Normally I take my time with books. It’s not that I’m a slow reader, it’s just that I tend to gravitate toward the immediate gratification of YouTube videos and Twitter. Every night before I go to sleep I read a couple of pages in bed, as it helps me fall asleep faster. But generally speaking, I don’t read much during the day. I burned through Andrew Klavan’s new novel, A Strange Habit of Mind, in about a week.
It’s surprising that it took me that long.
I’ve found Mr. Klavan’s books to be hit and miss with me, and I don’t mind saying so because he probably feels the same way. He’s written over 35 books now. But his last Cameron Winter mystery, When Christmas Comes, was one of my favorite reads last year and I went into A Strange Habit of Mind with high expectations. Since you’ve already read the first paragraph, you already know I was not disappointed.
Yeah, it’s very good.
Cameron Winter tells people he’s “Just an English professor.” Anyone who read the first novel knows that he’s much more than that. In his younger days (what am I saying? We’re the same age!) Winter was a hitman for the Division, some sort of super secret government program. Tormented by the terrible things he’s done and holding to Romantic era ideals, he changes his life, he goes to therapy, he tries to make the world a better place.
He’s an anti anti-hero.
Thanks to his “strange habit of mind” he can disassociate himself from preconceptions and opinions to see things as they really are. Klavan says that Winter isn’t a Sherlock Holmes, in that he’s not a deductive thinker, but even Holmes said that we have to get past our unconscious assumptions to see the whole picture.
Winter is a much more complex character than a golden age detective. And this ain’t your grandma’s Agatha Christie novel.
The novel opens with a young man sending a text. “Help me.” Realizing it’s too late for help, he commits suicide. This all happens in the first three pages. Talk about a hook! The text was sent to his old English professor. When Winter learns of his former student’s death, he has questions. Soon he’s going head-to-head with tech billionaire Gerald Byrne and his Division trained bodyguard Nelson.
I won’t give away any more of the plot.
Klavan is a master storyteller, who deftly infuses his worldview into compelling narratives. There’s so much to unpack in this story alone I could probably write about it for a week, if I was even qualified to do so. Writing his last nonfiction book, The Truth and Beauty, clearly refined Klavan’s thoughts and I’d actually recommend reading it first. Winter is a man out of his time, and understanding where he belongs provides an important context for his character.
We live in a broken world with no perfect solutions.
It’s something Klavan often points out on his podcast, and this novel provides an example of that difficult truth. He writes the world as it is and not how we wish would be. So Winter swears and takes the Lord’s name in vain. He uses sex as a tool and orchestrates a murder. Achieving his goal comes at great personal cost and there’s collateral damage. He’s not James Bond, and this isn’t an Amish romance.
Yet Klavan also believes in God’s unconditional grace.
The only way to see how it all works, and works so well, is to read the book for yourself.