Ratings2
Average rating3.5
THE INSTANT USA TODAY BESTSELLER Spencer Quinn's Tender Is the Bite is a brand new adventure in the New York Times and USA Today bestselling series that Stephen King calls "without a doubt the most original mystery series currently available." Chet and Bernie are contacted by a terribly scared young woman who seems to want their help. Before she can even tell them her name, she flees in panic. But in that brief meeting Chet sniffs out an important secret about her, a secret at the heart of the mystery he and Bernie set out to solve. It's a case with no client and no crime and yet great danger, with the duo facing a powerful politician who has a lot to lose. Their only hope lies with a ferret named Griffie who adores Bernie. Is there room for a ferret in the Chet and Bernie relationship? That's the challenge Chet faces, the biggest of his career. Hanging in the balance are the lives of two mistreated young women and the future of the whole state. At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Series
13 primary books17 released booksChet and Bernie Mystery is a 17-book series with 13 primary works first released in 2009 with contributions by Spencer Quinn.
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This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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WHAT'S TENDER IS THE BITE ABOUT?
A young woman—a frightened young woman—approaches Bernie, she needs help. But before she explains herself, something spooks her and she leaves.
Curious, Bernie starts looking for her—and stumbles into the middle of a situation involving stalking, murder, dog-napping, and all sorts of other things. There's an international aspect of this—but it's a very local story. There's a lot to chew on, a lot to talk about—but all of it is in spoiler territory, so I'm going to leave it at that.
APPROACHING THE POLITICAL
This is the second time in a week that I've said something along those lines, and it's a bit strange. Chet and Bernie keep finding themselves in the neighborhood of a senate election. The case brings the two of them across the path of both candidates (one of them repeatedly). But it's closer to home than that—Bernie's neighbors on either side are very invested in this campaign and their enthusiasm spills over onto the a-political P. I. (or so he tries to be)—at least at one point, one neighbor's has a considerable blow-back on Bernie's investigation. This is a new thing for Quinn to dabble in and he does it well.
If you don't catch the parallel between this campaign and the way people are behaving during it and...well, all of American politics right now. Quinn gives us some pretty good commentary to chew on.
NON-CHET ANIMAL CHARACTERS
Sure, we've got Chet's friend, Iggy doing his thing. But we have more animal guest stars. There's a dog—who could be Chet's sister (or niece), and I really hope we get to see more of her.
But the big guest star is a ferret. A ferret named Griffie—without Griffie it's hard to say if Bernie'd been able to very far with things. Chet can't stand ferrets, or so he repeatedly says...I'm not sure about Griffie, though.
Chet talking about adults, criminals or otherwise, is a lot of fun. Chet talking about kids is simply fantastic. But Chet talking about other animals is a different kind of fun.
A LITTLE LIGHT GETS SHED ON CERTAIN EVENTS
For ages now—possibly since the first book, definitely since the second or third—Chet's been alluding to a case that didn't end well. He's given us a little more information here and there about it, but never much. That ends now. Chet tells us some about it. Bernie tells someone else about it. We even get some hints from other characters about it.
I don't know why Quinn's decided now is the time to start clueing us in, but I'm so glad he did. We didn't get the whole story—I don't know if we will (and I'm not sure I care)—but we got a lot of it, and that's enough for now.
THE TRICK TO THESE BOOKS
This is tied to the above point. The trickiest part about reading Chet as a narrator is that he doesn't understand what he's telling you, and because of that he leaves a lot out. He's the best kind of unreliable narrator—he's well-intentioned and honest, he believes what he's telling us and he thinks he's giving us all the information.
What that means for the reader is that we have to think a little more about what he's saying, we have to do almost as much detective work as Bernie to understand what's really going on. Which is just so much fun, really. Sure, you might spend a couple of chapters with the wrong idea, but Quinn doesn't let you keep the wrong idea for long.
I need to spend time writing about this every time I talk about a Chet and Bernie book—I need to do better at this, but it's hard. If I could describe it better, I'd probably get paid to do this stuff.
SO, WHAT DID I THINK ABOUT TENDER IS THE BITE?
Yes, Quinn gave us a great pair of characters that we love in Chet and Bernie. He gives us a good story. He plays with the unreliable narrator to reveal what he really wants to say. Put it all together and he gives us another great read in one of the most reliably satisfying series in print.
Read this one. If this is your first time with Chet and Bernie, go back and read the rest after it. You'll be glad you did.
Disclaimer: I received this eARC from Macmillan-Tor/Forge via NetGalley in exchange for this post—thanks to both for this.