocking), but at others it felt a bit as if we were being given mini lectures. Also, the author used Maori words and then (randomly about a page later as my Kindle set the book out) they were translated, which was frustrating.

The mystery of what was going on was revealed half way through and after that it was more of a thriller than a police procedural. I found the behaviour of Hana's daughter incomprehensible.

This was OK, but not an effective crime novel for me.
 
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pgchuis | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 26, 2022 |
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