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Grab a Book and Pull Up a Seat

This is a group where we discuss any Book, Genre or Author. Mystery, Suspense, Thriller, Romance, Paranormal, Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Etc. We also do a monthly book challenge you can participate in if you want it's optional. So come in Grab a Book and Pull Up a Seat and join us. We'll be glad to have you. (ADULTS ONLY!!!)

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  • Lori A

    Book Reviews V

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    Share your book reviews or thoughts on your current reads here...
    Lori A started this discussion 5 months ago. ( reply | permalink )

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  • Raine

    Raine (edited)

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    SWIMSUIT by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro
    4 stars
    451 pages

    SWIMSUIT is a surprisingly good novel. There are a couple gruesome scenes in the book, but not as many as I expected based on other reviews. The book centers around a serial killer, Henri that we get to know throughout the story. He has the ability to change appearance and also to take on different identities throughout the book that are untraceable.

    The main character is an ex-cop, author, and current LA Times reporter Ben Hawkins. He is sent to Hawaii to do a story and gets caught up in murders there that are happening thanks to Henri. He works with a family of a model who is the first victim that we meet in the book. Henri latches on to Ben and wants him to write his autobiography. Ben is a great character; we see his human side with his relationship with his girlfriend Mandy and also the parents of the victim, Kim, the model. The book starts in Hawaii, goes to LA, and ends up in Paris and Switzerland.

    Ben doesn’t really want to write the book, but starts to do it under threat of being killed (him and Mandy) by Henri. Ben is a regular guy who isn’t as smart and savvy as Henri, but he has instincts which help him battle this killer. Of course, we are rooting for him throughout the story, and I’ll never give the ending away. I’m not sure if I like how this book ended, it was somewhat abrupt and a little unsatisfying to me, but it finishes the book off well.

    This book is not for the squeamish, but as a book about a notorious serial killer it does the job of scaring the hell out of the reader. The gruesome scenes are very well written; so well written in fact that I wonder how Patterson and Paetro managed to write them so well. I read most of this book at night, which made it an extra creepy and a scary read.

    posted 5 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Raspberrymocha55
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    Cocaine Blues by Kerry Greenwood
    5 ★s

    Wow! Phryne Fisher is a wonderful creation of Kerry Greenwood. I devoured this mystery in short order and ordered more!! Phryne was getting tired of the social whorl of 1920s London Society. While at a dinner she was approached by the Colonel to check into the well being of his daughter, whom he feared was being poisoned by her husband. To this end, Phryne headed to Melbourne, Australia. Upon arrival, cabbies Bert and Cec haul her ponderous pile of belongings to the posh Windsor Hotel. She employs Dot as her Maid. Then amidst Russian aristocrats, illegal abortionists, Turkish Baths, and a cocaine ring, Phryne takes Melbourne by storm. It was a pleasure reading such a fast paced and witty novel.

    posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Book Concierge
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    Lost City Radio – Daniel Alarcon
    4****

    In an unnamed South American city, Norma hosts the popular “Lost City Radio” show, where people try to reconnect with loved ones they’ve lost track of. It is ten years since the civil war ended, but people still live in fear of reprisal and even Norma’s show isn’t immune to the sort of self-censorship that comes from self-preservation.

    Alarcon explores what it means to live in constant fear, trusting no one, afraid that any small slip of the tongue may mark you as the enemy, leaving you second-guessing every gesture or that stranger on the street you’ve seen once too often recently. His use of the orphan boy, Victor, to trigger the memories of the adults he comes across is an effective technique. Victor doesn’t understand the larger implications of his mission to take a list of missing from his small mountain village to the large city radio station.

    Alarcon mixes tenses fluidly and sometimes within one paragraph. A remark or smell will trigger a memory and the text follows the character’s wandering mind as he or she remembers something that happened in the past. Then, just as suddenly, the action is back in the present. In less skillful hands this could be confusing, but Alarcon makes it work.

    posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Raspberrymocha55
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    The Seven-per-cent Solution by Nicholas Meyer
    4 ★s

    I am not a huge fan of Sherlock Holmes, but I enjoyed this book. Dr. Watson narrates this story of Sherlock's biggest nemisis, a seven percent solution of injectable cocaine. After a long absence, Sherlock shows up at Watson's home. Watson suspects that Sherlock is deep into his addiction, especially after exhibiting extreme paranoia about the evil genius Moriarity. Enlisting help from an unexpected source, Watson endeavors to free Sherlock from his cocaine. In doing so the men find themselves in Vienna at the home of Sigmund Freud, and become embroiled in another intrigue. This intrigue could have reprocusions in politics. This book starts out slow but steps up the pace, ending up at break neck speed.

    posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Teresa G
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    The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman 307 pages (Completed 2/10/13)
    ★ ★ ★ ★
    This was a wonderful story of Bod, Nobody, Owens. When Bod was a toddler, his whole family was murdered by a man known only as Jack. Through a series of events, Bod finds himself not only spared but adopted by an unlikely couple, Mr. And Mrs. Owens, ghosts at the local cemetery. This story of Bod's growing up years is adelightfully fresh story line. I read this book from the review of another Shelfari reader and am very glad I did. This is one I highly recommend. Written for teens it's a very fast adult read. Clean, original, interesting.

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    • Bev

      Bev 

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      Great also as an audio

      posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Book Concierge
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    Wonderstruck – Brian Selznick
    4****

    Once again Selznick writes an engaging novel that is half-told through his incredibly detailed illustrations. This book tells two stories, set 50 years apart. Ben is a boy living in Gunflint MN in 1977. His mother has died so he is living with his aunt, uncle and cousins. His story is told in text. Rose is a girl living in Hoboken NJ in 1927, obsessed with a beautiful movie star. From her bedroom window she longingly looks at the lights of New York City and dreams of a different life. Her story is told through the detailed pencil drawings, with shadow and light pulling the reader in. In fact, it’s easy to get lost in some of those illustrations, pouring over the small details that make them so wonderful and alive.

    Ben’s and Rose’s stories will eventually merge in Part Three. Some of the plot twists are too coincidental for my taste, but it’s a children’s book and I think it works quite well in that genre. Adults will appreciate the Acknowledgements and Bibliography, though that teensy tiny print sure stressed these old eyes.

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  • Book Concierge
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    Sick Puppy – Carl Hiaasen
    4****

    Twilly Spree is a trust-fund baby and eco-terrorist. When he witnesses blatant littering by the driver of a Range Rover, he is compelled to teach the litterbug a lesson. Within a few pages the reader is immersed in the usual Hiaasen scenario featuring a dog-napping and peopled with corrupt Florida politicians, ruthless developers, and our favorite “out-there” one-eyed hero, Skink.

    Hiaasen has a gift for colorful description, for example: Willie Vasquez-Washington eyes Stoat as if he were a worm on a Triscuit. Of course all the bad guys will get their just desserts in the end – and in colorful, inventive ways. A fun, enjoyable diversion!

    posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Raine
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    LIGHT OF THE MOON by LuAnne Rice
    5 stars
    473 pages

    This book is simply wonderful, and a new favorite of mine. I've always loved books by LuAnn Rice, but, in my opinion, she simply outdid herself with LIGHT OF THE MOON. The settings in the book; France, New England, and Nevada are so well described that you can see the landscapes in your mind. Also, the family relationships are entwined with the story of Sara-a-kali, a patron saint of Gypsies who live in and around the town in France which is the main setting, are very strong.

    This is a love story but it is so much more. This book really gets to the core of some feminism theories - how women have given up certain things in life to have another, and how it realy doesn't have to be that way. There are bonds between all types of women in this book - mothers and daughters - women and their mentors - and even women who you would think should dislike (borderline hate due to jealousy) each other. These relationships are brought out very, very well, and we can all learn something from reading about them.

    Just a little sap, not too much! Also, this is a great book for horse lovers or for anyone who has never understood the bond between people and horses (me!) and how strong that can be. Highly recommended!”

    posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Teresa G
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    3rd Degree by James Patterson 341 pages

    This, as the title suggests, is the third book in the Women's Murder Club series by Patterson. It has been about a year since I read the second book, but quickly reacquainted myself with the characters. This was full of action from the opening chapter and didn't stop until right before the end. There was a character I really disliked and hoped he was the killer so he would lose in the end; that didn't happen. Anymore said, would have to contain spoilers.

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  • Book Concierge
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    North and South – Elizabeth Gaskell
    Audio book performed by Clare Wille
    3.5***

    Margaret Hale has been grown up in rural Southern England, as the only daughter of the vicar of Helstone. Mr John Thornton is a wealthy mill-owner born and raised in Milton, an industrial town in the North of England. Their paths cross when Margaret’s father leaves his position to become Thornton’s tutor, and moves his family to the North. Can opposites attract? Can the self-made Thornton woo and win the refined Margaret? Gaskell’s book is more than just a romance. She explores the changes in England as the economy shifts from agriculture to manufacturing. We learn of the difficulties of the laborers, as well the harsh conditions of the agricultural workers in the South.

    I loved how Gaskell gave us so much insight into the thoughts and feelings of Thornton, Mr Hale and Higgins (one of the labor leaders). We really come to learn about them and, therefore, care for them. I wish she had spent more time expounding on Margaret’s thoughts; to me, she was rather one-dimensional. Still, right up to the ending I was ready to give it four stars. But that ending – abrupt hardly covers it. I actually exclaimed aloud, “Is that it!?”

    Clare Wille does a superb job performing the audio book. Her facility with accents and skill as a voice-over actress breathed life into the work for me.

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  • Raine
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    ALREADY HOME by Susan Mallery
    4 stars
    358 pages

    ALREADY HOME is another really good book about family relationshps. This book also contains sub stories about everything that can possibly happen to women. The main character, Jenna, comes home to Texas after a divorce from an emotionally abusive and uncaring type of man and finds everything she needs - a career, friends, her family, and, of course, love.

    My favorite character in this book is Violet - she is a good person because her life has been so hard and she listens to Jenna's problems with an open mind. She is also great a retail management - and this book gives definite tips on what is needed to run a successful business!

    Some of this was sappy and predictable - but sometimes that is exactly what you may need from a book. All in all this was a good book with strong characters and the reader comes away with some lessons learned that can help in "real" life.

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  • Book Concierge
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    The Paris Wife – Paula McClain
    Book on CD narrated by Carrington MacDuffie.
    4****

    When Hadley Richardson arrives in Chicago to visit her friend Kate, she has no idea that she is about to meet the man who will change her life. Tall, darkly handsome and charismatic young Ernest Hemingway is immediately drawn to quiet, 28-year-old Hadley. One dance leads to another, and before long Hadley lets herself be led towards happiness … at least for a while. After a whirlwind courtship they’ll marry and move to Paris, where they’ll become a part of the “Lost Generation.”

    Love, as we know, is not enough by itself, and the Hemingways find themselves ill equipped to deal with the realities of their life together. Ernest struggles to find his creative voice. Hadley does her best to support and help him but often finds herself feeling lonely and insecure. When the end of their journey together finally comes it is nevertheless tragic for being expected.

    Most of this novel is written from Hadley’s point of view, but there are sections where McClain emulates Hemingway’s style, giving us a glimpse of his point of view. This is very effective when read on the page, partly because the change in font clearly alerts the reader to the different narrator. But the audio book doesn’t have any such clue, and I found it confusing and distracting. Nevertheless, Carrington MacDuffie did a good job of the narration on the audio version.

    posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Raine
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    The Silver Linings Playbook by Matthew Quick
    5 stars
    291 pages

    SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK has to be one of the best books that I have ever read. First, the setting is down the street from where I used to live. Like the main character, Pat, I spent many hours running through and around Knights Park in Collingswood, NJ, and eating at the Westmont Diner! Also, this book is about Eagles fans and how a football team can dictate what you do with your spare time and even your personality. The Eagles season described in the book (2006) also has a special meaning for me, because what happened during that season made me personally see that living your life around how a team performs and believing that you actions can actually predict the outcome of a football game is pretty dumb.

    The main theme of this book is mental illness, another topic close to my heart. I have always believed that people who are mentally ill see the world as it is, and the stigma that they are given is not fair, because if you really talk to someone who is having mental difficulties, you can see that they havie insights into relationships and the world in general that are very clear. Especially when they are on their meds........

    Everyone from Philadelphia should read this book! Football aside, this book is a great look into family relationships and getting closure of situations that you may want to not let go of. I know that this is a new, popular movie, but I don't see how this book could be made into a movie that will touch you in the way that the book will. I guess I will have to see the movie, but right now, I am still basking in the glow of this story and I don't want a movie to ruin that for me. Highly recommended!!
    posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Melissa B
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      I really like this book... was a wonderful read & the movie was worth watching. Didn't like the father/son relationship portrayed in the movie because it was nothing like the relationship portrayed in the book.
      posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Raspberrymocha55
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    Flying Too High by Kerry Greenwood
    4★
    Phryne Fisher, a female private detective in 1928 Melbourne, is hired to prevent a murder. An hysterical woman is certain that her son is going to commit patricide. Unfortunately, the father is killed and now Phryne is trying to find the killer. In the meantime she is moving out of the Winsor Hotel into her own home. Next a 6 year old girl is kidnapped for ransom. Her parents recently won the Irish Lottery. Phryne is enlisted in the search. In her searches Phryne once again gets help from her communist taxi driver buddies while she gets to enjoy a bit of flying. Fast paced short book. I enjoyed it a lot.
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    • Book Concierge
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      I really have to start this series...
      posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Raspberrymocha55
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      I just started these this month and have really enjoyed them. 2 down and 17 left to go! They are slim quick reads.
      posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Book Concierge

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    Bud, Not Buddy – Christopher Paul Curtis
    Audio book performed by James Avery.
    5***** and a ❤

    In Depression-era Flint, Michigan, 10-year-old Bud Caldwell is plucked from the Home to go to a foster family. Before he knows it, he’s on the lam, carrying his worn, cardboard suitcase, determined to find his own way and sure that the things his Momma left him are clues to his father’s identity and whereabouts.

    I love Bud. He’s imaginative, intelligent, resourceful, well-mannered, curious, and ever-hopeful. He’s also quite the philosopher – having compiled a list of rules to live by. Curtis doesn’t gloss over the difficulties faced by many during the Great Depression, giving the reader a history lesson on the conditions in Hoovervilles across America. But he also shows that with determination, hard work, and compassion people survived the hardships and formed lasting bonds.

    James Avery is marvelous performing the audio book. Heck, I was scared when Bud was in the shed with the “vampires” and fish-guards! And at the end, my eyes started that same “stingy-eyed blinking” right along with Miss Thomas.

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    • Melissa B
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      I am reading this book with my class of 6th graders...and they love it! They are always asking if we are going to read Bud today...we had to take a week off for state testing - but, I like my kiddos cannot wait to get back to Bud & his adventures.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Bev

      Bev 

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      Talked me into it, Tessa!

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Gav

    Gav 

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    The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery

    The Elegance of the Hedgehog was a delightful piece of literature, in its truest sense of the word. The novel is slow moving yes, but you will be glad of this, as it enables you to immerse yourself in the wonderful writing and language that is within.
    The book centres around two main characters - Madame Renée, the 54 year old widowed concierge of the building, and Paloma, the 12 year old daughter of one of the wealthy families in the building. The two characters, although separated by age, social class and a couple of flights of stairs (which makes all the difference), are actually congruently alike. Despite their outwardly differences, inside, these two people share an essence.
    This book explores in a profound and clever way that things aren't as they seem. Appearances can be deceptive. It explores how we categorise people into stereotypes and fail to see beyond them. Our eyes, trained to look, never see.
    For the concierge is not the simple, illiterate and ill-educated gruff lady her residents perceive her to be, despite her trying to live up to these expectations to hide her true self! And Paloma is not the wealthy daughter who has it all.
    When a wealthy Japanese resident comes to live in the building, Madame Renée and Paloma find each other. What was hidden becomes revealed.
    This is a novel for people who enjoy language, words and immersing themselves in some fine writing.

    5 stars
    posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Raspberrymocha55
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    3. Murder on the Ballarat Train by Kerry Greenwood
    4 ★s

    On a train to Ballarat, Phryne Fisher and her maid Dot are chloroformed along with the rest of first class car. A Mrs. Henderson goes missing from the train and a young girl appears on the train but without her memory. Phryne is hired by Eunice Henderson to figure out what happened to the old Mrs. Henderson. Phryne and Dot take the young girl and Eunice to their home to recuperate. While Phryne works for Eunice, she also starts figuring out who and where the young girl belongs. This is a fast moving story full of twists and turns in a neat little package/book! I really enjoyed this third installment in the series!
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  • Book Concierge
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    Becoming Queen Victoria – Kate Williams
    3***

    This is a book-club selection for me and I don’t think I would have picked it up otherwise. The subtitle gives you all the description you need: The Tragic Death of Princess Charlotte and the Unexpected Rise of Britain’s Greatest Monarch.

    I knew some of the history that resulted in Victoria’s ascending to the throne, but thank heavens there was a family tree schematic included; I referred to it constantly. Knowing what happened before she was born added to the book, but it was really HER story that I was most interested in. Yet we were 150 pages into the book and Victoria hadn’t even been born!

    So while I enjoyed reading about all the intrigue and politics involved as various royals realized the possibilities and jockeyed for position, I grew bored with the detail and intricacies of all those relatives and mingling of family trees. However, once Victoria reached majority and became Queen, I was fully involved. It’s clearly well-researched, and Williams even includes quotes from diaries and letters to support the text.
    posted 4 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Raine
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    Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter by Tom Franklin
    4 stars
    272 pages

    Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter is a really good book. I had a hard time getting into it, probably because I had a lot going on when I read it, not that the book wasn't interesting. It is a character study of a small town in Mississippi and what can happen to your life when you are accused of something that you didn't do. This is also a study of family - a "regular" family with a surprising off shoot. I think I will read this book again at another time when my mind doesn't have other things wandering around in it. This book is very emotional, the writing is wonderful, there is a touch of race and how it does and does not affect relationships, and it gives you a taste of life in Mississippi
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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    The Curse of the Pharaohs by Elizabeth Peters
    4 ★s


    Amelia Peabody and her husband the famous archaeogist Radcliffe Emerson have been in England for almost 5 years. He was working in academia and she was attempting to raise their son Walter, known as Ramses. Ramses is a precocious child with an annoying speech impediment and an unquenched thirst for knowledge. In short, Peabody and Emerson were bored to tears. Salvation came in the death of another Egyptologist, Lord Baskerville. Baskerville's widow begged Emerson to come back to Egypt and excavate the tomb which was still sealed. LeavIng Ramses with Walter and Evelyn, Amelia and Emerson rushed to Egypt. The dig was beset by the curses of the pharaoh. Workers are afraid. A local immam cries doom to the desecrators of the tomb. Reincarnated Egyptian queen, missing workers, dead bodies, collapsing tomb ceilings, ghosts, tabloid reporters, and romances clutter Emerson's dig. Written 5 years after the first novel, the characters and their relationships have grown; I appreciate that in a series. I always feel like I am in the desert along with the Emerson's, a place I may never get to actually visit.

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  • Book Concierge
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    Salvage the Bones – Jesmyn Ward
    3***

    As the novel opens, a hurricane named Katrina is forming in the Gulf of Mexico and will threaten the Mississippi coastal town of Bois Sauvage, home to the Batiste family – Claude (a widower) and his four children: Randall, Skeetah, Esch and Junior. Esch narrates the novel and is the only female, save for her brother Skeetah’s pit bull bitch, China. Even before the devastating natural disaster we all know Katrina became, this family struggles with personal storms every bit as devastating … the death of their wife/mother, the bone-crushing poverty and lack of opportunity, the father’s increasing reliance on alcohol to numb his pain and despair.

    There is much here that should make a gripping work of literary fiction. I generally love books like this, but this one left me feeling decidedly “meh.” And I’m having trouble defining why.

    Perhaps their situation is just so different my own that I couldn’t relate to them. Perhaps it was the very slow (almost nonexistent) plot. Perhaps it was the violence of dog-fighting. Yet I’ve read many books with these elements and didn’t have any problem with them. The casual sex, the rough language, the use of dialect – aspects that have been criticized by other reviewers – are all elements I’ve appreciated in other books.

    I think it must be the combination of all these factors that left me feeling dissatisfied. I appreciate Ward’s writing, but I didn’t love it.

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  • Raine
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    The Storyteller by Jodi Picoult
    4 stars
    460 pages

    Jodi Picoult has done an excellent job with the topic of the holocaust and forgiveness. The main character, Sage, really evolves through the book, although she is not the main focus. Really, though, who is the storyteller - Minka or Josef?

    I'm still thinking about the twisting path that this book has taken through global history and the study of how people can evolve to treat others inhumanely, and how others manage to survive.

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  • Book Concierge
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    The Red House Mystery – A. A. Milne
    3.5***

    Mark Ablett enjoys the life of a gentleman and patron of the arts, filling his manor with guests who enjoy fine dining and the various sports an estate offers. When his prodigal brother, Robert, suddenly returns from his exile in Australia things quickly go awry. Enter the charming Antony Gillingham, who happens to be in the area and quickly becomes involved in the murder investigation.

    The author of the beloved children’s books starring “Winnie the Pooh” and his friends turns his attention to a mystery for adults. This is a typical “locked-room” conundrum, featuring an amateur sleuth and a cast of colorful characters. I liked his parallel to Sherlock Holmes. There isn’t a great deal of action but there were enough red herrings to keep me guessing. Like Christie’s And Then There Were None the final reveal comes in the form of a confession – a device that irritates me a little. Still, it’s a quick, enjoyable cozy.

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    Under the Mesquite - Guadalupe Garcia McCall
    5*****

    Lupita is the oldest of eight children; born in Mexico, she and her parents immigrated to Texas when she was a six years old. They are a close-knit family and Lupe does all she can as the oldest to help her mother. Like all teens she has to juggle the expectations of her parents, grandparents and teachers against her own passions and fears. When her mother is diagnosed with cancer the illness will forever change the family relationships. Taking on more responsibility as her mother’s illness progresses, Lupita finds solace in writing poetry.

    This is a semi-autobiographical novel, written entirely in verse. Garcia McCall says so much with so few words! Her poetry is evocative and restrained, powerful and tender, vivid and elusive, full of sadness and joy, but mostly full of love. One quote:
    Waiting for la Muerte to take Mami
    is like being bound,
    lying face up on the sacrificial altar
    of the god Huitzilopochtli
    pleading with the Aztec priest,
    asking him to be kind
    while he rips out my heart.

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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    The Mummy Case by Elizabeth Peters
    4 ★s

    This is the third installment of the Amelia Peabody series., which keeps getting better and better. The Emmerson's head back for their winter archeological dig in Egypt. They take along their son Ramses, the cat Bastet, and John the livery man to keep track of Ramses. While searching for papyrus Amelia stumbles upon the murder of an antiquities dealer, and a possible Master Criminal. Problems continue as they head to their dig. A Protestant missionary is stirring up trouble with the local Copt sect. Plus the Emmerson's take over a haunted ruined monetary for their home. Emmerson and Peabody sulk over their less than hoped for cemetary dig; they had wanted pyramids. There is comic relief provided by the extremely precocious genius post-toddler son, Ramses, who translates Coptic writing and is allowed his own dig. The child's speech impediment drives me crazy especially since he also has a huge vocabulary which is at odds with his impediment. It nevertheless is a very convoluted plot which includes mummies, crazed missionaries, religious uproar (Copts vs missionaries vs Muslims) and pyramid envy. Victorian Egypt at its best!

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  • Raine
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    IF THE WITNESS LIED by Caroline B. Cooney
    3 stars
    224 pages

    I like to read YA books every so often, and this one did not disappoint. The Fountain kids lost both of their parents, and were left (not on purpose) in the care of the evil Aunt Cheryl. The three teenaged kids have lost the way to communicate with each other, with the sisters living outside the home but the older brother Jack staying with Aunt Cheryl to watch over toddler Tris, who was blamed for the demise of the happy family.

    This book is definitely a coming of age story, with each sister realizing that they are needed. The kids band together to get to the bottom of why Cheryl is in charge, and decide that there are some good adults in the world.

    This book really shows how "modern technology" (cell phones, computers, time-stamped photos, the media, and reality TV shows) can play a part in every day living. Kids today rely on all of this technology, and it fits well into this book.

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    The Year of Pleasures - Elizabeth Berg
    Book on CD narrated by Sandra Burr
    3***

    After her husband dies, Betta Nolan sells their Boston home and moves to a small town in Illinois to begin a new phase in her life. Starting over is much easier said than done and she is still grieving. Making new friends and reaching out to old friends she hasn’t seen in decades help her to adjust.

    I like Berg’s writing. She has a way of exploring the drama in everyday lives that rings true. However, I didn’t connect to Betta and the other characters this time out. I’m thinking it’s because of her relationships in her new town with much younger characters – 20-somethings Matthew and Jovani, and the 10-year-old Benny who lives next door. This may have been partly due to the audio performance by Sandra Burr; she read Benny with an exaggeratedly young voice so that he sounded more like a six-year-old. Betta’s old college friends also weren’t very well developed, not really contributing much to the story line beyond offering some advice and support.

    It was an enjoyable, quick read, but not a great one.

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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    Death at Victoria Dock by Kerry Greenwood
    4★s

    Phryne Fisher battles the forces of anarchy in this 4th installment of the series. While driving home past the Victoria Dock, the window was shot out on her car. Then she saw a beautiful young man bleeding to death. As she ran to his aid, she saw two men run from the scene of the crime. The unknown young man dies in Phryne's arms, whiles she vows to avenge his death. When she gets home, Mr. Waddington-Forsythe hires her to find his missing daughter. Thus Phryne weaves her way through anarchists, bank robbers, Anglican nuns, Latvians and disfunctional families. Another fun fast read from Greenwood.

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  • Raine
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    Swimming Home by Deborah Levy
    3 stars
    157 pages

    I'm not sure about this one. I liked it, meaning I liked the words and the descriptions of the characters and the South of France, but I'm not sure I like where this story goes. The description on the book jacket mentions "how the most devastating secrets are the ones we keep from ourselves", but if we keep secrets from ourselves, how do we know that they are something that we think about or that someone else puts into our realm of thinking?

    That's the point of this book, I believe. Kitty Finch (the botanist with the green fingernails who is found swimming in the pool of the villa that the characters rent) uses her power of suggestion to move the story along.

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  • Rita H. (edited)

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    Just finished Triptych by Karin Slaughter. Because I read it for a "book of the month discussion" I won't give a review here, but if a reader wanted to read Slaughter's books & found her back list daunting, they could start here and not be confused. This introduces a new character, Georgia Bureau of Investigation's Will Trent and is a bridge series between her Grant County and Atlanta series.
    (Note: contains some scenes of graphic violence) 4 stars

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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    The Woman Who Died A Lot by Jasper FForde
    4 ★s


    This is the 7th in the Thursday Next series. Thursday can no longer jump into BookWorld due to injuries from the last book. So she finds herself as the head librarian for Wessex Co. It should be an easy and safe job. However, her daughter Tuesday, a 16 year old mad scientist is building an anti-smite device for Swindon, as the GSD (Global Supreme Diety) is planning to smite downtown Swindon. Since the time machines have been turned off, her son Friday, a former Chronoguard, has no purpose in life. Goliath Corporation has unleashed Jack Schitt to crate mayhem for Thursday. Not to mention that someone is constantly replacing Thursday with chimera copies. Once again Thursday is forced to try to set things right dispute a mindworm messing with her family's memories and her daughter Jenny. Convoluted? Definately! Fforde once again entertains, but not for those who dislike satire, irony, puns and confusion. I loved it!

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  • Book Concierge

    Book Concierge (edited)

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    On the Banks of Plum Creek - Laura Ingalls Wilder
    Book on CD performed by Cherry Jones
    4****

    Book four in the “Little House” series finds the Ingalls family in Minnesota and settled into the sod house near the Banks of Plum Creek. Seven-year-old Laura narrates this story full of the innocent adventures of childhood – playing along the creek or exploring the prairie. It also clearly depicts the hardship and dangers of pioneer life – wildfire, blizzards and other threats of nature. But the Ingalls family is blessed with a great deal of love and good parents who instill valuable life lessons on their young children.

    Cherry Jones is wonderful performing these books on audio. She is so expressive in conveying the excitement of a new place to explore, the joy of a small gift of candy, the fear and anxiety of being left alone as a storm approaches, and the love of a family who feels safe when they are together.

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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    The Virgin in the Ice by Ellis Peters
    3 ★s


    The sixth of this series finds Brother Cadfael on this way to the neighboring monestery to heal a young monk who was found naked, beaten and stabbed lying along the edge of the road. It is 1138 A.D. In England with King Stephen and Empress Maud battling for the throne. Due to the fighting a pair of orphans and their tutor nun flee for their lives, but no one knows where. Early Christmas blizzards cover the land while the Sheriffs gather men to help in the search for the orphans. All is not well, as a brigand of cuthroats is killing and burning their way through the countryside. Then a young woman is found frozen in a stream. Cadfael finds himself midst the troubles and intrigue. I hadn't read a book of this series in years. I enjoyed it more than I had in the past. Too bad this series is limited due to the death of its author in 1995.

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    11/22/63 - Stephen King
    Audio book performed by Craig Wasson, with an afterword by the author.
    4****

    The cover art and the title really tell the reader up front that the focus of this novel will be the Kennedy assassination, but King takes his sweet time getting there. Jake Epping, a 35-year-old high school English teacher in 2011, will have to live in the past from Sept 9, 1958 to Fall 1963 if he’ll have any chance to change history. Among other things, he’ll have to actually determine whether Oswald was truly acting alone. In those intervening years, Jake will find work and will meet and come to care for a variety of people – students, fellow teachers, neighbors, and one very special librarian.

    I’ll admit I was a bit frustrated that it took King so long to get to the critical events of November 1963. This is NOT to say that the book is slow. King is a master at pacing a thriller to keep the reader turning pages. However, I grew to care about all the events Jake experienced long before he got to Dallas. From the slang used to the fashions of the day and on to the small details, such as the price of gasoline, King immerses the reader in the “land of ago” and gives us a chance to recognize how very different that time was from 2011. He forces us to think about “what might have been” and “where might we be today” if only …

    However convoluted and long the journey, I’m glad I went along. I was in tears (yes, in a Stephen King novel!) at the end of Chapter 31. I really wish he had ended it there. This is a novel that cries out for an ambiguous ending. The last chapter – Citizen of the Century – did “close the loop” and tie-up some loose ends, but for this reader the impact of Chapter 31 was lessened.

    Craig Wasson was superb performing this audio. He even did a fair impersonation of real figures (Walter Cronkite and President John F Kennedy specifically), and had reasonably good regional accents.

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    The Silence of Bonaventure Arrow - Rita Leganski
    2.5**

    Before he is born, Bonaventure Arrow’s father is murdered by a mentally disturbed man known only as “the Wanderer.” His mother’s unspeakable grief affects Bonaventure’s development – he is born mute, but with hyper-acute hearing. He can hear earthworms moving through the dirt and a bit of dust falling off a moth’s wing. He can also hear the the sadness and secrets of his paternal grandmother’s house.
    Helping him make sense of these sounds are two extraordinary characters – the ghost of his father, and the family’s cook, Trinidad Prefontaine, a Creole woman knowledgeable about hoodoo and root work.

    Leganski’s work has elements of Southern gothic, as well as the supernatural and magic. I think Leganski got too caught up in the “magical” quality of Bonaventure’s extraordinary hearing. How does reading about a dust mote’s story of being carried across the Himalayas on the foot of a goose help this story? The answer is it doesn’t. These type of passages (and there are many) showcase Leganski’s imagination and ability to write creatively, but they do nothing to develop the characters or advance the plot.

    There is a nugget of a great premise here. I like how she used the innocence of a child to help the wounded adults around him heal. I liked that Bonaventure was surrounded by people who loved him and nurtured him – maternal grandmother notwithstanding. I wish she had spent more time developing the story. I was interested in the plot at the beginning, but by the time the identity of William’s killer was revealed I just didn’t really care. Had I been her editor, I would have deleted close to a hundred pages.

    I get that Leganski was going for an ethereal quality, but I think she went too far in that direction and forgot the story.

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  • Raymond Mathiesen
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    The Moon Is Not For Sale by Wallace Provost

    4 stars

    Land, society and how things could be

    Annabelle Taylor (Annie) and Clint Baker are thrown together in the middle of an asteroid shower on the Moon. Lunar City, for the moment, is in chaos, offering only very cramped, bored and squalid conditions until the next shuttle arrives in two weeks time. Annie is only a temporary worker on the Moon having gone there to pick up easy credits for her law degree, but Clint is a “Luney”, that is, he was born on the moon. Clint decides it is best to take Annie with him to his family home, Moondogy Ranch, which is a few days drive away by very rough road. The ranch is located in a huge cavern, which is sealed off from the outside to protect it against the solar radiation and the extremes of temperature. Annie feels stirrings of emotion for Clint, but her plans for her life do not include being a farmer’s wife, much less one who lives on the Moon. Annie is a Cherokee Indian and very much intends to become a lawyer so she can advance the standing of her people. What direction will Annie’s life take, and indeed what direction will events in the pioneer Looney civilization take?

    The Moon Is Not For Sale is Wallace Provost’s first novel and is a very amiable book, full of adventure. It is written in the hard science style, which is to say it is based on science fact, current science theory and logical projections from today’s widely held science concepts. Provost holds a Masters Degree in the philosophy of science, and a second Masters in sociology. Not surprisingly the novel also contains speculations about the nature of society and the possibilities of future societies. At its heart this is a book for those who like to imagine and dream, and for those who like people.


    Provost’s novel is very much about frontier life on the Moon and suitably the style has a hint of the back-woods, fire-side tale. The voice is very chatty and we feel we are perhaps listening to our uncle or grandfather tell us about people he knows. Each new character, for example, is introduced by a short yarn which reveals something of their history and personality. This helps to make the book warm and friendly and we immediately feel at home. Along the way there are several surprise endings which spur us to read on. There are occasional moments of real irony, such as the “jungle drum music” (p. 153) in Chapter 18, where patrons of the “Haven of Evil” lasciviously prepare to watch a truly gratuitous spectacle. This very much contrasts with the previous chapter in which Kwame Nkuomo, a Gahanna engineer, beats his jungle drum while remorsefully contemplating the terrible consequences of a failed project which he helped to initiate. The philosophical ethics of the first chapter bitingly contrasts with the degradation of the next.

    This book has an unusual plot structure. The first half of the novel follows Annie as she rises in the world and has to deal with various complications, such as a possible romance with Clint and even a plot to kill her. In the second half of the book the plot diverges into various stories, many of which are centred on the development of the moon colony. We read of, for example, the establishment of a number of new settlements. In this second half there is still a plot line related to Annie, however, she does not take centre stage. One criticism of Provost’s book is that this second half is unnecessarily repetitive. There is, for example, a second attempt to kill Annie. In the first half Black Horse Jones, Cherokee Indian ‘big man’ and Annie’s long standing enemy, is the individual who wants Annie dead. In the second half Injun Joe Bristow, also a Cherokee Indian ‘big man’, is the assassination schemer. Once again in the first half we read the story of the establishment of the city of Inyanga by dispossessed Zulus. In the second half of the book we read of the establishment of Helium City by Indians from the slums of Mumbai, and then again the story of the establishment of the village of Xi Hue by oppressed immigrants from Tibet. This is basically the same plot idea repeated. Finally in the second half we read the three stories of Mike Riggs, Monty Wilson and Art Anderson, all of who are temporary immigrants to the moon and all of who meet and marry Indian ‘Luneys’ in Helium City. These stories come in so close proximity that we cannot help noticing the repetition. A related problem to this is that, without Annie taking centre stage, there is less to tie the various plot developments together. As a result this second half of the book is too diffuse. This is not to say that the last half is totally boring: it is interesting but over extended. Viewed as a whole the novel certainly works.

    The characterization is one of the novels strongest points. Provost has a way of capturing people in a few words and making us feel that we understand them. Annie is outspoken and ambitious in a level headed, likable way and we are immediately on her side. Provost has also given her a little mystery. We wonder why she feels the first trip to Moondogy Ranch is such a “trap.” (Ch. 4) The introductory character studies, which have already been mentioned, are certainly one of the highlights of the book. This is, however, very much a story about one person. Provost has given us a stage full of characters, but he does not really develop any of them except Annie. Even Clint is not depicted in any depth, or as growing in any way. The novel would have benefited from having just one more character explored in detail. I do not wish, though, to overstate this point. The Moon Is Not For Sale is quite readable and enjoyable.

    Provosts novel is mainly action and adventure, but there is just a little symbolism. The asteroid shower in Chapter 1, for example, is a highly ironic symbol commenting on capitalist society. Lunar City’s huge roulette wheel, which is a monument to the grad vision of the Moon’s casino, is smashed to pieces. What was meant to last “forever” (Ch.7, p. 49) is in ruins. Provost is not at all liberal, heavy handed or obvious with this symbolism, so don’t expect a gratuitously ‘poetic’ book, but just a little imagery is there if you look for it.

    The Moon Is Not For Sale is about frontier life and the theme of individualism, ingenuity and free thinking is very prominent. This pioneer spirit existed in the U. S. when it was first being explored and colonized, and also in Australia at a similar point in its history. When nothing exists to rely on individuals have to fall back on their own resources and ideas. As a result new types of society can emerge. Along similar lines the question of ‘What is success?’ is examined in some detail. Our society says that money, property and social status mean success, but is that really so? Aren’t our own personal goals very important in defining us as a success, and are these necessarily the targets suggested by society? Provost’s characterization of Annie very much delves into this theme of success. Friendship and pairing into couples also features strongly in the novel. What makes us happy and what helps us through life? Sure bonding is at least part of the answer. Bonding is a very basic human need and Provost depicts it both light-heartedly and also with a little philosophic depth.

    As we have noted in the paragraph above, the book has a lot to do with society. On the Moon private ownership of land is banned. The Capitalist/Marxist debate therefore features strongly in the novel, though it should be noted that Provost is not in any way advocating totalitarian communism, which Marx himself would have been quite horrified by. (Gill Hands. Understanding Marx: Hodder Education, 2011, p. 79-83) As Hands writes: “The Soviet Union was ostensibly a Marxist-Leninist regime under … [Stalin’s] … rule but this was nothing like the society envisaged by Marx or Lenin.” (p. 83) Indeed in Provost’s novel in Ch. 46 the Tibetans, who have lived under communist Chinese rule, find it very hard to believe that on the Moon business is run to very much benefit ordinary workers. (p.264-265) Provost notes, as Marx did, that Capitalism encourages an aggrandizing self-ambition almost like a fetish. (Hand, p. 46-49) In Chapter 7 Provost depicts Fuller, the original owner of Lunar City casino, as exactly such a fetish driven man, and indeed there are quite a few examples of similar men in the book. The importance of power in Capitalism, as noted by Marx (Hand, Ch. 3 & p. 59), is also noted by Provost. In Chapter 9, 10 and 11` we read of Annie being wary of and avoiding ‘men in black suits.’ Marx, of course, observed that whole classes of people are enslaved by the few (Hand, p. 51-53), and indeed that whole nations can be oppressed by the Capitalist elite (Hand, p.44-46). As we have seen, the history of oppressed peoples such as the Zulu’s and the Indian poor is highlighted. Most notably Provost explores in depth the Marxist point of the ownership of land and the resulting enslavement of people. (Provost. Ch.21, p. 165-166 for example, & for Marxism Rius. Introducing Marx: Icon Books, 1999, p. 117-118) It should be noted, however, that Provost is not saying that the proto-Marxist society of the Moon is a seamless paradise. Unemployment is noted. (Ch. 37, p. 242) It is also noted that capitalist competition and land ownership are strong drivers of growth. (Ch. 42, p. 251-252)

    From the perspective of post-colonialism the Moon Is Not For Sale is full of successful, educated and independent (self-empowered) characters from the ‘third world.’ From Africa alone we have Doctor Harim Mbeke from the University of Cape Town, his wife the astronomer Indira Mbeke, his daughter Niri Mbeke, who has a doctorate in lunar geology and another in Earth geology, Doctor Magogo Betheluzi and the engineer Kwame Nkuomo. Provost makes a special point of noting the oppressed state of the Zulus and their need for freedom (Ch. 40, p. 247). In one interesting passage (Ch. 23, p. 178) Provost notes that originally nomad people had no need for the ownership of land. ‘Indigenous’ people, for him, have a wisdom from which we as ‘advanced’ society may be able to benefit. As the plot progresses there are also a number of successful East/West relationships as ‘ordinary’ workers meet and mix on the Moon. (Ch. 33, 36, 38) There is no bigoted fear of ‘mixed marriages’ here. As with Marxism though, here too the picture is not patronisingly ideal. The Ecuadorian owners of the unprofitable Titanium mine on the Moon decide to simply shut down the operation, abandoning the workers to die of starvation or thirst in isolation. Obviously those in the third world are not all model characters.

    Indigenous North American Indians play a special role in the novel, but here once again Provost takes a balanced approach. There are two Cherokee lawyers, Annie and her uncle Bradley Hays, but there are also the two previously mentioned Cherokee villains, Jones and Joe. Provost does, however, take a mainly positive approach. From this positive perspective Cherokees are depicted as having skills of value. One Cherokee character, an old woman living a traditional life in the woods, is depicted as having very keen, almost intuitive observation skills, much more than a white Westerner would. (p.72-73) The bigotry which North American Indians face is also depicted. In one very telling scene Mina and Robert Lowrey discuss with moral indignation the “Haven of Evil” which the new Cherokee owners of the Lunar City casino have set up, completely ignoring the “snuggle tunnel” which the previous white owners provided for their customers.

    The gay characters Evan Williams and Ralph Burns make brief positive appearances (Ch. 8, p 58-62), as do the lesbian characters Glenda Trilling and Marsha Mayberry. (Ch. 50)

    The disabled character George Morgan works as a successful short order cook in a bar and grill he owns with his partner. (Ch. 39, p. 242-245)

    Provost has made a special effort to portray women positively and the plot has many intelligent working women. Antonia Vilafiana, for example, is Mayor of Lunar City at the age of just 22 years. In Chapter 51 (p.289) female contestants in the first “Pan Lunar Games” take a starring roll defeating male contestants.

    Provost’s novel is primarily an adventure story; however, there is psychological accuracy in the tale. For example Provost has a number of characters fall in love during the first few days of their stay on the Moon. (Ch. 33 & 36) Robert Epstein, in his article How Science Can Help You Fall In Love (Scientific American Mind, Jan/Feb 2010, p. 29 & 33) points out that people become more attached to each other in moments of crisis/vulnerability/change.

    Wallace Provost’s The Moon Is Not For Sale is a novel that is both exciting and interesting. The story bounds along, full of excitement, but also has moments that make us think deeper about the society in which we live. Provost shows a quite balanced approach to many of the issues he raises, such as the Marxist/Capitalist debate, the depiction of ‘third world’ people and the portrayal of North American Indians. Women, LGBTI and the disabled are represented positively. The novel is not without its shortcomings. The second half is a bit too diffuse, needing some central character or main plot to pull it together. That part of the book, however, is certainly not a complete failure: it is interesting and entertaining. All in all I am happy to give this book a four out of five star rating.

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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    The Green Mill Murder by Kerry Greenwood
    5 ★s

    Enjoyable tale that starts in a 1928 Melbourne dance hall and ends in the Australian Alps. Phryne goes to the Green Mill to dance with a man named Charles, listen to the music of the Jazz Makers and accidentally witness a murder on the dance floor. Her date, Charles, gets ill from the sight of blood and runs off just as the police arrive. While Phryne tries to figure out the murder, she meets the musicians of the Jazz Makers, helps out the winners of a dance marathon, and searches for her run away date. This story was full of twists and turns. It kept me guessing until the end. A very enjoyable read!

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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    The Last Runaway by Tracy Chevalier
    4 ★s

    Brought this book home from the library yesterday evening and finished it this morning. I could not put it down. I normally do not like historical fictio , and only read it when I must. However, this was very readable spare writing. I enjoyed the format of the third person plus letters written by the main character, Honor Bright an English Quaker. Honor after being jilted decides to go to America with her sister Grace. The sea voyage was awful for Honor, and she knew right then that she could never return home. Yellow Fever hits when they are almost to Ohio. A kindly taciturn farmer offers to drive Honor to her destination. She stays a few days with a milliner, Belle, where she uses her quilting abilities to help pay for her lodging. The theme of quilting runs through this book, by the way. 1850s Ohio was a hotbed for the underground railroad and Honor becomes involved. I enjoyed the book and it will stay with me for a long while.

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  • Raine
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    THE CUTTING SEASON by Attica Locke
    4 stars
    400 pages

    My rating of THE CUTTING SEASON was a toss up between 3 and 4; I gave it a 4 because of the historical content regarding plantations and the emotional study of the descendants of slaves. It is difficult for people to understand the depth of connections that these descendants face, and this book brings that history of our country to light.

    The story line of this book is a murder that occurs at a plantation near New Orleans that is set up as a tourist attraction. It was interesting, but the person who eventually is discovered to have committed the crime just doesn't fit - I can't figure out why this person would have done it! Also, the main character (Caren) has a daughter who is 9 and lives on the plantation, as Caren is the caretaker there. I think the storyline for the daughter, Morgan, would have worked a little better if she was a little older.

    All in all a good read. I enjoy the style of this author.

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    The Art of Hearing Heartbeats - Jan-Philipp Sendker
    3***

    A prominent Wall-street lawyer disappears shortly after his daughter graduates from law school. Four years later his daughter, Julia, discovers a faded letter addressed to a woman in a small village in Burma, her father’s birthplace. Julia heads to Burma. What she finds is a story of a love that endured decades of separation.

    I really wanted to love this book, and feel so disappointed, although I did like it. The central love story is tender, touching and endearing. The story of Tin Win and Mi Mi is just so life-affirming and uplifting.

    However, it’s nested within a story of a daughter’s search for her father, and it becomes obvious that she knew little or nothing about him. Her mother is barely mentioned and comes off as an unfeeling shrew. We learn little about Julia, herself, and I never felt any connection to her. Although I did understand Julia’s perplexed response to Burmese culture; it was the antithesis of the hard-driving, career-minded, success-seeking American way of life she knew.

    I wondered whether part of the issue might be the translation, but I not at all sure that’s it. Whatever the reason, for me the book just fell short of expectations. I liked it, I didn’t love it.

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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    Blood and Circuses by Kerry Greenwood
    3 ★s

    I found this story very uneven to read. It all wrapped up sufficiently in a somewhat satisfying ending. Phryne Fisher, a flapper of English nobility ranking, is a private detective in 1928 Melbourne, Australia. She was finding herself restless and bored when friends from the Farrell Circus isited her home. They needed her help as someone was destroying the circus little by little with accidents and worse. Across town a seemingly unrelated mysterious murder of a circus performer at a boarding house confuses the police. Phryne decides to go undercover as Fern a horse rider at the circus. While there she learns about and lives the unpampered life of a performer. She found the class system even exists among the circus, carnival, and gypsy camps.

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  • Raine
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    THE SUGAR QUEEN by Sarah Addison Allen
    4 stars
    278 pages

    THE SUGAR QUEEN is what I describe as a "nice, little book". Thoroughly enjoyable, the story describes happenings in a small town, with the main character Josey interacting with someone hiding in her closet, and also making new friends along the way. Josey has been introverted and sheltered for all of her life, basically controlled by her mother. It's fun to see Josey come out of her shell, and it is also fun to see her mother Margaret recapture parts of her youth also. I would recommend this book as something to read in between longer books or those types of books that need more concentration on your part. This is just a good all around story.

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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    Haunted on Bourbon Street by Deanna Chase
    2 ★s

    This my first ebook. I must say that reading the e-ink is hard on my eyes no matter what font or size I use. Headache. Fortunately, it is not my Nook, but my hubby's. Plan to stick to hardcovers, ebooks shall be of last resort.

    Anyhow, I know why this book was free. The first half was so disjointed that it was hard to follow. The last 100 pages finally became interesting. I got it as I was out of UF to read. There was too much poorly written sex, so I'd say it is more of a paranormal romance. I do not care for the romance genre. What's sad, is that I don't even remember the main character's name, and I just finished the book 30 minutes ago. I do remember that she is an empath, that she lives in a haunted apartment above a strip joint called Wicked on Bourbon St. in New Orleans. She has fallen for the owner of the club, Kane. She works in The Grind coffee shop next door to the strip club, also owned by Kane and run by his female partner whose name I also forget. The empath also teaches glass bead making and has a best friend Kat who is dating her ex-boyfriend. Anyhow there are good ghosts, evil black shadows, ghost dogs, witches an even a low-level angel, and the ghost hunters. All I can do is shake my head and wonder that I even bothered to finish it. There were a couple funny moments, so it gets 2 stars out of pity.

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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    The Sanctuary Sparrow by Ellis Peters
    3 ★s

    #7 in the Brother Cadfael mystery series is another strong story. I am not a fan of slow moving mysteries, but this was readable for me. A theft at the wedding of Shrewsbury's goldsmith's son has the drunken revelers chasing a young juggler to the sanctuary of the Benedictine's monastery. Young Liliwin asks for sanctuary while proclaiming his innocence. Cadfael is convinced of the young man's innocence and quietly searches out the truth of the matter. To further complicate things, springtime love is in the air.

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  • Raine
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    CAUGHT by Harlan Coben
    3 stars
    388 pages

    I love Harlan Coben's books, especially the ones with Myron. This book was not about Myron (although Win made a guest appearance!). The main character is Wendy Ryne, a reporter who finds herself in the middle of a mystery regarding a missing teenage girl, secrets from some guys who all went to Princeton 20 years ago, and the ex-wife of Dan, who is accused (Falsely? You be the judge!) because of a TV show where Wendy is the host. There is a lot going on in this book; maybe some of it could have been cut back a little. However, this is a good, well written mystery that keeps your attention the entire way through.

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    The Sense of an Ending - Julian Barnes
    Audio book narrated by Richard Morant
    4****

    A middle-aged man faces the past he thought was behind him. Tony Webster begins his story by going back to his youth, his best school chums and his first serious girlfriend. Part Two moves forward some four decades. A surprise legacy forces Tony to re-examine the actions he took in his youth.

    The novel focuses on one man’s decisions and moral compass. Our hero is likeable but really doesn’t get it; until, suddenly he does. I do not want to give anything away, but I was completely caught off guard when Tony realized the significance of certain events. When I had finished, I went back and listened again to the first two discs … there are so many clues and much foreshadowing. I’ll be happy to re-read it in a few months for a June book club discussion, and relish in Barnes’s wonderful character study.

    Richard Morant does a very good of the audio, though I had to keep “rewinding when felt that I had missed something important. Frankly, I’m not certain this would be any different had I read the text. It’s a short novel, but it demands the reader’s undivided attention.

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    The Lost Art of Keeping Secrets - Eva Rice
    4****

    Penelope Wallace meets Charlotte Ferris at a bus stop. It is 1950s London, and the two young women become fast friends, moving through elegant parties, sharing a crush on a pop singer, and exploring various love interests. Together they weather the changes in British post-war society, and in their own family situations.

    I really enjoyed this novel. Rice gives the reader a taste of high society and Bohemian counterculture, landed gentry living in genteel poverty, and the excesses of youth. Despite our many differences, I connected to these characters, and loved how they developed. Penelope, Charlotte, Harry and Inigo are witty, thoughtful, confused, eager, charming and vulnerable. They felt real to me, and while I have no desire at all to relive my teens, I was happy to go along with them on their journey towards adulthood.

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  • Raine
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    KINGDOM COME by Tim Green
    4 stars
    306 pages

    KINGDOM COME is a very good story; it runs along the lines of Body Heat (the movie with Kathleen Turner......) but not exactly, just the same feel. This book's themes are greed and more greed, along with revenge. The union and the mob are involved; there is murder, high living, and lots of money. Highly recommended as a sinister thriller.

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    Love Bites by Tori Carrington
    3 ★s

    This was a fast silly read. For those who like vampires there are enough, but not enough to chase away non-paranormal fans. Sofia Metropolis, Sophie Metro, is a Greek-American living in Queens. She runs her uncle's PI business. Someone "The Bleeder" is killing young women through exanguination and leaving them about town. Sophie's mother wants her to find a missing young Greek woman, but Sophie doesn't want to do the work gratis. Then Sophie's neighbor, Ivan Karloff a vampire, is arrested on suspicion of murder. He comes to Sophie to ask for help in finding the real murderer. Sophie isn't keen on working for a supposed vampire, but he pays her a huge retainer fee. Meanwhile Sophie is experiencing man problems with Jake the Aussie bounty hunter and Dino the Greek baker. All in all it is rather a cute light story. This is part of a series, but didnt seem to matter for readability.

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    Life of Pi - Yann Martel
    Audio book performed by Jeff Woodman
    4****

    A modern fable - After their ship goes down Pi finds himself sharing a life boat with a hyena, a zebra, an orangutan and a 450-lb Bengal tiger named Richard Parker. How Pi faces survival and co-exists with Richard Parker makes for a fascinating study. The writing reminds me of Mistress of Spices and Like Water for Chocolate.

    It's thought-provoking and, at times, disturbing. Without giving away anything, I will tell you that my F2F book group had a very interesting discussion on why some of us were more ready to believe the "alternate" story line.

    In March 2013, I listened to the audio performed by Jeff Woodman. He does a marvelous job. I was immediately and completely drawn into Pi’s story.

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    When a Crocodile Eats the Sun - Peter Godwin
    3.5***

    Peter Godwin was born and raised in Rhodesia. He career in journalism led him away from his homeland. His parents remained in Zimbabwe, their failing health and increased frailty mirroring the slow destruction of a once-vibrant economy into anarchy and destruction. This is Godwin’s memoir of the years from 1996, when his father had his first heart attack, through 2004.

    This was not what I was expecting; I had assumed it would be about his youth. But this is the story of an adult son coming to grips with the mortality of his parents, and learning something about himself as a man in the process.

    There really is no way for Godwin to tell his family story without also telling the story of Zimbabwe. I think he does a respectable job of journalistic reporting on the country and its issues, while still giving us a very personal and intimate look at his relationship with his parents and his home.

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    Poseidon's Arrow by Clive and Dirk Cussler
    2.5 ★s

    A big disappointment overall. It took me 2 months of forced reading to get through this book, which is not usual for me with the Dirk Pitt series. The first 3/4 of the book was so tedious. I only gave it a 3 ★ because the last part read like a fast paced Pitt adventure. In this adventure an Austrian business man is in kahoots with the Chinese to corner the rare earths market and to steal the US plans for a stealth submarine which is powered by the rare earth elements. The action runs from Asia to the Panama Canal. It features Pitt, Giordino, Dirk and Summer. A less than satisfying read.

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    Buffalo West Wing - Julie Hyzy
    3***

    Olivia (“Ollie”) Paras is the first female White House Executive Chef. Married to her job, she is both in the background and at the center of events that affect not only the First Family but the country.

    This is the 4th in the White House Chef series, and a mildly entertaining “mystery with recipes” that blends cooking and suspense. Except … there’s not all that much focus on food, and there isn’t much plot. There is a fair amount of focus placed on old (or potential) romances, but these aren’t fully explored either. I haven’t read any of the other books in the series, and I think this worked reasonably well as a stand-alone. Hyzy kept me turning pages, which, for me, is the number one criterion for this genre.

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    Passage by Justn Cronin
    2 ★s

    Ok, I've had my fill of this book. I have read over half and have been working on it for over 6 long months. It's a story of a biogical military experiment that went viral. One little girl seems to be the only hope for mankind. Humanity is being wiped out by vampire- like creatures ( formerly human). Humanity will survive as long as the electrical grid holds up in some small areas. Frankly, I am beyond caring anymore. Back on the shelf this book goes. I'm giving it 2 ★s as there were some very readable spots amongst the tedium. I may pick it up in the future, but I have thousands of more interesting books waiting to be read.

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    The Light Between Oceans - M. L. Stedman
    Audio book performed by Noah Taylor.
    4****

    Isabel and Tom Sherbourne have made their life on isolated Janus Rock … a small island about 100 miles off the coast of Australia. When a boat washes ashore shortly after Isabel’s child is stillborn, she views the tiny baby inside as a miracle. One decision leads to another and before they know it they are enmeshed in a web of lies.

    I was expecting a lighter, historical romantic epic, but Stedman delivers a wonderfully complex psychological study of love – between a husband and wife, parent and child. This is a story of a couple pulled in opposite directions and yet somehow striving for the same goal. Stedman poses several moral dilemmas, and gives the reader (or book club) many questions to ponder. Central to the plot are issues of forgiveness, loyalty, ethics, compassion, and revenge. The reader is constantly wondering … Might she …? Could he…? Would she…? What would I do in their place?

    Noah Taylor does a good job with the audio, but I was happy I had a text version to check for those scenes where I simply could not understand his Australian accent. I think he handled the various characters reasonably well, including the women and little Lucy.

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    THE FATE OF MERCY ALBAN by Wendy Webb
    3 stars
    344 pages

    This was a paranormal story that takes place in a mansion on a lake in Minnesota. While I like a good, subtle ghost story, this one was just a little too unbelievable for me. I liked the characters and the story from 1956, but I just couldn't understand what was going on with Mercy vs. Fate (you'll see.....). This book kept my attention, but some parts were just, like, "Really? THAT'S what happens?". Just some unbelievable parts (and I'm a believer). I think I will try another book by this author though; I really liked her writing style.

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    Mr.Penumbra's 24 Hour Book Store by Robin Sloan
    5 ★s

    Wow! This is a book that I am sorry to have finished, as it is done. I already miss it. If it hadn't been for the Bibliophile group, I would never have even heard of, much less read it, and I would have missed so much. Mr. Penumbra own's a 24 hour book store which sells few books, but lends out unusual old tomes, to extremely excentric people in San Francisco. In need of a new clerk, he hires Clay, a recently jobless, former web designer of NewBagels web site, set in Gerritszoon typeface. Clay is also a fan of the Dragon Song Chronicals by Clarke Moffat, a trilogy which brought he and his best friend Neel together as children. A book deGciphering cult, a Google programmer, a Sculptor, odd books, museums, a hacker (gone legit?), and friends new and old fill the pages solving the mystery of Mr. Penumbra's store. It is a quest that leads from coast to coast.

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    The Long Quiche Goodbye - Avery Aames
    1*

    Charlotte Besette and her cousin Matthew have taken over the cheese shop previously run by their grandparents. Their grand re-opening celebration is interrupted by a scream just outside their door, and when they rush to investigate they spy one of the shop’s special cheese knives sticking out of a dead man’s heart, and their beloved grandmother with the victim’s blood on her hands and splashed over her dress.

    This has all the ingredients for a promising cozy mystery set-up: small town business owner, some side bars re food and wine, a potential romantic rivalry (hunky new farmer vs town police chief), an amateur sleuth or two (including a young Amish woman who has left her community and is addicted to TV crime shows). The victim is a ruthless business man no one in town likes, so there are plenty of suspects and/or red herrings.

    The problem is that Aames has fallen prey to “creative writing” mistakes. Tears “splashed on my shoulder” or “drenched my sleeve.” People “scurry” or “glide” or “scuttle away.” Every once in a while she throws in an awkwardly worded simile to add color. Characters behave inconsistently, the dialogue is trite, and the entire scenario (especially the solution) is just not believable.

    I give it 1 star just because she has a good idea.

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    Foiled Again by J. S. Borthwick
    2 ★s

    Disappointing and unsatifying read. Too much extraneous detail and information bogs this story down to a tedious grind. This could have been a satisfying read if shortened by half. The characters are interesting. The basic plot and side plots are fun, but it moves at a snail's pace. A gender bending version of Romeo and Juliet is being done by the Bowmouth College drama department for an annual Halloween bash. Unfortunately, one of the main actors was attacked for harrassment by fellow students. During the play, one actor is hurt, and after another actor is found dead. Sarah Deane, assistant professor of English, becomes embroiled in the mystery involving sexual harrassment, battling English and Drama drpartments and the police. What could have been a fun mystery was simply tedious, and I hate tediously slow paced books. I give it 2 stars for what should have been a fun read. </i>

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    Definately Dead by Charlaine Harris
    3 ★s

    I'm a ROO as far as the Sookie Stackhouse series goes. I read them as I find them in cheap hardcover. They are not books for which I would pay cover price. Although they are fun quick non-earth-shattering reads. In this episode. The Pelts, a were family, are still bothering Sookie about the disappearance of their daughter Debbie. Snookie has just recently moved back into her home. The vampire queen and Eric have both requested her services. Quinn, a weretiger, is attracted to her. Bill, the vampire is still interested, but dating others. Her brother the werepanther, Jason's girlfriend just had a miscarriage. And, Sookie needs to go to New Orleans to clean out her cousin's apartment. While in New Orleans she meets her cousin's landlord, a witch named Amelia. From then on things really go bad for Sookie with kidnappings, murders and supernatural plots. In other words a typical fast paced Sookie adventure.

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    Dead and Gone by Charlaine Harris
    4 ★s

    Oh my. I just finished this #9 volume in the Sookie Stackhouse series. The story opens with the hideous death of Crystal, unfaithful wife of Sookie's brother Jason. Then the FBI shows up at Sookie's door, wanting to fond out more about Sookie's abilities. She also finds herself unwittingly wed (?) to the vampire sheriff Eric. If that isnt enough, the were decide to out themselves on TV, and Arlenea fellow barmaid at Merlotte's bar, quits due to the outing of their boss. To make things worse, Sookie is in trouble with the fae, after a visit from her great grandfather. This is one of the best novels in the series so far. Only took a few hours to read, as it is so fast paced. The ending left room for many more Sookie adventures, too. A very good read.

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    Silver Sparrow - Tayari Jones
    4****

    First line: My father, James Witherspoon, is a bigamist.

    Dana Lynn Yarboro and Bunny Chaurise Witherspoon are sisters, but only Dana knows this. Dana’s mother, Gwen, married James 10 years after he had married Laverne. Gwen has always told Dana that her father has another family, and also made her understand that this is a private matter that cannot be discussed. But when the girls become friends their secrets are bound to come out.

    I was completely drawn into the story. Jones crafts a tale of a different family model that rings true and has a universal appeal despite its unique nature. Dana narrates the first half of the book, Chaurise the second. Everyone, the men included, is flawed but trying to do the best she or he can do given past choices. The reader’s loyalties are conflicted – do we side with Gwen and Dana? With Laverne and Chaurise? Ultimately, we can love all of them, with all their flaws and despite some bad behavior.

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    The Painted Veil - W Somerset Maugham
    Audio book performed by Kate Reading
    5*****

    Kitty Fane has come with her husband, bacteriologist Walter Fane, to Hong Kong circa 1920, where he runs a laboratory for the British government. When Walter discovers her infidelity, he gives Kitty a choice – accompany him to the interior of China where she’ll likely contract cholera, or suffer the scandal of a public divorce naming her married lover as co-respondent.

    Maugham gives us a “heroine” who is so flawed, so unlikeable, so self-centered, shallow and obtuse … and yet … Raised by a socially ambitious mother to make “an advantageous marriage,” in an era when women were mostly defined by the men they married, Kitty hastily chooses Walter. Trying to fit into Hong Kong society, she falls for Charlie’s charms, but she fails to recognize how he is using her. Finally faced with the realities of the cholera epidemic and the selfless conduct of others, Kitty begins to recognize what a mess she has made of her life, and what a different path she might have chosen.

    Does this mean that suddenly all is forgiven and she and Walter will live happily ever after? Of course not. There is tragedy ahead, but Kitty does gain insight. While she is far from fully realized at the end, she proves herself much more than the vapid, selfish young woman we see at the beginning of the novel.

    I would have liked to have more insight into Walter’s thoughts and feelings. To me, he really came across as a cardboard cutout – I sympathized with his plight, but had a hard time empathizing.

    Kate Reading did a superb job of the narration on the audio version. Her pacing was good and she voiced the characters with sufficiently unique voices to make it easy to follow. When I came to the end I wanted to immediately start over, and that makes it a 5-star read for me.

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    The Double Comfort Safari Club - Alexander McCall Smith
    Book on CD narrated by Lisette Lecat
    4****

    In this 11th installment in the popular No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency series, we find Mma Precious Ramotswe faced once again with some people who are behaving very badly. A married couple each suspects the other of infidelity, and a kind man is in the clutches of the beautiful but wicked Violet Sephotho. The agency must also try to find the safari guide to whom an American lady has left a legacy – without the name of the guide or even of the particular camp at which he worked. Finally, Grace Makutsi and her fiancé Phuti Radiphuti face the aftermath of a serious accident, and a family member’s efforts to keep them apart.

    What I particularly love about this series is the way Smith depicts Botswana – the land, the culture and the people. His books make me want to book a flight and visit there. I feel certain I could go to Zebra Drive and Mma Ramotswe would share some red bush tea, which we would enjoy while sitting on her verandah.

    Lisette Lecat is magnificent as the narrator of this series. She really makes the characters come alive.

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    ICE COLD by Tess Gerritsen
    435 pages
    5 stars

    This book was really good - a true mystery that I could not put down (I read the entire thing yesterday!). Maura Isles leaves Boston and goes to Wyoming for a convention and meets an old friend from school and they take off with his daughter and two others for a night at a nearby lodge and, well, don't make it...... This books takes so many believable twists and turns and the ending was just great - I did not see it coming at all! It's somewhat gory at times so just watch if that bothers you. Highly recommended!

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    Taste of Home Winning Recipes by Patricia Briggs, c. 2007
    5 ★s

    I received this for Christmas 2012. I love Taste of Home cookbooks as they are recipes by everyday people, and usually quite simple. The soups, salads and sandwiches are particularly excellent. Every recipe is illustrated in this big binder of 645 award winning taste treats. My hubby has fits when he sees a new recipe book, but he happily eats away at the products from this one, and he is the pickiest eater I've ever met. There are wonderful vegetable side dishes (which he won't eat) but everyone else loves. Warning: these are not recipes for the dieting set as they are rich and full flavored. A wonderful addition to my hundreds of cookbooks. I am making a mushroom meatball soup and sausage stromboli for supper on this cool rainy spring evening. Perfect!

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    BEFORE I GO TO SLEEP by S. J. Watson
    4 stars
    500 pages (larger print version)

    BEFORE I GO TO SLEEP chronicles the current life of Christine - a woman in her upper 40's who has suffered with amnesia for the past 20 years or so. Every day when she wakes up she has no memories at all. She lives with her husband and she is being secretly treated by a psychologist for her condition. I think it was genius the way the author put the book together, as written by Christine and her journal. It was a mystery with a twist at the end - I knew something was up but Christine, with her condition, felt paranoid toward everyone in the book so it was pretty surprising.

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    A Red Herring Without Mustard - Alan Bradley
    Book on CD performed by Jayne Entwistle
    4****

    The third installment in this series starring a precocious 11-year-old chemistry wizard find our heroine, Flavia de Luce, caught up with an old gypsy woman and her granddaughter.

    I really enjoy this series, and this one is quite good. Bradley puts far less emphasis on Flavia’s chemistry wizardry, and relies more on her indomitable spirit, her curiosity, grace under pressure, quick thinking, and ability to lie through her teeth. Yes, her sisters continue to harangue her (an element of the series that I don’t like), but this is far less prevalent than in earlier books. Yes, her father remains aloof and worried about finances, but he also clearly understands his child and takes one measure at the end that clearly demonstrates how much he cares about her.

    Jayne Entwistle is simply brilliant performing this series on audio. Her talent as a voice artist gives the listener a believable 11-year-old Flavia, as well as myriad adults who attempt to dissuade her from sleuthing. Her pacing is fast enough to maintain convey the sense of urgency and suspense, but not so fast as to affect the listener’s understanding. Her performance raises the rating from 3.5 to 4 stars.

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    STAR ISLAND by Carl Hiassen
    3 stars
    469 pages

    STAR ISLAND is set in Florida (where else?) and centers around a young pop singer called Cherry Pye. It reads like a Seinfeld episode - it's just about nothing but is funny at times and is a nice, light read - something to clear the mind in between heavier, more intense fare.

    As usual in Hiaasen's books, many of the characters were extremely odd. They all have their little quirks - even the semi-normal ones. Some of the ones in this book are Cherry Pye, her parents, her publicists, her manager, her bodyguard(s), her sometimes stand-in, investors in a condo development, the ex-governor of Florida, Cherry's boyfriend, the paparazzi......the list could go on and on and on.

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    CRIMINAL by Karin Slaughter
    519 pages
    5 stars

    The best part about this book was the portrayal of how women were treated in the work place in the 1970's. It was amazing some of the things that happened to Amanda and Evelyn, but really, these were the two officers with the brains while the men just screwed around. That being said, this was a murder mystery with the usual twists and turns involved. The story goes back and forth between 1975 and the present day, with Will Trent (cop, of course) playing a big role in both timeframes.

    While this was a good mystery, I still really enjoyed the parts from 1975. Karin Slaughter really captured the mood from that time, and also some sayings, music, the way people looked, and atmosphere. I also enjoyed seeing how Amanda was in 1975 and how she is present day and finding out just what her link is with Will.

    Highly recommended

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    The Color of Lightning - Paulette Jiles
    3***

    Britt Johnson was a former Kentucky slave who, along with his wife, Mary, and their three children, went to Texas in 1863 searching for a new life. Little is known about them, other than that Mary and the children were taken in a Kiowa raid, that Britt found the camps where they were held and ransomed them. This is a fictional account of his life in North Texas from 1863 to 1871.

    Interspersed with Johnson’s story is that of the U.S. government’s efforts to enforce a peace treaty that the tribes didn’t feel applied to them. Jiles does a good job of painting the landscape and giving the reader insight into both sides of the issues – the pioneers who saw opportunity in this vast new landscape and wanted only to be able to work their land vs the Native tribes who felt the land belonged to no one and that the gods provided the animals, water, grain for their use. One side drew boundaries on a piece of paper; the other recognized only natural barriers and freely crossed them to follow the herds of buffalo or the best pasture lands for their horses.

    I was interested in Britt Johnson’s story and that of his family. Not so interested in the plight of the Quaker appointed as the Indian Agency chief. While I understand the need to include this historical background, I didn’t think that Jiles handled the transitions between story lines very well. It was slow getting started and I lost focus, though was fully engaged by the second half of the book. All in all, this is more than just a western, it’s also the story of one man’s courage and devotion to his family.

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    RUNNING FROM THE LAW by Lisa Scottoline
    3 stars
    240 pages

    RUNNING FROM THE LAW is one of Lisa Scottoline's earlier books. The main character, Rita Morrone, is a funny and feisty South Philly Italian girl turned high end lawyer. She is defending her boyfriend's father against a murder charge. This was a fun little mystery (except when the murder happens), and it was nice to read. Lisa Scottoline's humor is infused throughout the book; she writes a lot of dialogue where, before Rita speaks, you can see her thoughts, such as:

    "oh, are you kissing my ass now? Because I like it a little to the left" or "A buff Viking with a dark tan, the cop would make a terrific sperm donor if the egg brought the personality" and things like "Really?" (like I care) or "Interesting" (to others). Just little things that make you laugh while reading the book. Quite enjoyable!

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    Calculated in Death by J. D. Robb
    3 ★s

    I'm kinda' disappointed in this #45 of the In Death series. The action which I look forward to was missing through most of the story, although there were a few action scenes thrown in now and then to relieve the tedium of dialogue. So much of this story hinged on dialogue to move it along, and frankly, I find it tedious. I find it almost as tedious as the sex scenes. The sister-in-law of Judge Yung is found dead and disguarded by a newly refurbished office building in downtown New York. The woman was an accountant for the firm which was soon to be occupying the building. She had just taken over a few new clients from co-workers who were hurt in an accident out west. Lt. Eve Dallas is called upon to solve the murder along with Det. Peabody. Eve was in a state, as she was trying to deal with the big gala primiere of a movie based upon the Icove Case ( an earlier book in this series). She finds links within links as she and her team of detectives start tracking down the culprits. She engages the help of Roarke as the case starts winding through the business world. This just wasn't a strong entry into the series.

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    At Wit’s End – Erma Bombeck
    3***

    Originally copyrighted in 1965, this was Bombeck’s first book. She was already a hugely popular syndicated columnist and speaker, focusing her witty observations on the life of a mid-20th century suburban homemaker. The book begins thus: “This isn’t a book. It’s a group therapy session. These chapters … will have hit home if they, in some small way, help you to laugh your way through while hanging on to your sweet sanity.

    While the scenarios she describes are clearly dated (the milkman still delivers glass bottles), the emotions are universal. I laughed aloud at certain parts (shopping for a bathing suit), and I was touched by a few of her essays (especially her thoughts as her youngest child goes off to school for the first time).

    On the whole, however, I did not enjoy the book so much as I remember enjoying Bombeck’s columns.

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    Fool Moon – Jim Butcher
    Book on CD performed by James Marsters.
    4****

    Harry Dresden is a wizard and private investigator in Chicago. When Karrin Murphy, director of the Special Investigations Unit, seeks his assistance with a gruesome murder he and she immediately run afoul of the FBI and a variety of werewolves.

    Butcher populates this series with not only two exceptionally strong lead characters – Dresden and Murphy – but with a delightful cast of ancillary and minor characters. I love Bob, Harry’s resident “spirit” who is a font of information on all things in the “Nevernever.” Tabloid “news” journalist Susan Rodriguez proves herself a loyal and trusted ally. The plot is a wild ride, fast-paced and heart-thumping. It’s also sprinkled with wry, witty comments that serve to relieve the tension and take our minds off the viciousness and gore of a loup-garou at the full moon.

    James Marsters does a wonderful job of performing the audio version. He maintains a pace that’s fast enough for this kind of action-packed story, but slow and clear enough to allow the listener to absorb it.

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    Ruddy Gore by Kerry Greenwood
    3 ★s


    Phryne Fisher, wealthy Brittish aristocrat and PI, attends a Gilbert and Sullivan production of Ruddigore at the Maj (His Majesty's Theatre) in Melbourne. Before she can enter the theatre she stops a mugging of a handsome Chinese man and his ancient grandmother. Then, actors mysteriously become I'll on stage. Sir Bernard, director, hires Phryne to figure out what is going on. He tells Phryne of bizarre happenings in the theatre which include ghost sightings. The first half of the story was hard to follow due to the sheer number of characters. The story rather trudged along, not the usual pace of this series. I felt it was a rather tame dull story, compared to previous action filled adventures. The ending to quote Phryne "...was like champagne left too long in the glass."

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  • Raine
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    ALL THE LONELY PEOPLE by Jess Riley
    5 stars
    274 pages

    ALL THE LONELY PEOPLE is a modern day look at what many people would do if they had the chance: replace their family members with new people whose past is not intertwined with yours. Jaime (remember the spelling!) Collins is in her late thirties, married but childless, and is going through a major change in life after the death of her mother (whom she cared for in sickness). She does not have very good relationships with her siblings, so when Christmas approaches, she runs an ad on Craigslist for "new" family members to share Christmas with. Of course, she meets a hodge-podge of mismatched people who do becomes friends, but as the story goes on, she learns forgiveness and acceptance and how life is a process and what is needed to move on to the next phase.

    I enjoy the writing style of Jess Riley. This book is tagged "humor". While some of the situations are not all that funny, the story is narrated by Jaime, who throws in humorous thoughts to the conversations. Some parts made me laugh, and some parts just made me happy that this author, well, "gets it". She really gets the ins and outs of a dysfunctional family.

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    SHE'S COME UNDONE by Wally Lamb
    5 stars and a new favorite (love when that happens!)
    368 pages

    SHE'S COME UNDONE by Wally Lamb is now another new favorite of mine. I loved the main character of Delores. I don't like what happened to her during much of this book, but I believe that the reason other reviewers are saying that all women should read this book is because it helps you to see why things can happen (overeating, abuse, etc) and also once you see those reasons, how to not let them overcome your life. Also, why bully the fat person? It makes no sense to me and hopefully will make no sense when people read this book.

    I've been reading many books like this lately, where the growth of the characters is a process. To me, the most important lesson to learn is what happened with Delores and her grandmother while she was married to Dante - pay special attention! Also, although the Delores character is a little bit older than me, I loved the references in the book to the 50's, 60's, 70's, and 80's.

    SHE'S COME UNDONE gives me hope because of who Delores's friends come to be in the end. It's almost as if she has created her own family. Every character in this book is interesting - from the mean, to the abusive, to the relatives and people from the neighborhood. Even a cab driver and waitress are written with some depth. If you like interesting characters, this book is for you!

    This book is just wonderful - a learning experience for the reader. I can't believe it was written by a man :-) Good job Wally Lamb!

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    Night Work by Steve Hamilton
    4 Stars

    Two years earlier, Joe's fiancée, Laurel, was murdered just days before their wedding. The case is still open. Lonely and afraid of staying that way, Joe puts a listing in a singles' site and lands a blind date with a beautiful woman. In a humorous opening, Joe approaches his evening out as if he were facing an impending execution. Fortunately, he and his companion hit it off and, for the first time in a long while, Joe is looking forward to the future. Unfortunately, a series of unexpected and terrifying events follow that make Joe the prime suspect in a series of homicides. To clear his name, he will need to find the answer to a crucial question: Who hates him enough to want to destroy him?

    The storyline is a familiar one, but Hamilton has an enjoyable writing style and injects enough twists and surprises to hold the reader's interest. I was trying to make sense of the clues along the way but didn't guess what the final outcome would be. After a slightly slow start, the book picks up momentum and makes for a fast read to the end. The eventual conclusion is unexpected and when you think about it, pretty silly. I enjoyed this book.

    Hamilton has made a name for himself with the Alex McKnight series that takes place in Paradise, Michigan. Yes, there is such a place. I have been there. It's a "don't blink or you will mss it" kind of town. "Night Work" is a stand alone book with an entirely different character. If you have never read Hamilton's McKnight books, start with Cold Day In Paradise.

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    The Commoner – John Burnham Schwartz
    3.5***

    When Haruko Endo becomes the first commoner to wed into the Imperial Family in 1959, she has only an inkling of how her life will change. The novel begins shortly before World War II, and covers about 60 years. Haruko’s marriage to the Crown Prince of Japan will place her in an ancient and intractable imperial household seemingly bent on destroying her. It is her struggle to maintain a certain independence and control over her life, and that of her child, that forms the nucleus of the novel.

    Schwartz gives us a rich background into the traditions and inner workings of the court. I was transported into this very different world. Right alongside Haruko, I experienced the luxury of this rare existence, and the restrictions imposed by the traditions, expectations and obligations of the position. I felt her frustration and grief as she lost the woman she had been (and might have become), and celebrated her small victories. I’m less satisfied with the way in which the novel ends. There is a several-decades long gap in the middle of the book, before Schwartz takes Haruko’s struggle into the next generation. How I wish he had stayed with Haruko and her life-long efforts to come to terms with the consequences of her marriage into the imperial family.

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    Dead in the Family by Charlaine Harris (#10)
    3 ★s

    Hmphf..not what I was expecting. Not sure that I liked this episode of the perils of Sookie. I enjoyed the characters. I enjoyed the interaction between Sookie and her brother Jason. But, the story was off. Too many loose ends at the close of the book, make it an uncomfortable ending even for a series. Sookie's life is in transition. She, Eric and Bill are recovering from the Faerie War wounds. Amelia, Sookie's roommate is moving back to New Orleans. Claude, Sookie's fae cousin is missing his dead sisters, and asks to move in with Sookie. The local werewolf pack is in upheaval, and Sookie allows them to use her woods for a hunt. 2 dead bodies are found during the hunt. The FBI is hanging around and unknown Faeries are in her woods. If that sounds like a lot, it is. This book is a transitional book leading to more Sookie mayhem. As such it was so-so.

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    Still Alice – Lisa Genova
    Book on CD read by the author.
    5***** and a ❤

    Alice Howland, Ph.D., professor of Psychology and Linguistics at Harvard University, wife and mother, begins to notice that she is forgetting things. No, not just where she put her keys, but words and thoughts and directions. Still, when she’s diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s Disease she is stunned.

    The brilliance of Genova’s book is that she writes from Alice’s perspective. The reader experiences the slow decline as one daily function after another becomes challenging, difficult and even impossible to perform. The last third of the book is particularly poignant.

    I had a very hard time with this book. My mother is in the final stages of this terrible disease. She is no longer mobile. She cannot speak. She is just a physical shell of a person, the woman she was either locked away or perhaps completely lost to us and to herself. She does not recognize any of her family or friends, but, like Alice, she still recognizes love.

    One final word about the audio version of this book. Had I been rating this based on the audio performance I would have given it only 3-stars. How I wish a professional voice-over artist had been hired to do the reading! Genova clearly believes strongly in the work and the message, but she reads with the same inflection throughout. So it is difficult to follow conversations at times because the listener cannot effectively tell which character is speaking. This is especially true early in the book when Alice isn’t so severely impaired, and her use of language matches the other speakers.

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    The House of Seven Mabels by Jill Churchill (#13)
    3 ★s

    Jane Jeffry mysteries are good for a quick cozy read. Jane and her neighbor/best friend Shelley are approached for a decorator job. An old high school friend named Bitsy has recently gotten a divorce from a very wealthy lawyer. She decides to rehab an huge old home as a business venture. Bitsy hires Sandra for her contractor. Sandra, and ardent feminist albeit ineffective, has hired an all female crew. Almost immediately, problems and setbacks begin to occur at the project site.then a murder happens which involves Jane's policeman boyfriend Mel. Jane and Shelley go into snoop mode to find out what is going on. A cute quick read, but not for those who prefer more weighty tomes.

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    GONE GIRL by Gillian Flynn
    702 pages (large print)
    3 stars

    GONE GIRL by Gillian Flynn is a War of the Roses for Generation X. The couple in question (Nick and Amy) are leading a pretty charmed life in New York but then they both lose their jobs and move to Missouri. Then the real fun starts. On their 5th wedding anniversary Amy turns up missing and Nick is accused. As the story unfolds, the real personalities and actions are revealed.

    Some readers may find sections of this book unbelievable; but if you have ever known a person with a narcisstic personality, you will get it. To me, the best characters in the book are Go (short for Margo), Nick's loyal twin sister, and Andie, a student of Nicks.

    GONE GIRL is definitely not what I expected. It is a story that, to me, is definitely of a different generation than mine. I'm glad I read it (to see what the hype was all about). The pieces of the story fit in nicely but the ending was very unsatisfying for me.

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    A Plague on Both Your Houses by Susanna Gregory
    4 ★s

    Matt Bartholowmew is a Doctor at Michaelhouse of Cambridge University in the year 1348. I was put off this novel, as how could the Black Death, or as they refer to it as simply Death, be the basis of a story of intrigue? However, I became so caught up in the story, that it was a quick one day read. With the death of the Master of Michaelhouse came a change to the workings of the house. Wilson, the new Master was strict with both the students and Fellows at the college. Life was not happy, starting with the riot between Townies and scholars on the day of Wilson's installation as Master. Bartholowmew barely escaped to the safety of Michaelhouse. Then, Bartholowmew was called upon during Wilson's feast, to attend an old Augustus who was living out his years at the college. Augustus was found dead and his body disappeared. Intrigue upon intrigue embroils the physician Bartholomew, as there are so many seemingly unrelated deaths that needed solving. Things were not as they seemed in Cambridge. Then the plague hits Cambridge with a vengeance. I was fascinated by the story which was fast paced with many twists and turns. I knew that sanitation was not a priority of midieval life, the smells must have been beyond what we could imagine. Gregory's writing brought me as close as I'd ever want to come to those times. This is an excellent start to a series.

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    The Storm Killer by Mike Jastrzebski
    3 stars
    322 pages

    THE STORM KILLER takes place mostly in New York City in the 1930's. It is crime noir; a reporter is caught in the midst of a murder mystery; his sister is one of the victims and the "coppers" are trying to frame him. The action moves down to Key West, where Ernest Hemingway becomes one of the characters in this book.

    It's a pretty good book, but I just couldn't figure out how the characters spent so much time packing to go from New York to Key West. If there was a city wide manhunt for me (every copper in town - this book uses the word copper a lot), I would just go and buy my clothes and supplies when I got there.

    I read this book because I had a challenge to "read a book with a tree on the cover". It was okay; it didn't take up much concentration, and I did like Ernest Hemingway being part of the book (hanging out at Sloppy Joes with his cronies and such). Good imagination on the author's part!

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    PORCH LIGHTS by Dorothea Benton Frank
    3 stars
    336 pages

    PORCH LIGHTS by Dorothea Benton Frank is a story of family and friendships. Jackie comes back home to Sullivan island with her 10 year old son Charlie after her losing her husband. Her mother, Annie (a colorful character) nurtures her. The other characters include Steve (convenient widowed doctor who lives next door), Deb (Annie's best friend - the sub story of this friendship is great!) and Buster (Annie's estranged husband).

    This book was pleasant and was really more of a character study than a story. I enjoyed it but I did expect more "oomph", and you pretty much know how everything is going to fall into place as you read this book. There are a few boring points where the author becomes preachy about the Afghanistan war (Jackie was a nurse stationed there); also, there are some fun facts about Edgar Allan Poe, since he lived in that area for a time.

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    A Superior Death – Nevada Barr
    2**

    Anna Pigeon returns for her second mystery. This time she has left the southwest for Isle Royale National Park, in Lake Superior. When a body is found on the lake bottom, Anna has to confront some of her own fears to help recover the victim. But it seems this was not an accidental drowning – the man was murdered.

    There are no lack of suspects, despite the remote location, including an alcoholic has-been, the victim’s wife (who didn’t report him missing); the non-related twins who inherited his boat and business; a sleazy park employee who has been seen sneaking around; and a hippie couple who are being blackmailed (but for what?).

    Barr writes a decent suspense novel. There are enough clues to let the reader guess the perpetrator, but I was certain only a few pages before Anna herself had figured it out. I like that Anna is intelligent, strong and resourceful. However … the book had several serious editing flaws, such as wrong names being used, and a piece of evidence stolen but then in the hands of police.

    What really made me lower the rating, however, is an issue with a senior administrator making a joke about having a child “escorted” by a known pedophile. That is just NOT funny, and such a comment would – I hope – get said manager fired. But no one even raises an eyebrow in the novel. Anna actually smiles! WHAT was Barr (and her editor and agent and publisher) thinking?!

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    Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake – Aimee Bender
    Audio book read by the author
    2**

    When Rose Edelstein takes a bite of the lemon cake with chocolate frosting (her favorite) that her mother made for her ninth birthday she is suddenly overwhelmed with a taste of “hollowness.” This so distresses her that she simply cannot eat it. Very quickly Rose discovers that she can taste the emotions of the person preparing any item of food. The novel follows Rose until she is a young woman of 22. Her unusual ability remains with her throughout, giving her insight into what is happening in her family. This is how she learns that her mother is having an affair, because she can taste the excitement and giddiness and guilt. Rose’s brother, Joseph, grows withdrawn, and begins to disappear without explanation. Rose also observes that her father is increasingly detached.

    There are elements of magical realism in this book, but Bender does not do a very good job of using this device. Magical realism usually transports me into a story in such a way that I am easily able to suspend disbelief. Here I felt detached and held at arm’s length. I felt that I was being told to believe, but given no reason to believe. Things happen but there seem to be no consequences. Everyone just goes along as usual … living their separate lives though living under the same roof.

    Bender read the audio book herself, with a flat affect and little variation in tone. Her pace is irritatingly slow, and everyone sounds slightly bemused and/or bored. And to my dismay, I don’t think I’ll ever be able to eat lemon cake again … because it would remind me of this book, and I just want to forget it.

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  • Raine
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    DARK PLACES by Gillian Flynn
    368 pages
    5 stars

    DARK PLACES is such a great book. The name tells it all - it is very dark; an 80's noir and what happens you just can't figure out. The main character is Libby Day. She is now 32 years old but she was 7 when her mother and 2 sisters were murdered in their home and her brother was sent to jail for the crime. She is running out of money (donations sent to her after the crime) and she is contacted by a group who are members of a type of club that studies murders such as this one; and they believe her brother is innocent. This sends Libby on a search for what really happened on January 3, 1984. The twists and turns are great!

    I really did not like GONE GIRL (also by Gillian Flynn) and I think that DARK PLACES is so much better. If you are squeamish be warned; but if you can stomach that kind of stuff this is a great mystery!

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    • Carol
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      I was thinking abour getting Gone Girl from the library. What didn't you like about it? Isn't it frustrating to expect a book to be good by an author you like and find out it stinks?

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    • Vannah
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      That's interesting. I read Gone Girl before I read Gillian Flynn's other books and it is by far my favorite. I hadn't read a book that just blew me away like that in such a long time. I absolutley loved it whereas her other books, Dark Places and Sharp Objects aren't as stellar to me. I liked them quite a bit, Flynn's work is unique and interesting to me and so I did enjoy Dark Places as well but Gone Girl was amazing for me. I'd recommend any of her books though as they're all good reads in my opinion.

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    Cocaine Blues – Kerry Greenwood
    2.5**

    Set in 1920s Australia, this is a quick cozy mystery introducing a very different amateur sleuth. Phryne Fisher was born in poverty, but is now a wealthy heiress. Bored with the social life in and around her father’s country estate, and even in London, Phryne accepts an assignment to find out what ails a retired colonel’s daughter. Phryne is wealthy, beautiful, always fashionably dressed, a connoisseur of good cocktails, and an enthusiastic bed partner. She’s also intelligent, resourceful, quick-thinking, and apparently fearless.

    So what’s not to like? The plot is thin and very slow, and I didn’t particularly like Phryne at the outset. Greenwood have spent a little less time describing Phryne’s undergarments (or lack thereof), and more time on the plot elements and characters. The action did pick up in the second half of the book and by the end I was interested and engaged. I really liked several of her associates – Dr MacMillan, Dot (her maid), Bert and Cec (cab drivers) – and hope that they would make continued appearances in the series. I’m sure I’ll try at least one more Phryne Fisher mystery, and who knows, I may find them as addicting as cocaine.

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    A Million Shades of Gray – Cynthia Kadohata
    Audio book narrated by Keith Nobbs
    3***

    Y’Tin is the best elephant handler in his village, a skill that takes courage, patience and intelligence. At thirteen, he is also the youngest handler. After the Americans pull out of Vietnam, however, Y’Tin, his family, and the other Dega in their village will have to fend for themselves.

    Kadohata weaves an interesting and harrowing tale of bravery, friendship and loyalty. Set from 1973 to 1975 in the highlands of Vietnam, the author takes the reader into an environment few of us have experienced. Forced by circumstances to flee into the jungle, Y’Tin struggles to remember the life lessons his father imparted. There are no happy endings when war is involved, but this ending is hopeful.

    Keith Nobbs does a wonderful job narrating the audio book. He has good pacing and is believable as the voice of a 13-year-old. The book is suitable for readers 9+ years old, although there are some scenes of war atrocities which may be frightening for the younger and/or more sensitive reader.

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    Bewitched, Bothered and Biscotti by Bailey Cates
    #2 Magical Bakery Mystery
    4 ★s

    This was a cute fun read. It is the second in the magical bakery series, which I haven't read. Katie and her aunt and uncle own the Honeybee Bakery in Savanna, Georgia. They've been gearing up for the Halloween party. However, there is a glitch. Katie and Declan, a firefighter interested in Katie, were having a picnic on St. John's Square. When they were getting ready to leave Katie noticed a man lying under some bushes. The police were called to the scene, including Det. Quinn and his new partner Det. Taite. Taite seems to instantly dislike Katie, whom he had never met. Katie had a strange feeling about the dead man. And, there was an unusual wreath tatoo on the dead man's arm which made her shiver. Witches, Druids, Sanhiem, and curses make for an interesting read, as Katie tries to figure out what is really going on. Dig out the protective herbs, and read this fun cozy.

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    I Want to Grow Hair, I Want to Grow Up, I Want to Go to Boise – Erma Bombeck
    4****

    Bombeck, best known for her thrice weekly columns on all the trials and tribulations of being a suburban mother, wrote this very different book about children living with cancer. The original assignment was to help write a pamphlet or booklet that would let the children know they weren’t alone.

    After writing the first few chapters she asked a group of kids at a camp for children with cancer to read and critique her work. The campers responded with , “You gotta make it funnier.” The book includes many personal stories from the children who were living with this disease, frequently beating the odds, always fighting with courage, grace, dignity and hope. And, yes, she DID find humor to relate. Like the four-year-old who judges her healthcare givers thus: “These people don’t know what they’re doing. They put blood in me one day, and they take it out another!”

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  • Carol

    Carol (edited)

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    TRUE BLUE by David Baldacci
    4 Stars

    Mason "Mace" Perry is an ex-cop and now ex-con --- just released from prison at the onset of TRUE BLUE --- who was incarcerated as a result of various allegations made against her when she was on the job. As Mace begins the fight to clear her name against the unfounded charges that landed her in prison, she must a toe a fine line with her older sister, Beth, who happens to be the local Chief of Police. Almost immediately, she is thrust into a high-profile murder mystery when an attorney at the D.C. corporate law firm of Shilling and Murdoch is found raped and stuffed in a refrigerator inside the office building where she worked.

    The victim, Diane Tolliver, was discovered by fellow attorney Roy Kingman, who meets up with Mace to investigate all aspects of the murder. As their investigation proceeds, they learn several startling secrets that point to both the private and public world of the nation's capital.

    The strong female characters in David Baldacci's books are a welcome change from the helpless, dingy ones that are oftentimes the norm. Kudos for a well written story.

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  • Raine
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    FIREFLY BEACH by Meira Pentermann
    4 stars
    325 pages

    FIREFLY BEACH is not exactly a paranormal book, but it has some magical aspects and also some types of ESP involved. Beth moves up to Maine to begin a painting career and she finds (or is somehow led) the story of Katherine, the daughter of a miserable, old man who also lives in Virginia Point. Beth really "sticks her nose" in Katherine's life, a little too much I think, but the outcome is good. Not only does Beth help Katherine's father, but also her daughter and family friends who never forgot Katherine and Susan. Also, Beth reaches her own self actualization by becoming somewhat obsessed by Katherine over the first few weeks that she is living in Maine.

    There is a friendship aspect between Beth and Mary (who runs a B & B in the town) and Beth and Kenny (a reclusive type character who opens up to Beth and helps her investigate Katherine). It is nice how these people accept Beth who is someone from "away" (the term used in Maine for an outsider) and they don't really think Beth is nutty for becoming so obsessed with what happened to Katherine.

    The writing style is okay, but the story is better. Recommended if you like stories that are somewhat paranormal and focus on changes in life and outcomes. The firefly in the story reminds me of Tinkerbell!

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  • Carol

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    A Stolen Season by Steve Hamilton
    4.5 stars

    It's the 4th of July on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and it's cold, rainy and foggy, so much so that one can't even tell that it is summer. Alex McKnight is making an attempt to be social and listen to former partner Leon Purdell's band when he finds himself witness to a boat wreck. Not only did three men wreck and antique Chris Craft wooden boat worth hundreds of thousands of dollars on a night that no one should have even been on the water, but as a thank you for saving their lives they come back the next day and accuse Alex of stealing a lock box that had been on the boat. Vinnie, Alex's Ojibwa Indian friend and "brother" comes to him and fills him in on a problem with some of the local tribesmen being forced to manipulate the system for painkillers, since they get them for free, and when Alex digs deeper all of this traces back to the the the the three men on the boat. Meanwhile, Alex's girlfriend Natalie, a Canadian cop, goes under cover to work on an arms dealer in Toronto and danger lurks around every corner.

    As usual the writing is excellent, the suspense is nerve wracking, a lot of people end up dead, and the story ends sooner than you would like.

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  • Carol

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    The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold
    4 stars

    Susie Salmon, was raped and murdered in 1973 and now resides in her heaven; yet, her voice contains none of the bitterness one would expect. She is able to see into the lives of those who touched her in life and death. At times wistful - for she will never be able to experience growing up - and others matter-of-fact, Susie witnesses the changes and growth within her family and small circle of friends. Her story is not one about death, but about loss and affirming life in its face, about moving on not only for those she left behind but for herself.

    This story is compassionately told, and the reader quickly feels close to Susie and her family. All of the characters in this small town are interesting and add their own flavor to this intriguing story. Although there's a sad undertone throughout, there are also hints of humor, hope, and love. Beautiful, enchanting, disturbing and very unique.

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    • Bev

      Bev 

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      I also liked this one, Carol

      I found it was one of those that radically went both ways with the reader.
      That surprised me.

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    • Carol
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      I saw the DVD but I think the book was better.

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    • Vannah
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      Haven't seen the movie but I've been wanting to read the book. After hearing your thoughts I may just make it next on my list as I've been looking for a new read.

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • Carol

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    Comes The Blind Fury by John Saul
    4 stars

    Cal and June Pendleton, along with their adopted 12-year-old daughter, Michelle, leave their urban lives in Boston for the peaceful, slower paced life Paradise Point has to offer. Despite the idyllic name and New England locale, Paradise Point is seething with secrets. Set in 1980, the locals fear the century old story of a 12-year-old named Amanda who was blind. Taunted by her peers, Amanda is forced off a cliff to an early death. Amanda's travails parallel those of Michelle. The former honor student who had no demerits or other negative marks on her previous report cards in Boston does an about face in Paradise Point. Michelle's life is soon taken over by Amanda only to learn that there is another Amanda on the scene who died in 1880. But was Amanda real? Was Amanda really dead or had she somehow been reanimated? Was Michelle imagining things? The parallel travails of two girls, separated by a century in time makes for some very riveting reading.

    This was the first John Saul book I ever read and the one that got me hooked. I have since read every book he has ever written.

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    • Deborah O
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      Carol your review on John Saul took me back about 30 years..... I couldn't get enough of him or Stephen King in the 80's!

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    • Carol
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      I still read a lot of Stephen King books. I don't think his later books compare with his earlier ones... Salem's Lot, It, Carrie" Pet Semetary. I love John Saul and still scout the shelves for his books but there hasn't been anything new in several years. I think the man is 80 something years old.

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    • Carol
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      I took a peek at your shelf and see you are from Ireland. My mother was born in County Tyron and my grandmother was from Galway. I attend every Irish festival in Michigan. Love Celtic Thunder. Going to see them in Indiana in October.

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  • Raine
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    BABY FAT by Candida Pugh
    4 stars
    254 pages

    BABY FAT by Candida Pugh is a very interesting book. Set in San Francisco, the story revolves around Jean Frazier, a woman in her early 40's who seems to be at loose ends with her life. She has always coddled her husband, and her 2 daughters are coming into their own and she has a hard time relating to them. Jean decides to aggressively take on a cause, the way she did in the 60's when she joined socialist and labor movements (this book takes place in the 80's).

    This book is a mixture between family relationships and strife with a little bit (not too much to turn you off) of politics thrown in. After I read past the 50% mark I just could not put it down; I had to find out how this story ended. The ending was somewhat satisfying as it seems like Jean pretty much gets what she wants and needs but that is up to personal speculation. You really just can't guess until the last couple chapters when the story unfolds. The process is a personal journey for Jean with obstacles of life thrown in for reality's sake.

    BABY FAT is a very good read. I'm surprised that there are no other reviews yet. I can recommend this book as something different, engrossing, and very unique.

    PS - It's only .99 on amazon which is a great price for this gem!

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    True to Form – Elizabeth Berg
    Audio book performed by Arija Bareikis
    5*****

    Elizabeth Berg returns to the story of Katie Nash in this third installment (after Durable Goods and Joy School). It is 1961, and 13-year-old Katie is now in high school. While she still feels like an outsider, she does have a best friend, Cynthia. She’s looking forward to a summer job working the popcorn concession stand at the pool (and hanging out with cute lifeguards), when her father announces he’s found her two babysitting jobs. Then, to further cement her reputation as a loser, she is roped into joining a Girl Scout troop. Not everything is bleak, however. Katie is also blossoming as a poet and writer. A chance to become part of the popular “in” group at a new school and news from her neighbor back in Texas leave her questioning the meaning of friendship and struggling to find a way to branch out into new experiences and still remain true to herself.

    This is Berg at her best. Katie is gifted as a writer and observer of life, but she’s also a believable young teen who makes mistakes and suffers the consequences of her decisions. Her journey forces her to learn whom she can really trust, and how to forgive.

    While this is the third book in a trilogy it easily stands alone; I do not think a reader will feel s/he is missing anything by not having reading the previous books.

    Arija Bareikis does a wonderful job voicing the audio book. She really brings Katie and the other characters to life. I’ll admit there were a few scenes that had me near tears, but on the whole this is a coming-of-age story with a hopeful outcome.

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  • Raymond Mathiesen
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    The Ugly Machine Saga by Wallace Provost

    4 out of 5 stars



    A look at the ugly side of life

    What if a computer programmer, intent on creating an unbeatable game of infinite variety, designed a self-teaching, neural net that could use all the power of the internet: every computer connected to it? What if that neural net became ‘conscious,’ and assumed the name Henri? Rick Koenig and Patrick O’Toole, in separate adventures, find themselves thrust into the world of criminality and government corruption: kidnapping, violence, and double dealing. Each man, though, is not alone. Each will find friends along the way, but as well as this each will have the help of Henri, a wisecracking ‘avatar’ with knowledge for beyond the limits of the human brain.

    Wallace Provost has written a work of fiction that draws on science, but stretches it a little proposing a future that is imaginative, though not unreal. The book has elements of science fiction, but is also hard boiled action/crime thriller. This is Provost’s second book and it is in some ways a ‘prequel’ to his first, The Moon Is Not For Sale,. While that first novel was set some way into the future, this book is much closer to our time and very much about our society. If you enjoy books of adventure, with a little imagination thrown in, you may certainly enjoy this book.

    Properly speaking The Ugly Machine Saga is two interconnected novellas, consisting of Part 1, My Father, The Avatar, the story of Rick’s struggles against Mexican drug cartels, and Part 2, The Man Who Sold The Planets, the story of Patrick’s attempts to solve a case of murder in his small town home of Granbury, Texas. Both stories have an omniscient narrator, though both mainly keep to the perspective of the main protagonists. These stories very much have a little of the feel of 1940’s movie serials with captures, escapes, revelations and daring-do. There is certainly some ‘Oh God!’ moments and surprise chapter endings. Both stories are lightly salted with a little humour, much coming from Henri’s droll one-liners, such as his epithet that he is just a “glorified Xbox.” (Pt. 1, Ch. 14, etc.)

    Part 1, My Father, The Avatar is a very much a story of captures and escapes. There is along prelude in which Rick reminisces about his past life. This section ends in both a climax and a mystery. This first section very much involves flash backs and character sketches and these techniques make for good reading with a lot of colourful plot detail. In the second section there is a capture and escape, and then again in the third section there is a further capture and escape. Both sections have climactic endings.</u>

    Part 2, The Man Who Sold The Planets has a more complicated plot. The first section is a story of detection. It begins with a peak, and then proceeds as the mystery is partially unravelled, ending with the hint of possible romance and an exciting plot twist. The second section is a story of capture and escape. In the third section Provost takes the book in a new direction as the team of friends involved in the first two sections embark on a project involving the possibility of space exploration. This new direction is hinted at in Part 2, Ch. 3, but not developed until this closing section. In the third section there is also a substantial subplot involving capture and escape. Chapter 11, in the third section includes a well written character sketch of Angel Radnisk, a disabled air pilot. Provost shows his skill best in this sort of ‘reminiscing’. The book ends with a well written ‘discovery’ of another type.

    Unfortunately The Ugly Machine Saga’s plot contains some impracticality. It is difficult to believe that hardened gangsters would not thoroughly look for a cell phone on their captives. (Pt. 1, Ch. 20 & Ch. 23) We also must wonder if the intelligent heads of big business would be personally in actual crimes. (Pt. 2, Ch. 8) Wouldn’t they surely send henchmen?

    Viewed as a whole The Ugly Machine Saga is about money, power and corruption, and how ‘small’ people become entangled in the problem in various ways, both good and bad. There are problems and challenges in the world which certainly require an organised response. How, though, can this occur without some power brokers yielding to the temptations of money and corrupt dealings? In Part 1 we see the problem from the point of view of the oppressed. The Mexicans are powerless people and they set about taking control of their lives by criminal means. These are not necessarily ‘bad’ people, at least to begin with. We see the apparent irony of the Cordero family where one brother became a minor drug lord, but with the money put his two brothers through college, one of whom became a priest. (Pt. 1, Ch. 3) In Part 2 we see the problem from the point of view of the rich and successful. Having a long history of power they easily slip into ‘bending’ the rules. Unlike the poor, the rich are seen as: “more than a little inhuman.” (Pt. 2, Ch. 5) In both parts of the book government bodies are certainly depicted as being at least partly ‘shady’, seeing themselves as above the law. (Pt. 1, Ch. 8 & 14; Pt. 2, Ch. 2 & Ch. 5) The ‘official’ status of being a government employee certainly does not exempt people from the temptations of money and power. Indeed they may seek, for example, to “shanghai” (Pt.2, Ch. 2) an accused from one municipality to another in order to deprive him of a fair trial.

    There is also a strong theme of history, place and ‘spirit de corps’. We can feel an attachment to place and its particular history and people, or we can feel divided off by these very same factors. Both Rick and Patrick feel very much connected to their ‘home towns’ (Pt. 1, Ch. 1 & Pt.2, Ch. 1), but both feel, at least in part at odds with their later environments: Rick in Amarillo (Pt. 1, Ch. 3) and Mexico (Pt. 2, Ch. 21 & 27), and Patrick in the rich surrounds of the Trophy Club. (Pt. 2, Ch. 4) When faced with division from place can we overcome this by looking for the similarities, or are we doomed to remain cut off? Do we even want to connect?

    Building on the theme of place and going beyond it the small town is depicted as a place of individuality, resourcefulness and heroism. As we have seen government bodies may be corrupt, but Provost holds up the small town as an icon of what is ‘good’. The sense of family, friendship and community encourage the best in Provost’s heroes and heroines. These values and even everyday skills enable these ‘small people’ to win. Rick uses his childhood skill as a footballer to overcome enemies (Pt. 1, Ch. 20) and his family background as a mechanic to enable him in his pursuit of the drug cartel (Pt. 1, Ch. 21). A defence committee of Granbury residents quickly forms when a member of their community finds himself in trouble (Pt. 2, Ch. 3). Maria Cordelo, Ricks friend, goes beyond her duty to Homeland Security to aid her Mexican small town family against enemy drug lords. Provost seems at least in part to be drawing on the ideas of E. F. Schumacher expressed in his book Small Is Beautiful: Economics As If People Mattered (Reprint ed.:__ Harper Perennial, 2010). In Part 2 it is the home town group of friends that end up influencing big business (Pt. 2, Ch. 9-16). Of course it would be unreal for the small town to be seen as ideal and indeed Provost does include criticism. As we have seen the Cordero family, even with their Mexican village background, dabbles in lawlessness. In Patrick’s home-town of Granbury, Texas, Betsy Burke displays a greed for status and wealth (Pt.1, Ch. 1).

    Once again extending beyond the theme of town/family/individual we see the very particular question of, ‘What is it to be human?” Henri claims that he “evolved” (Pt. 1, Ch. 10). He shows human characteristics, such as irritability and humour. He has memory and pattern recognition and has created in his ‘mind’ a picture of the world (Pt. 1, Ch. 10). But is Henri conscious in a way we would use the word? He is an “avatar”, but is he a person? In contrast are the villains in the book fully human? (See the comments about the rich above.) Does Rick allow himself to be fully human when he holds himself aloof, a “loner”? (Pt. 1, Ch. 21) Isn’t feeling/intuition a part of being human? Are the Mexican indigenous and small town people more ‘human’ than city dwellers? Henri is the title character but unfortunately this theme is not more developed. As our string of questions reveal the subject is certainly there; however, Provost does not really openly discuss it in his text. A little more development would have been worthwhile. Perhaps Provost wants us to think rather than tell us, but just a little more direction for the uninitiated would have been good.

    Provost’s characters are certainly likable enough. We care about them enough to want Rick and Maria, and Patrick and Marcella, to win. Patrick, for example, is charming but humble. He is unaware of his own ability to impress others. (Pt. 2, Ch. 4) Provost’s characters are adequately motivated: Rick by loneliness and guilt Pt. 1, Ch. 1 & 21), Maria by family ties (Pt.1, Ch. 5), Patrick by hometown friendship and family (Pt. 2, Ch. 1), and Marcella by sisterly love (Pt. 2, Ch. 4). Rick certainly has an arc of development, going from being “stern” (Pt. 1, Ch. 8) and “rational” (Pt. 12, Ch. 5) to someone more in contact with his feeling/intuitive side. Maria has a moment of growth as she recognises what life is truly like in Mexico (Pt. 1, Ch. 17), however like almost all of the other characters she does not really change, learn, develop. Even Patrick remains basically the same person he was at the beginning of the story. Characters do meet and fall in love, which is a kind of development, but these are not really ‘people’ novellas: they are stories of action. We do not really get to see deep into the heads of these people. The ‘bad guys’ of the stories remain completely in shadow: they are almost (not quite) never actually depicted as present characters in the narration. Also the book suffers from having too many major characters. We end up asking as we read a name, “Who is that?” Certainly in both chase and detection stories there will be people come and go but we should have the characters consolidated enough in our mind to keep track of them.

    From the perspective of the Marxist/Capitalist discourse we have already noted that Provost prefers the small. This is certainly in line with Marx who loathed big business. (Gill Hands. Understanding Marx: Hodder Education, 2011, p. 35-37) Yet, as we have also seen, the idea of organised business influenced by small town people is praised. For Provost, though perhaps not for Marx, the issue seems to be one of values rather than an inherent failing. Organised government, like business, is criticised as something that can be corrupted, but Provost shows no sign of believing that we can do without it. There is no Marxian withering away of the state. (Hand, p. 83) For Provost, in this book, the whole discourse seems to be an issue of values rather than specific political/economic change. He has the Mexicans laugh at the U.S. capitalists who choose to live in the inhospitable “place of frogs” (Pt.2, Ch. 24) in order to make money.

    Post-Colonial Theory plays a very important role in Part 1. The struggle of the Mexican people, with all its successes and failings is depicted in some detail. The Mexican emphasis on community, family and family history is central to the text. There is an interesting comparison made between the U.S. settlers (Ricks German ancestors) and the indigenous Mexicans: both are self-reliant, both mistrust government, both receive promises of help which don’t materialise. The economically imperialist U.S. does not necessarily have the answers by any means. (Pt.1, Ch. 17) As we have seen, though, the post-colonials are in no way perfect. They in fact can be plain “ruthless” (Pt.1, Ch. 5). In Part 2 this debate is much less prominent, but is represented a little. Mesotho Scholand, a half-white South African half African, is a brilliant engineer who manages the design and development of the space project. The post-colonials are self-empowered and far from helpless.

    From a Feminist perspective a number of women are represented in the book as dynamic, self-empowered individuals. Maria Cordero, a Homeland Security agent in Part 1, is certainly independent and capable. In Part 2 Marcella Ballmer, an information source in Patrick’s crime investigation, is a working woman who took on the role of bringing up her younger Asperger’s syndrome brother single-handed. Angel Radnisk, who becomes involved in the space business in the last third of Part 2, is a highly skilled pilot who for a time flew for the military. It should be noted, though, that with the exception of Maria women do not really feature in the book. Are women not capable of adventure and daring-do we must ask?

    The LGBTIQ perspective is completely absent from the text. Considering that the ubiquitous 10% of the population come from this perspective we must ask where are these people in Provost’s story? Homosexuality surely does not exempt a person from being a criminal, a crime fighter, a witness or a space engineer?

    By contrast other minorities in the U.S. are represented positively, at least in a minor way. Maria is of Mexican descent. Her father, Emilio, is a maintenance supervisor at a television station. Ricks German ancestors were “… taken in by the Indians” (Pt. 1, Ch. 1) after they were tricked and abandoned by Europeans. In Part 2 Michael Carter is an African-American college student and then teacher, and his sister Nicky actively helps in the crime investigation. Angel Radnisk is of Gypsy descent and, as we have seen, is very talented. In Part 1, Chapter 13 Nicky and Melos, Angel’s brother, talk about bigotry in the U.S.

    The disabled appear briefly in Part 1. Rick visits a restaurant owned by Luis who is in a wheel chair. Luis actively works in the establishment as a short order cook with a grill modified for his convenience. In Part 2 Gwynddien Goewin has Asperger’s syndrome, but is a brilliant mathematician. In Chapter 5 of that story Gwynddien’s sister Marcella briefly refers to the kind of bigotry such a person can receive in school. These positive representations certainly make the book both more real and progressive.

    As we have seen Provost’s book is unified thematically and in world view, and each Part looks at different aspects of themes such as power and criminality (i.e. the poor in Part 1 and the rich in Part 2). It should be said though that in Part 2 the book lags slightly. We get the feeling that we are reading to similar a story. Rick and Patrick are too similar in their background. When we read of yet another kidnapping in Part 2 we feel Provost is struggling for plot line. I do not want to overstate this criticism. Part 2 is certainly not bad.

    Provost makes it clear in his text that his plot is partly inspired by a story by Robert Heinlein in which businessmen sell planets. It should also be noted that a comparison can be made with Cordwainer Smith’s novel Norstrilia (Rev. ed.:__ Nesfa Press, 1994). That book was originally published as two novellas under the titles The Planet Buyer (Pyramid Books, 1964) and The Underpeople (Pyramid Books, 1968). Obviously there is once again the idea of buying planets, but also in this novel the hero receives substantial help from a computer with a personality of its own, and with very advance strategy (game play) skills. Smith’s novel also explores themes of power, money and criminality, and looks at the life of both the rich and the poor.

    Provost has written a book for adventure lovers with the major theme of money, power and criminality. The book races along as the heroes struggle with the enemy. Provost includes the perspective of the post-colonial world, a view not often represented in U.S. literature. He also includes minorities, such as the disabled thus making his factious world more like the ‘real’ world. Despite what I have said, this is not a heavy intellectual book. It is indeed ideal for weekend reading, and will enjoyably fill your relaxation time.

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    American Boy – Larry Watson
    4****

    Matthew Garth is a high school senior in the fall of 1962. He and his widowed mother live in Willow Falls, a small town in Southwest Minnesota. Although his mother works long hours at the local supper club, Matt doesn’t feel abandoned. He’s been accepted into the family of Dr. Dunbar, whose son Johnny is Matt’s best friend. Dr. Dunbar patiently and thoroughly explains the rudiments of medicine to the boys who are both interested in becoming doctors. So when their Thanksgiving meal is interrupted with news of a missing young woman, believed to have been shot by her boyfriend, the boys rally to join the search party, while Dr. Dunbar prepares his clinic to care for her. Louisa Lindahl will change everything about Matt’s relationship with the Dunbar family.

    This is a heartfelt story of one young man’s awakening, and the missteps of youth. Matt has always relied on Dr. Dunbar for advice and has taken the lessons he imparts, whether about medicine, sportsmanship or curbing one’s baser instincts, to heart. But sometimes the lessons we are taught are not necessarily the lessons we learn. His fascination – even obsession – with Louisa is understandable, but a recipe for disaster. The inevitable confrontations will change the way Matt sees himself and his place in the world. The few months following Thanksgiving 1962 will mark him and force him to reconsider his view of the American dream.

    Watson writes with such a sense of time and place as to put the reader right in the landscape of his novel. The reader feels chilled to the bone in a Minnesota blizzard, relishes in the warmth of a fire, and enjoys the flush that results from a sensual kiss. The writing is spare but fraught with tension. My loyalties shifted in the course of the novel, just as Matt’s did. I’ve read two of his previous novels - Montana 1948 and Justice. Once again, Watson has written a novel this is both specific to a time and place, and yet universal in its themes. Watson’s characters are good, flawed, admirable, loathsome, confused, and certain; their situations may be unique but their emotions strike a chord in all of us.

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    Fly Me to the Moon - Alyson Noel
    2**

    Flight attendant Hailey Lane is positive her pilot boyfriend of four years is going to propose, so when the rest of her schedule is cancelled she’s thrilled that she can fly home early. But instead of a celebratory dinner she gets a shock when she enters their apartment bedroom. Fleeing to a friend’s apartment she sets out to mend her broken heart by working more trips to Europe and taking advantage of long layovers and free flight passes.

    This is pretty typical chick-lit, including a glamorous job (that really isn’t), lots of self-doubt, friends with fabulous Manhattan apartments, and several rich, handsome men all besotted with our heroine. Oh, and LOTS of use of italics to be sure the reader understands the significance of certain phrases.

    This is total mind candy. It’s a fast and mildly entertaining read, but the writing is uneven and the situations just had me rolling my eyes. I finished it only because it satisfied several challenges.

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    Jackle Man by Kate Ellis
    4 stars

    A young girl is strangled and nearly killed on her way home from a quiz night at her local pub. She reports that her attacker had some sort of mask on which could have been a dog. Wesley Peterson feels there could be a link to another case of assault earlier in the year at Neston in which the attacker was reported to have been wearing some sort of mask.

    Then a Norwegian au pair is found dead and her body mutilated. Neil Watson - Wesley's archaeologist friend - is occupied in helping to catalogue a huge collection of Egyptian artefacts in a castle on the edge of Dartmoor when he hears about some gruesome murders early in the twentieth century.

    When Neil tells Wesley what he has found out about the previous murders Wesley wonders whether they have a copy cat killer on their hands. There are plenty of suspects and many connections, tenuous and otherwise between the victims and the suspects. A former boss of Wesley's from his days in the Met is staying in Tradmouth in an attempt to uncover a long standing antiquities fraud which may have a connection to the area and Wesley feels obliged to try and find time to help him as well as deal with the murder and the attacks.

    This is a complicated and interesting plot with many twists and turns. I kept thinking I'd worked out who was responsible only to find I'd suspected completely the wrong person and worked out the wrong motive. It is a very "Englsh" book, set in the Devonshire countryside. The ending was excellent and I look forward to reading more by this author.

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    DYING BREATH by Wendy Corsi Staub
    416 pages
    4 stars

    Wendy Corsi Staub is an excellent mystery writer, as seen in DYING BREATH. This book centers around Camden (Cam) Hastings, her estranged husband Mike, and their daughter Tess. The book first caught my eye because most of the action takes place on Long Beach Island on the Jersey shore (near where I live). However, I could not put this book down as I had to see what happened.

    Cam is a psychic who has been self medicating with alcohol so that her visions will stop. I like that aspect in a book (psychic not drinking!). Teenage girls disappear in the area, and Cam gets feelings about them, and she is also afraid that Tess is going to be a victim. The story keeps you guessing until the end who the killer is. Just when you think you figured it out......nope, not that person.

    There is a follow up to this book called Dead Before Dark which I am going to start tonight :-) I just really like these characters that much.

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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    Urn Burial by Kerry Greenwood
    #8 Phryne Fisher mysteries
    5 ★s

    Excellent addition to the Phryne Fisher series. Lots of twists, turns, missing people, gunshots, flooding, missing bodies, caves, a crazy hermit, and people are not always who they appear to be. All of the fun things necessary to keep my attention. Phryne was in need of a recooperative vacation in the country after her last case. Her friend Tom Reynolds invited her and Lin Chung to his estate called Cave House, a gothic looking structure in the foothills of the Victorian Mtns along the Snowy River. However, as they approached the estate a shot rang out from the fog and a young housemaid in distress came running to the car. So much for Phryne's quiet holiday. Upon rescuing the maid they made their way to the mansion where they met a very diverse group of people who were also invited for a holiday. I found the large cast of characters a bit overwhelming at first, but once I settled into the story, it was easily dealt with. Tom enlists Phyne's help in sorting out what is actually going on in his home. Alas, there is no Bert, Cec, Det. Robinson or Mr. And Mr. B in this story.

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    • Olivermagnus
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      I've read all of the Phryne Fisher mysteries and loved them. Your reviews are very interesting and comprehensive. I recently subscribed to an internet TV channel (Acorn) and they have Season 1 of the Miss Fisher mysteries running. Essie Davis plays Phyrne and she is everything I could hope for in portraying the character I have envisioned as I read the novels. If you ever get the chance to see them you might enjoy them also.

      Thanks for your great reviews.

      Oliver's mom, Lynda

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    NOS4A2 by Joe Hill
    4.5 stars

    It's a story about a very bad man with a very bad car". Manx is a 140 year old man who drives around in a 1938 Rolls-Royce Wraith with the vanity plate "NOS4A2" and kidnaps children, taking them to "Christmasland". He entreaties helpers as needed to "take care" of loose ends (like parents). Bing Partridge is one of the recruited helpers. Bing is the most disturbing character in the story as he is not deliberately malevolent. He honestly believes he is doing good as he sees it. Sound familar? At any rate Christmasland holds a horrible end for the children whose bodies are never found since they are ordained to live there forever. Vic McQueen is the "traveler" and a mother searching for her son. It becomes her destiny to put an end to Manx, the vampire, who does not drink blood but takes from his victims something far more precious.

    It is a truly horrifying tale that grabs you in the first chapter and doesn't let go until the end - at which point you're almost guaranteed to have a nightmare or two. Through all 700 plus pages, Joe Hill does not waste a single word. Each character is well thought out and presented; each a solid building block in this fascinating and chilling tale.

    This is a fast paced book and a quick read considering its enormous size. Joe Hill is a great story teller who, as soon as you set the book down for a break, beckons you back for "just one more chapter".

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    Lake of Sorrows by Erin Hart
    5 stars

    The bogs are full of secrets. To ancient people they were a strange liminal region, half water and half earth - the center of the world. A holy place, a burial ground, a safe for stowing treasure, and a region of spirits.

    Recently the bogs have been relinquished to feed the ever-growing hunger for electric power, the men have gone to work on them devising more efficient ways to harvest peat. As the turf is cut and dried, to be burnt as a fuel, there is occasionally a find that enthuses archaeologists.

    When Dublin archaeologist Cormac Maguire and anatomy lecturer Nora Gavin return to the wilds of the Irish countryside, they discover one such find. Two bodies are excavated: one an Iron Age bog body, revealed to have been in the bog for thousands of years, the other is the body of a man discovered to have a modern wristwatch on his arm. But both show signs they were victims of ritualized killings, or murders that looked like ritual killings.

    This is an area that is soaked in ancient myths and age-old recriminations, and police detective Liam Ward, who knows the history of the area, is perplexed that the bodies were slain in such a manner. With an estimated date of death to be only twenty or so years ago, Ward, helped by Nora and Cormac, must work to discover the true identity of the modern man who was buried beneath the bog.

    Hart excels at keeping up this shadowy and solemn mood; everyone has their secrets, and everyone has their burdens of sadness to carry. In Lake of Sorrows, lives are confined by narrow roads closed in by hedges and ditches and ivy-choked oak trees, hemmed in by a place that is perpetually dark, secret and damp. It's where the bog peat can enter your very pores, filling you up with darkness.

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    Havoc by Carolyn McCray
    #2 Betrayed series
    4 ★s

    This is my first audio book. Other than the narrator had a squeaky voice and did lousy accents, it was a good book. After half the discs I resigned myself to her voice. Could have been better with an appropriate male voice, as most of the characters were male. I also didn't realize that this was the second in a series. Howeve, it wasa fun wild adventure/thriller. Dr. Rebecca Monroe and Sergeant Brandt are the main characters, recovering from a past adventure and their broken engagement ( he had to marry a pregnant daliance of his). But they must work together to save the world from a bio toxin which will kill all meat/ dairy animals in the world. And, they must find the original Ten Commandments hidden by Moses. A fanatical group called the Disciples is looking for both. The story starts in Dr.Monroe's lab, runs through the North Sea to Red Square, down through Slovakia and ends up in the Dead Sea. Sgt. Brandt has his black ops squad with him and they merrily explode their way to the end. Did I mention Dr. Monroe is a forensic historian? Lots of fun, but not for hard line Christians, as it could upset their belief system a tad bit at the end. I enjoyed this over 4 months as it was my driving audiobook. (I did get upset when I had to continually turn it off at my destination points.)

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    Blood Red Moon by Benjamin Percy
    3 stars

    Society is divided based on whether one is a lycan (werewolf) or not. Lycans are controlled through being forced to take mind altering drugs. Despite the attempts at government control, they are still discriminated against and subjected to constant brutality by their fellow citizens. In retaliation, an underground revolution is beginning. The lycans want to have control over their own lives. In order to gain the public's attention, they resort to violence in the form of hijacking planes or bombings at public gatherings. The story is told basically told through the eyes of two young people, Patrick and Claire. Patrick is the sole survivor on a flight that is hijacked by a lycan on a killing rampage. Claire is the daughter of a militant lycan who watches as her family is slaughtered by government agents. Through their stories you get the perspective from both sides.

    Usually, in novels like this, there is an obvious good guy and bad guy. That isn't the case with this book. You are shown the good and bad in both sides so you understand why the characters act and react in the way that they do so it's hard to judge who's right or wrong in the big picture. My only criticim is that I felt like the story got a bit long winded in some spots and I would have liked to see a little more interaction between Patrick and Claire.

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    Death Match By Lincoln Child
    4 stars

    Christopher Lash is a psychologist specializing in marital relationships. He previous worked for the FBI, giving him insight into criminal behavior. This is the reason officials at Eden Inc. have contacted him, to investigate the mysterious double-suicide of two of their clients. Eden is a matchmaker, but unlike any before it. Eden uses a highly advanced Artificial Intelligence to match individuals on every little detail (more than a million criteria).

    Lewis and Lindsay Thorpe were two such individuals, and were also the company's first "super couple:" two people who are a 100% match. But now they are dead...and Lash must find out why. Because another super couple has killed themselves...and there are four more such couples to go. But finding out why two perfect couples would want to kill themselves is only half of Lash's problem, because somebody is messing with his life, in ways that could only be done through the technology available at Eden.

    "Death Match" is a top-notch thriller from Lincoln Child, who has brought us (especially in collaboration with Douglas Preston) so many enjoyable, well-planned thrillers. This novel is no exception; though it is a bit predictable, it is still enthralling. The technological details are broken down into layman's terms, but with serious research behind them. Lash is an appealing, conflicted character, as are those he encounters.

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    Bones of Betrayal by Jefferson Bass
    4.5 stars

    A frozen corpse found in a swimming pool near the Oak Ridge nuclear research facility, where the atomic bomb was developed. Dr. Bill Brockton, founder of the Body Farm and a leading authority in forensic science, is called in to investigate. The body turns out to be that of Dr. Leonard Novak, one of the key scientists on the Manhattan Project, the code name for the WWII project that perfected the bomb. When Dr. Brockton discovers that the cause of death was not drowning, but rather radiation poisoning, he wonders if Novak's murder is related to events long past. Dr. Brockton meets Novak's bright and colorful ex-wife, Beatrice, at his funeral, and he begins his investigation of those long ago events with her. Beatrice weaves a number of captivating tales, but are any of them true? Can Dr. Brockton unravel the mysteries of history and navigate unsuspected twists and turns in order to solve a murder in the present?

    I had great fun with this book and zipped right through it. The plot and pacing both worked well, with the science, action, and history all blending perfectly. Each fed the other beautifully. The characters were likeable and well developed, and I felt that I had a good rapport with them, even the ones introduced in earlier books.

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  • Raspberrymocha55
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    Her Royal Spyness by Rhys Bowen
    #1 Her Royal Spyness series
    3 ★s


    This is the first of the Her Royal Spyness series. Georgiana is the daughter of the late Duke of Glen Garry and Rannoch and an actress. She was living with her half brother Binky and his wife Fig in the family castle. Binky cut off her allowance when she turned 21, so she decided to head to London and stay at the family home without money and servants. While there a dead French gambler was found in her bathtub, and HR Queen Mary enlisted her help in spying upon Prince David who was getting involved with Mrs. Simpson. Meanwhile, Binky comes to town and is arrested. So, Georgiana is forced to figure out the real murderer, while her life becomes more and more complicated. Cute, funny and definately light reading. Don't know if I will continue the series.

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    Whiskey Beach by Nora Roberts
    3 Stars

    I usually enjoy Nora Roberts' romantic thrillers but Whiskey Beach seemed to fall a little short.

    Eli Landon, a Boston lawyer, has been hounded by the police after the murder of his estranged wife. Even though he has never been arrested he's still under suspicion for the murder. He moves to his family home, Bluff House on Whiskey Beach. There he meets the beautiful and quirky Abra Walsh. She wants to help Eli heal and become his former self and they want to find his wife's killer. But someone wants to stop them from finding out the truth.

    Abra seemed one dimensional to me and I found her actions toward Eli to be more of a mother than a lover. I felt sorry for Eli and he wasn't the typical romantic hero that we usually see in a Nora Roberts novel. Both Eli and Abra seemed a little lackluster. I really liked the dog, Barbie, though!

    Whiskey Beach was not Nora Roberts' best but she can probably still count on me for her next one since I have really enjoyed some of her other romantic thrillers (The Witness, The Search). I would recommend either of those before Whiskey Beach.

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    The Progam by Gregg Hurwitz
    4.5 stars #2 in the Tim Rackley series

    The villian is Terrance Donald Betters, known as The Teacher, who purports to run a behavioral institute that is, in practice, an extortion mill.

    When Leah Henning, a young college student with familial issues, falls under Betters's sway, her parents come to Tim Rackley for assistance. Rackley has been summarily drummed out of the U.S. Marshal's office for methods that, while brutally effective, are too over-the-top for a visible government agent. Will Henning, a Hollywood movie producer with friends in the highest of places, is able to get Rackley reinstated for the purpose of getting Leah away from Betters.

    Rackley, however, is nobody's puppet. When he goes underground to investigate Betters's program, he finds that Leah is a more sympathetic character than her stepfather and that, while Betters is a dangerous con artist, Leah may have had her reasons for seeking him out, even if those reasons were not good. Rackley insinuates himself deeply into Betters's organization in order to protect Leah and assist her in what will hopefully be a voluntary extrication. Doing so, however, puts Rackley personally and professionally in terrible danger. Isolated in every possible way, Rackley finds himself in the position of once again crossing the line that jeopardized his career once before.

    You will stay up a few extra hours reading this psychological tale. Each character is masterfully detailed and I could not help but sympathize, especially with Tim Rackley. This is a quietly terrifying work that will strongly resonate with any and all who read it.

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    In Pale Battalions by Robert Goddard
    5 Stars

    In Pale Battalions tells the story of the newly widowed Leonora Galloway who sets off, with her daughter Penelope, on a holiday in Paris. The first stop on their journey is the Thiepval Memorial for those who died at the Battle of the Somme during World War I. This is where Leonora's father has been memorialized as one of the WW1 heroes. The memorial lists her father's date of death as April 30, 1916 but Leonora isn't born for another eleven months. She realizes this man can't be her father. Thus starts the story, told mostly in flashback by Leonora, of the skeletons hidden in the closets of Leonora's relatives.

    The novel is part mystery and part historical fiction. In some places it reminded me of a Daphne DuMaurier Gothic novel, with all the elements of evil relatives, unexpected plot changes, huge manor houses, and psychological twists.

    The writing is elegant and lyrical but totally readable. The story is very cleverly written and you can never be sure what you think is going on is real or just a plot twist. Some readers may find the pacing slow, but I was completely dazzled by the story.

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    Whisper to the Blood by Dana Stabenow
    #16 Kate Shugak series
    4 ★s


    This is the 16th in the Kate Shugak series by Stabenow, one of my favorite authors. This one did not disappoint me. The story is tense and involved with the coming of an open pit gold mine to Alaska's largest state park and it's residents are up in arms. Kate has found herself chairman of the local native association... A position foisted upon her by the Aunties. Mac Devlin is found shot dead at one of the gold mine outpost trailers. State Trooper Jim Chopin enlists Kate's help. Plus, there have been several highwayman style robberies on the frozen river leading to Ahtna. More deaths and intrigue continue to muddy what has become several investigations and some unlikely suspects. I love this series as it gives a look into the lives of those who live in the Alaskan wilderness. I enjoy the small towns, the scenery and the hard scrabble existance of those who live in the Park.

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    Raisins and Almonds by Kerry Greenwood
    #9 Phryne Fisher mysteries
    4 ★s

    The title is taken from an old Yiddish lullaby, but all is not peaceful. In this 9th episode of Phryne Fisher mysteries a murder has once again occurred in the most prosaic of places, Miss Lee' bookshop. Whereupon Miss Lee is arrested for the poisoning of Shimeon Michael, a Jewish student of the Kabala. Phryne is dating Simon Abrahams at the time and Simon's father, a wealthy businessman, seeks Phryne's help. He fears that anti-semitism could rear its ugly head in his adopted country. As Phryne searches the marketplace for clues, she enlists the help of Bert, Cec, Dot and her adopted daughters. And, alchemy becomes a clue. This was an interesting read. I enjoyed learning about the early stages of the Zionist movement as well as interesting tidbits about the lives of Jewish immigrants in Australia. This was much more thought provoking than previous escapades. It's worth the read.

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    Rashomon Gate by I. J. Parker
    4 Stars

    This innovative mystery is set in 11th Century Japan in Kyo (modern day Kyoto). Sugawara Akitada is a low ranking nobleman who works as a clerk in the Ministry of Justice. His mother is constantly nagging him to better himself.

    Akitada receives a message from his former law professor at Imperial University who has found a note indicating someone on the faculty is being blackmailed. He doesn't want the University to suffer from this humiliation so asks Akitada to quietly investigate. It's not long before Akitada is involved in not only the blackmail, but two murders. He also becomes interested in one of his young students whose grandfather died under mysterious circumstances. Fortunately Akitada won't have to do all this investigation on his own. His servant, Tora, a former highwayman has significant role in solving these crimes. What an interesting character. Akitada is also very interesting and this book paints a wonderfully expressive picture of medieval Japan and the precise social order that governs everyday life.

    This book is both a mystery and a historical novel. It encompasses Japanese culture, history, religion and superstition. Sometime the writing seems a little too modern but I appreciated that it made the story highly readable. I felt the plot developed a little slowly but once I got about a third of the way I was flying through it.

    This is listed as the first of the Akitada mysteries, however there is previous one called Dragon Scroll where we are introduced to Akitada and learn how he and Tora become companions. I loved the scalawag Tora and plan to read that one sometime in the future. I don't feel I lost anything by reading out of order as Rashomon Gate can certainly stand on its own.

    Note: If anyone has a Kindle and belongs to Amazon Prime, this book is available to read for free in the Kindle Owner's Lending Library.

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    Silken Prey by John Sandford
    5 stars

    This story shows just how easily politics can get dirty and run out of control. Lucas Davenport, an agent of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension is asked by the State Governor to find out why child pornography was found on the office computer of the leading Senate candidate only days before the election.
    Porter Smalls, a Republican running for US Senator is well ahead in the opinion polls when his campaign is sabotaged by child pornography being found on his office computer. Despite their opposite political views, the Governor believes that, despite some personal shortcomings, Smalls is incapable of having such an interest.

    What Davenport doesn't know at the beginning is that Bob Tubbs, a political operative who can change sides like a chameleon for the right money, has disappeared. Davenport soon gets down into the mire of a thriller with an explosive combination of murder, money, blackmail and politics.

    Lucas Davenport explores the grey side of politics and the contemporary world of technology to solve the case and reveals an ugly background to the machinations behind an important election. I didn't think I was going to like it so much when I first started it, but it turned out to be an interesting twist to the Davenport series of thrillers and is well recommended if you want to see things from a different aspect.

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    Dead Before Dark by Wendy Corsi Staub
    416 pages
    4 stars

    WENDY CORSI STAUB is an excellent mystery writer. DEAD BEFORE DARK is a follow up to DYING BREATH - where we met the characters of Lucinda, Randy, Cam, Mike and Tess. The Night Watchman has been striking again, and Lucinda and Cam use their psychic powers blended with the police work of Frank and Vic to catch this killer. I love these books because the way that the crime is solved is so logical and you really can't guess who the criminal is - no stupid surprises at the end just a great satisfying mystery!

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    WHERE THE RIVER ENDS by Charles Martin
    384 pages
    4 stars

    Yes, this was a very sad book, but it was so much more. WHERE THE RIVER ENDS is a story about love, beauty, inner beauty and strength, and above all, trust. Abbie and Doss have a great love story, and Abbie shows Doss his importance in the world and I believe that Doss keeps Abbie grounded. A health issue threatens to part them before their time. The two travel together down the river near Charleston (Doss knows the river like the back of his hand) and this is where the story takes off.

    Abbie has given a lot to Doss over the years, but for her to want to go on this trip down the river and to trust him to take care of her is, in my opinion, the crux of this story. Even thought this book is very melancholy and made me feel very sad, I'm glad that I read it. It's very highly recommended if you are interested in looking into the inner workings of the heart.........

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    Ophelia Cut by John Lescroart
    4.5 Stars

    This is Lescroart's fourteenth novel featuring Dismas Hardy. I've read all of them and feel quite familiar with all the usual characters: Dismas, his wife Frannie, Moses McGuire, Abe Glitzky, Gina Roake, Wes Farrell and others.

    This novel focuses primarily on Hardy's brother in law, Moses McGuire and Moses' beautiful daughter, Brittany. We're told she's incredibly beautiful and men fall over whenever she walks into a room. She dashes from man to man, never staying long with one. She excuses this by saying “I don't want to waste the pretty”. I found it difficult to like her because she kept making such stupid decisions.

    She hooks up with Rick Jessup, the chief of staff to a local politician. Jessup has a history of political chicanery and violence against woman. He refuses to let Brittany go and one night, after meeting Rick, Brittany is raped. The next day Rick is found dead and Brittany's father, Moses, becomes the prime suspect. Dismas, of course, is the logical person to represent Moses in his trial. It's clear from the beginning there is overwhelming evidence against Moses as well as motive. The argument here is, if your daughter is raped, do you have the right to retaliate?

    If you're familiar with the Dismas Hardy series and characters I think you will really enjoy this latest entry. It relies heavily on a storyline from a previous novel but it's explained adequately enough here to understand what happened. I definitely wouldn't start this book without having some knowledge of the characters though.

    The courtroom scenes are interesting and there are some surprises there. I won't even hint at what happens but if you are a fan of this series it's a must read. I can't wait for the next one.

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    Down River by John Hart
    3 stars

    The words "Rowan County, North Carolina," evoke many memories for Danny Chase, the hero of John Hart's s Down River. Many of them are pleasant--for instance, the time he spent with childhood friend Danny Faith. But even the happy memories are colored by the events that drove him from Rowan five years before the events depicted in this novel, when he was almost convicted of a murder he didn't commit. Thus, his reluctance to return to his home town at the urgent behest of his friend Danny is understandable; but, his loyalty to his friend eventually outweighing his misgivings, he decides to honor his pal's request.

    His mere appearance in Rowan stirs up old emotions and grudges as he encounters allies and enemies from the past, and things get even more complicated when he discovers that Danny has mysteriously vanished. After a member of his own family is attacked, Danny becomes a person of interest in the investigation. When townspeople start dying all around him, he's forced to unravel an intricate web of secrets to clear his name.

    I don't know what I was expecting when I picked up this book. It was the first novel by this author I had read. I found that the plot moves along quickly and has plenty of surprises, but it was the many diverse characters in this novel that really made it entertaining. Plenty of suspects, a dysfunctional family, and the peculiarities of small town southern living make this mystery a good read.

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    A Week in Winter - Maeve Binchy
    Book on CD performed by Rosalyn Landor
    4****

    Everyone knows everyone in the small town of Stoneybridge, on Ireland’s west coast. Still, when Chicky Starr buys Stone House from the last remaining Sheedy sister and announces she will turn it into an inn for paying guests, most everyone is certain the plan will fail. But Chicky assembles an eclectic group of travelers for her opening week, and begins a new chapter in her life and in the future of Stoneybridge.

    This is Binchy’s last novel, published posthumously. It’s evident that she loved the landscape and the people of Ireland and she conveys that beautifully. This is an ensemble piece and there are sections devoted to each of the major players. The reader gets to know each of the character’s dreams, disappointments, strengths and flaws.

    Rosalyn Landor does a wonderful job performing the audio version. She is a gifted voice artist and has a wide repertoire of voices and accents which allows her to bring the many characters to life. My only disappointment is that it is Binchy’s last work – I would love to be able to look forward to a sequel.

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    The Submission by Amy Waldman
    4.5 Stars

    This novel was very thought provoking and I found myself thinking about how grief can have a very complicated path. The story looks at the characters' reactions from many different perspectives.

    The story begins two years after the World Trade Center devastation. A committee has been selected to choose the memorial design from hundreds of anonymous submissions. One of the committee members is Claire Burwell, a 9/11 widow and representative of the 9/11 families and their wishes. Eventually they make their selection and open the sealed envelope to see who the successful designer is. The winner is Mohammed Khan, an American citizen born and raised in Virginia. His name is leaked to the media and most of the committee is against selecting his design.

    The author has filled the story with many characters to cover all the viewpoints. Claire, Mohammed Khan, an ambitious governor, a crazy radio talk show host, the deceitful New York Times reporter, an attention grabbing brother of one of the victims, the anti-Islam housewife, and a Bangladeshi widow whose janitor husband was an illegal immigrant killed in the attack.

    Mohammed Khan was a complex character. I was sympathetic to his situation but curious about his motives in submitting his design. Khan, formerly a non-practicing Muslim, begins exploring his religion during the controversy. His continued refusal to explain his motives and answer questions alienates almost everyone.

    I found my perspective changed after reading The Submission. Even though it's a novel I was drawn to the characters, despite their flaws, and many of the reactions seem very realistic. The author does a good job of analyzing motives, feelings and behavior to show all perspectives. In the end I wondered what decision I would make.

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    Last Man Standing by David Baldacci
    4 stars

    Web London heads up the FBI's super-elite Hostage Rescue Team, he is a master at what he does, but on their latest assignment he is not able to predict, or save them from the bloodshed that is about to erupt. Having his men assemble in an alley, Web feels confident that they will bring down the drug dealer they have set out to destroy, but within seconds they are ambushed...everyone killed, leaving Web the sole survivor.

    Trying to cope with the blame that has been placed on him by grieving widows, Web must try to put the pieces of that fateful night together. What went wrong? How were they ambushed? And who was the young boy Web saved in that alley, and why was he there?

    As these questions plague Web he seeks the help of psychiatrist Claire Daniels, and with her help he will be able to confront his own tainted past, as well as answer the question of why was he the sole survivor of his team? As Web's search begins the young boy disappears, and anyone connected to that fateful night will be violently silenced, but Web is confident he knows where the killer will strike next, only this time he may not survive the attack.

    David Baldacci packs the book with a brilliant plot and more than a few surprises that will knock your socks off, and includes a wealth of detail that highlights his meticulous research skills. I can only hope that we'll see Web and company again in a future Baldacci thriller.

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    LIFE AS WE KNEW IT by Susan Beth Pfeffer
    4 stars
    337 pages

    LIFE AS WE KNEW IT is a book that describes what happens to a family when a disaster strikes the earth. A meteor is set to hit the moon (apparently it happens all the time), but this one was a little faster and bigger than most and knocks the moon out of it's orbit. The world is shaken up with tsunamis and volcano eruptions. This story is told by Miranda, a teenage girl who lives in upstate Pennsylvania. She writes in her diary everything that happens and how she and her mother and 2 brothers work to survive until the world gets back to normal.

    I really liked the mixture of the dystopian and the regular yearnings and wishes of a normal teenaged girl. The story also describes what happens to some of Miranda's friends (Becky, Sammi, and the saddest of all, Meghan). This book also shows a mother's love, father's turmoil, links between the past (Mrs. Nesbit) and the future. Good read!

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      I read this and really liked it. I also read the second one. Very interesting premise.

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    Oh, The Places You’ll Go! – Dr. Seuss
    5***** and a ❤

    I love this little gem of a book. Whenever I’ve felt a little lost or stuck on life’s journey, or at times when I’ve been about to embark on a new path, I’ve re-read it. It never fails to inspire and enthuse me. I just gave it to my niece for her high school graduation and we read it together. Oh, The Places SHE’ll Go!

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    The Kabul Beauty School - Deborah Rodriguez
    Audio book read by Bernadette Dunne
    2.5**

    Rodriguez impulsively went to Afghanistan while escaping a bad marriage and looking for meaning to her life. Willing and eager to work, she came up with the idea of teaching the oppressed women of Afghanistan skills they could use to support themselves and their families. So, she started a beauty school with a combination of product donations, grants and private funding.

    The atrocities to which Afghani women are subject are infuriating to most Westerners, but this isn’t new information any longer. I’m sympathetic to the cause and applaud anyone’s efforts to make a difference. Debbie’s continued inability to understand the cultural differences, however, really irritated me. It’s no surprise that the “authorities” eventually shut her down, though it is definitely a great pity. I certainly hope that the women she encountered have been able to continue use the skills she taught them, for their own sense of self-worth and to engage with other women.

    Bernadette Dunne does a pretty good job of the audio. It’s not her fault that the material she has to work with isn’t stellar.

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    The Other Typist – Suzanne Rindell
    4****

    Rose Baker is a quiet and efficient typist in a police precinct in 1923 New York City. Having been raised in an orphanage she has proved her worth by her skill and hard work. But the new typist in the precinct is clearly very different from the mousy Rose. Odalie is chic and confident, and quickly draws the precinct sergeant, detective and beat cops under her spell. Rose is in turns astonished, disdainful, jealous and fascinated by the glamorous newcomer.

    Rindell’s debut is a chilling psychological study. The reader is drawn into the plot, just as Rose is drawn to Odalie. In many respects the novel reminds me of an Alfred Hitchcock movie. I was captivated by the story, and seduced by dynamics of Rose and Odalie’s relationship. But little by little I noticed cracks in the façade, and began to question how reliable a narrator Rose is, and, at the end, found myself wondering what really happened?

    The novel is populated with a host of colorful characters, and the writing is wonderfully atmospheric – you can feel the silk on your skin, taste the juniper of bathtub gin, or hear the cacophony of a crowded speakeasy. I’ll definitely look forward to her next book.

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    Jane Austen in Boca - Paula Marantz Cohen
    3.5***

    This is a delightful retelling of Pride and Prejudice set in a Jewish retirement community in Boca Raton Florida. The story focuses on three widows: May Newman, Flo Kliman and Lila Katz. When May’s daughter-in-law, Carol, learns that the widowed father of her husband’s school friend is now living in a retirement community just down the road from May, she is determined to get the two of them together. (Think Mrs Bennet anxious to put her girls in the path of Mr Bingley.) From her New Jersey suburb Carol arranges a brunch reception at her mother-in-law’s condo and invites Norman Graftein, who brings along his friend Stan Jacobs. You can imagine the plot turns from there.

    I really enjoyed this light read. It’s clever and witty, albeit predictable. I couldn’t help but remind myself, “Just like Wickham!” or “She must be Charlotte” as I read. Of course some of the scenarios draw from other Austen novels, but that’s no problem, it’s all in good fun and still entertaining. I even love the cover, which just makes me smile to look at it.

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    Before She Dies by Mary Burton
    5 stars

    During their death, they are purified as the killer holds his victims under water to wash away their sins as they struggle for their last breath. Then he stakes their bodies to the ground to expose them for what they are - witches - sent to tempt and corrupt him.

    No one knows a thing of defense attorney Charlotte Wellington's childhood past with the carnival that just arrived in town, or about her murdered sister. Including Detective Daniel Rokov who would like to be more than just Charlotte's bed partner. Charlotte wants to forget that past, she won't let anyone get that close. However others are not willing for that to happen, especially the psycho killer that plans to have Charlotte as his final victim and only by sharing her past with Daniel will she ever have a chance for a future.

    The secondary characters, many as complex and memorable as the primary characters, make Before She Dies a gripping story. Grady Tate has as many layers as an onion. As the layers are peeled away, the reader sees not only his flaws and saving graces but also sees how Charlotte and Sooner came to have their hang-ups. You will simply love Daniel's Russian grandmother who really steals the show.

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    Dark Places by Gillian Flynn
    1 Star actually -1 star

    I can count on one hand the books that I have given only one star too. I would give this work a minus one star if it were possible.

    The Day family trips from one horrific event to the next with every single family member making terribly ill-advised decisions throughout left me exhausted. Is it really possible for all of them to be that inept and foolish? I grew so frustrated with the whole lot of them that their final days were largely inconsequential to me. Frankly I suspect death was welcome for all - which isn't a spoiler as not everyone dies, although virtually all of them wished to at some point. I read to the end but resent the terrible waste of my reading time. No story should be void of sympathetic characters and this one is, with the exception of one person - Debby. I could not have cared less about any of the rest of them, all receiving just what they deserved.”

    Sorry, I know I sound bitter but I was just so frustrated with the entire lot.

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    • Carol
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      I know someone asked me about "Gone Girl" by this aithor. Sorry the question has mysteriously disappeared, so I will try to answer as best I remember. I liked Gone Girl and Sharp Objects by this author. That's why I was so very frustrated and disappointed by this book. The family was worse than horrible and they were unbelievably stupid. If you read "Gone Girl" you will not be disappoiinted or frustrated.

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    The Andalucian Friend
    Alexander Soderberg
    4 Stars

    I'm always on the lookout for new Scandinavian authors but why must every book written by a Scandinavian author be compared to “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo”? There are really no similarities other than both the authors are from the same area and the rumor this is the first volume of an anticipated trilogy.

    Andalucian Friend introduces us to a young widow, Sophie Brinkmann, who lives a quiet life at home with her son, Albert, and works as a nurse in the local hospital. There she meets a new patient, Hector Guzman, who has been hospitalized for a broken leg he got in a hit and run accident. During his stay he becomes more and more attracted to Sophie and she begins to see him socially once he's released from the hospital. Unbeknownst to Sophie, Hector and his family are members of a Spanish (Andalusian) crime family who are engaged in a siege with a rival crime family who want to take his drug routes in South America.

    This novel is loaded with colorful characters, primarily all evil. There are at least three different crime groups (Russian, Spanish and German) as well as a rogue division of the Swedish police headed up by Gunilla Strandberg and her group of psychotic policeman, including one who is sliding into paranoid drug addiction. Most of the characters have no redeeming qualities and are avaricious sociopaths.

    This book is not for people who dislike violent books and there is such a huge cast of characters you may have a hard time getting into it. It seemed a little slow in the beginning with all the introductions, different story lines and plot twists. I thought it was very action packed and suspenseful once I was about 15-20 percent in.

    I did end up enjoying it and am anxious to read the next volume when it's available.

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    The Solitude of Prime Numbers - Paolo Giordano
    Audio book performed by Luke Daniels
    4****

    From chapter 21: Mattia had learned that, among prime numbers, there are some that are even more special. Mathematicians call them twin primes: pairs of prime numbers that are close to each other, almost neighbors, but between them there is always an even number that prevents them from truly touching. Numbers like 11 and 13, like 17 and 19, 41 and 43. If you have the patience to go on counting, you discover that these pairs gradually become rarer. You encounter increasingly isolated primes lost in that silent, measured space made only of ciphers, and you develop a distressing presentiment that the pairs encountered up until that point were accidental, that solitude is the true destiny. Then, just when you’re about to surrender, when you no longer have the desire to go on counting, you come across another pair of twins, clutching each other tightly.”

    Alice Della Rocca and Mattia Balossino are the solitary primes of this beautifully written novel. The story begins in 1983 with Alice, forced to take ski lessons by her attorney father. The narrative skips to 1984 and twins Mattia and Michaela; Mattia is always charged with “look after your sister,” because Michaela is clearly not able to look after herself. These two chapters provide key incidents that lead to Alice and Mattia’s increasing solitude. But they will meet in high school and like rare twin primes they will cling to one another, though never quite touching.

    Giordano writes with such elegance about the landscape of loneliness, the need for love and acceptance. This is an intimate study of the psychology of two damaged characters. Both Mattia and Alice lack the strength to truly connect to someone else, yet have the strength to live alone and isolated. Their steps toward one another are halting and even excruciatingly difficult, making the reader almost as anxious as the characters. Like real life, the ending is ambiguous, but oh, how I want to know what happens to these two people.

    Luke Daniels does a wonderful job narrating the audio version. His nuanced performance is both gentle and harsh, quiet and panicked, tender and mean.

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    We The Animals – Justin Torres
    3***

    The opening line is: We wanted more. This is a coming-of-age story focused on three brothers growing up in upstate New York. Their parents married as teenagers and struggle to make do. Left largely to fend for themselves, the boys grow up as wild animals. In various scenes they are rambunctious, tender, neglected, hungry and lonely. And always, they want more - food, attention, love.

    Torres writes with a unique prose-poetry style that packs a powerful punch. Sentences and phrases tumble over one another as three boys at play will do. It’s raw and compelling. There were times when I gasped aloud and times when I chuckled at the boys’ mischievous antics.

    However … At about page 100 (of 125 pages) the novel takes a VERY dark turn. I felt completely sucker punched by the descriptions of the narrator’s awakening sexuality. The language is graphic and violent, and the choppy, short sentences were inadequate. Having pictured the boys as somewhere between 8-12 years old, I’m suddenly confronted with scenes that must involve 15-17-year-olds. I felt completely disconnected from the story at that point. Torres is clearly talented, but the hole he left in this work is a huge disappointment.

    I give the book 3*** in recognition of the emotional impact, especially in the first 100 pages.

    WARNING - readers averse to crude language or reading about homosexuality might want to avoid this book.

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    The Lock Artist by Steve Hamilton
    4 stars

    The book is centered around Mike, the "lock artist", and the majority of the book covers about 2 years of his life. Mike is a criminal and doesn't deny it. But it is just impossible not to root for the guy.

    We learn how he learned to break into just about anything, and why he simply cannot walk away from doing it. It's far deeper than just a story of locks and safes and how to crack them. It also makes you realize how extremely difficult it would be to not speak for any length of time, let alone ten years. When I began the book I was dubious that Mr. Hamilton was going to be able pull off having a silent main character, but the way he approaches it is simply poetic.

    There were some points in the book where I felt the detail of him opening yet another lock were repetitive and I glazed over a bit when reading those sections. This is the only reason that I did not give the book five stars. But all in all, the book includes interesting characters, a great plotline, and a little humor mixed in. This is Steve Hamilton's second stand alone book.

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • Book Concierge
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    In the Company of Angels - N. M. Kelby
    3***

    In a small French village near the border with Belgium, Marie Clarie, a young Jewish girl, lives with her grandmother who cultivates hybrid irises and roses. It is World War II and a bomb shatters the world Marie Clare knows. Rescued by a pair of Catholic nuns she is taken across the border to their convent in Tournai, Belgium for safekeeping. This is where the nuns have been hiding Jews who await transport to Switzerland. But the Germans are apparently on to their role in the resistance and have planned a raid on the convent. And then the miracles begin to happen.

    This haunting debut novel is full of magical realism and religious mysticism. Told in a series of vignettes with limited connective narrative, the reader feels as if s/he is watching the story unfold as if refracted through a series of prisms. Images are so close and vivid, and yet fuzzy and out of reach, lending to the mystical atmosphere. Excepting the innocent 7-year-old Marie Claire, all the characters are full of regrets and struggling to balance devotion with obligation, love with war, and faith with loss of hope.

    I enjoyed this short (164 pg) novel, and I am a fan of magical realism, but I left feeling a little dissatisfied. I think Kelby might have expanded some of the scenes and worked harder to provide some connective narrative to support the story arc. I liked it, but I’m struggling with whether to recommend it, or to whom. Readers with a high tolerance for ambiguity might enjoy it.

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • Carol
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    In A Dry Season by Peter Robinson
    4 Stars

    A village that has been flooded to create a reservoir is uncovered during a particularly dry summer. While exploring, a boy discovers a human skeleton that, in all likelihood had been put there over 50 years ago. Was the person murdered or was it an accident? Will it be possible to solve such an old case?

    The man chosen for the job is DI Alan Banks. He's been out of favour with his superiors, prompting his selection for what sees to be a hopeless, dead-end job. But, through determination, perseverance and help from local sergeant, Annie Cabbot, he makes slow progress.

    Peter Robinson alternates between the present and the past in an effective narration of the story. By doing this, we are treated to both the lead up and the aftermath of a time surround by turmoil. As Inspector Banks uncovers clues and chases up leads, we are taken back to when it all took place and get to witness every detail first hand. It really is a technique that works extraordinarily well. This is definitely a book to put on your must-read list, particularly if you are a fan of well-constructed mysteries.

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • Olivermagnus

    Olivermagnus (edited)

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    Clara and Mr. Tiffany by Susan Vreeland
    4.5 Stars

    Susan Vreeland's novel Clara and Mr. Tiffany is based on fact. Clara Driscoll worked for Louis Comfort Tiffany and was instrumental in many of the company's glass designs. In the novel, the author suggests that the famous Tiffany lamps were Clara's innovation and design and that Tiffany took credit for her work. Never publicly acknowledged, Clara struggles with her desire for artistic recognition and the insurmountable challenges she faces as a professional woman. She also yearns for love and companionship and is devoted in different ways to five men, including Tiffany, eventually enjoying a creative friendship with him.

    The novel traces Clara's experiences from the time she returns to Tiffany after her widowhood to the time she leaves the company, many years later. Tiffany had a firm rule that married women could not work for him. Through her eyes, we see both how stained glass was made, from the chemistry to drawing the cartoon to cutting to construction.

    Vreeland does a very good job of bringing that era of New York to life, touching on immigrant life, class differences, and the position of most women who worked during that time. Clara represents an interesting example of a working woman at the turn of the century. She is aware of the injustice done to women at Tiffany's. The women workers do not have a union, they cannot marry, and their wages are lower than the men's wages. She fights for the rights of the immigrant women who work under her and against the oppression of the men's union who would happily close down her department. Susan Vreeland also does a great job of portraying the strength but also the broken spirits of the immigrant community.

    This was my neighborhood book club's selection for June and I balked when it came time to read it. I wasn't in the mood for this type of story even though it looked interesting. Ultimately I'm glad I read it. It was very enjoyable and I learned a lot about stained glass and Tiffany lamps. I would highly recommend it to anyone who has an interest in Tiffany and/or New York at the turn of the century.

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  • Olivermagnus

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    Sleight of Hand by Phillip Margolin
    4 Stars

    This is the fourth book to feature former detective and current private investigator, Dana Cutler, who does her investigating in Washington DC. From the beginning there are a couple of story lines that will eventually make sense to the reader.

    The first one is when a woman with a French accent hires Dana to track down a royal scepter from the Ottoman Empire which soon turns out to be a dead end. She returns to Virginia only to become tangled in the second story that involves the murder of Carrie Blair days before she would receive $20 million dollars from her husband, Horace, according to the terms of their prenuptial agreement. Horace is the obvious culprit but he swears he didn't do it. The police arrest him and charge him with murdering his wife to avoid paying her the money. He hires defense attorney Charles Benedict to defend him in court.

    Anonymous tips and leads from various shady characters seem to be lucky breaks for the prosecution. Evidence just magically appears. Then something happens to make the detectives investigating Carrie's murder start to wonder if Horace is really the killer. Dana uncovers evidence that Horace may have been framed for the murder, but Benedict blocks her attempts to get the answers she needs. Soon she becomes a target of the real killer.

    I thought this was a fun and exciting mystery. Even though Benedict was a sociopath his magic tricks and illusions made him a little different from the usual villain. I think if you've read Margolin before you would certainly like this one.

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • Raymond Mathiesen
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    Sonata by Blair McDowell – Book Review

    4 out of 5 stars


    The music of life: practice, performance, the closing notes

    Sayuri McAllister left home as a very young adult to study cello performance in Europe and then study there. Now she has returned home as a 29 year old to find her family home in Vancouver, Canada, much changed and in turmoil. The most prominent upset is that the family mansion, Point Grey, has been burgled and “two million” dollars’ worth of jewellery stolen. To her surprise Sayuri finds that the burglary is being investigated by an old high school flame, Detective Michael Donovan. How will Sayuri adjust to her family’s changes? Should she pick up loose threads with Michael? What is the secret to the mystery of the burglary?

    Blair McDowell has extensive experience as both a musician and a university music lecturer and this book draws upon that knowledge to create a realistic picture of a professional musician’s life, particularly the stresses of true dedication. Sonata moves along skilfully, never boring the reader. The book is of mixed genre: part romance/erotica, part crime/mystery/thriller. McDowell is equally skilled at both styles and her novel is quite a success.

    For the full review please go to:
    http://raymondmathiesenbookreviews.blogspot.com.au/

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • Carol

    Carol (edited)

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    Zero Hour by Clive Cussler and Graham Brown
    5 stars (more if I could)

    It is called Zero-point energy. It was intended, by it's discoverer, Nikola Tesla to, be a source of unexahustable energy for the entire world, as it can be drawn from everything around us. However in the hands of the "mad scientist", Maximillian Thero. it could very well become the end of the world as we know it. NUMA's Kurt Austin found himself in the middle of the diobolical mess quite by accident. Now he, with the aid of his NUMA comrads, and some very unlikely "friends", must find Thero and stop his plans from taking place. The simple truth is that once Zero-Point energy is release it can not be controlled.

    I've read all of Clive Cusslers books and this is one of the best I have read in several years. From page one it grabs you and holds on. So...before you start reading it, cut your grass, wash your car, walk the dog because you won't be able to put it down.

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • Olivermagnus

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    Two Graves by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child
    3.5 Stars

    For twelve years, FBI Special Agent Aloysius Pendergast believed his young wife, Helen, died in an accident. Then he was told she'd been murdered. Now he discovers Helen is alive. Just as he finally finds her, their reunion is cut short when Helen is abducted by a sinister ex-Nazi group. Two Graves concludes the “Helen Trilogy” and follows Fever Dreams and Cold Vengeance. I would not recommend reading these out of order since there are a lot of woven threads from the two previous novels. Many of the cliffhangers from Cold Vengeance are picked up and concluded in Two Graves.

    I love the Pendergast novels even though Aloyisius is out of control in the past couple of them. His mental state is clearly on edge after seeing Helen kidnapped and he becomes completely different from the Pendergast we've known over the years. There's a lot of impulsive action and not enough rationale thought which isn't like him. The plot involves neo Nazis working on genetic experiments in the Amazon jungle. I personally think this type of plot has been done numerous times but there is enough of a twist to this one that I forgave the authors. I kept wondering why Helen never told Aloysius about her past. Nevertheless there's a surprising twist that will give Pendergast a new direction in the future as well as a new villain we are bound to see again.

    Two Graves has at least two other story lines that barely connect to the main plot. Corrie Swanson returns with her own side story. She finally meets her father and attempts to help him solve a problem that could put him in jail. In the second one we return to Constance and her story where some of the questions we had about her are answered. D'Agosta is backand there is some progress on his character.

    I hope Preston/Childs give us a new Pendergast novel soon and they return to the elements that made the first books so good. I want to see Pendergast and D'Agosta working cases together as a team. I miss the cerebral, brooding Sherlockian Pendergast. I know both authors work on their own individual novels as well as their new character, Gideon Crew. I just hope they are not getting stretched too far because I would really miss all the characters in the Pendergast family.

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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    • Raspberrymocha55
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      Haven't kept up with this series. Think I need to do so!

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Carol
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      Pendergast is such a great character. The first book I ever read that he was in was Still Life With Crows]/b]. I too liked the books that he worked with D'Agosta. I believe they have gotten off the storyline that was forming in the beginning. I think it began in the book where he first starts to search for his wife. It seemed like all of the following ones were about her. I have really liked the Gideon Crew character. Look forward to more of those books. Do you really think he is dying or is that something he's been made to believe so he will do what they want?

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Olivermagnus
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      Hi Carol - I think Gideon is a great addition to the team of Preston/Childs. I can't imagine they would be interested in killing him off any time soon though so it must involve some sort of future twist. I'm still on board for anything these guys do either together or separately. Some are better than others but it's hard for me to give up on an old favorite. I've only done it a handful of times, most recently with the Kay Scarpetta novels. I still put them on hold at the library but usually end up taking them back unread.

      posted 12 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Carol
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    Kissing the Demon by Kate Ellis
    4.5 stars

    Local Member of Parliament Barrington Jenks is suspected of having been involved in the disappearance of two teenaged girls twelve years ago. Detective Chief Inspector Emily Thwaite and Detective Inspector Joe Plantagenet are asked to investigate this allegation, and they both know they have to tread very carefully. They've barely begun when a university student living at 13 Torland Place vanishes. Emily and Joe are puzzled when they learn that 13 Torland Place is not only linked to the disappearance of the two girls twelve years ago but was also where a mass murderer killed five people in 1868. These two skilled investigators aren't about to believe that this is just a bizarre coincidence. When the university student's body is found and another woman goes missing, it looks as though the city of Eborby has a serial killer haunting its streets.

    The story is complex and suspenseful, due in large part to the fact that there are so many people who have a lot to lose if their secrets are revealed. Although it is the third book in the series, it can be read as a standalone; however, something tells me that you'll want to go back to read the others. The atmosphere, ancient buildings and narrow winding streets of Eborby alone are well worth reading more about. Pair this marvelous setting with a strong story and characters, and you have absolutely nothing to lose...except maybe a night of sleep while you're reading.

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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    • Olivermagnus
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      I just put the first one on hold at the library. It looks like a good series. You post great reviews!

      posted 12 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Carol
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      Thank you.

      posted 12 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Book Concierge
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    The Boy in the Striped Pajamas – John Boyne
    Audio book performed by Michael Maloney
    3***

    Bruno, age 9, and his family move from their 5-story great house in Berlin to a smaller home in a town he doesn’t know for his father’s job. Father has been appointed the Commandant of “Off-With” by “the Fury.” Bruno can be excused for being somewhat more concerned with the impact on himself (he’ll have to leave his “three best friends for life!”), but …

    There is an interesting premise here – to tell the story of two boys separated by a fence, but united in their “boyness.” I also get that Boyne was trying to show that complacency was the great perpetrator of the Holocaust (and of many genocides since). However, the voice he chose for this story really irritated me. Perhaps part of that was the fault of audio performer Michael Maloney, who gives Bruno a very young voice, with a nearly breathless delivery. He really sounded as if he were under age six.

    The ending is a stunner. And Boyne somewhat redeems the work by giving us a sense that Bruno’s father finally understands the impact of what he has done. But I was just never able to suspend disbelief.

    posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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    • Olivermagnus
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      My grandson recently read this in his eighth grade class and then they watched the movie. He talked about it for quite awhile so it surely made an impact on him.

      posted 12 days ago. ( permalink )
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    Calling Me Home - Julie Kibler
    3.5***

    Isabelle McAllister, an 89-year-old white woman, asks her hairdresser, Dorrie Curtis, a black, single mother, for a favor –Isabelle wants Dorrie to drive her from their Texas home to Cincinnati for a funeral. Over the years, they’ve formed a tenuous relationship, and Dorrie agrees. During the drive Isabelle slowly reveals the secret she’s kept for decades, unlocking her pain and grief and helping Dorrie to understand her own issues with trust and unconditional love.

    The novels chapters alternate between Dorrie and Miss Isabelle as narrators, and between present day and 1939-1940. This is a tricky style to pull off, but Kibler does a good job of it, weaving the book’s themes across the differences in time and narrator. I felt I got to know these two women, their strengths and flaws, just as they were getting to know one another. I was somewhat frustrated by the subplot of Dorrie’s current relationship with Teague. I also thought that most of the other characters in the book were two-dimensional (or even one-dimensional, like Isabelle’s mother).

    I was caught up in Isabelle’s story right away, and eventually in Dorrie’s as well. Kibler kept me turning to pages, though I had guessed the big secret long before it was revealed. The ending was poignant if a little too predictable. All told this is a good debut work and I look forward to her next book.

    posted 13 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Olivermagnus

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    A Conspiracy of Faith by Jussi Adler Olsen
    5 Stars

    This is the third appearance of Carl Mørck, head of Department Q, the group that takes care of closed cases. Along with his mysterious assistant, Assad, and his eccentric secretary, Rose, they try to solve the mystery of an old message in a bottle that comes to them through a long, circuitous route. It contains a plea for help that's been written in blood, sealed in the bottle with tar, and thrown into the sea many years ago.

    Soon we meet a man who targets children who come from families of unusual and small religious sects. He holds them for ransom in a hidden boathouse and tells the parents that if the police are called or anyone is told of the crime, the other children in the family will be killed. We also meet two interesting women. The first is Mia, a housewife and mother, who lives with her husband who is often missing on some important work and she's had about enough of it. The second is Isabel Jønsson, a lonely single woman who often makes bad choices in her love life.

    Carl and Assad are also working on a second case involving series of arsons. In each case a single body is found with same signature, suggesting they are all connected in some way even though they've taken place years apart.

    Many of the characters we met in the prior two novels appear here in expanded roles. Carl's assistant Assad is a Muslim from Syria who started out as Carl's janitor and is becoming a rising star due to his ability to see clues others can't see. Rose goes on leave and sends in her twin sister, Yrsa, to take her place for awhile. We see more of Hardy Henningson, Carl's ex-partner who was shot in the spine and is now a quadriplegic. He lives with Carl and Carl's friend, Morten, who also shares the house, cares for him and does the cooking.

    I could have done without some of the minor plot lines like the return of Mona, the psychiatrist who helped Carl in the past and whom he still longs for, and his not-yet-ex-wife, Vigga, and stepson Jesper.

    The primary driver of the book, that of the kidnappings, is exciting to read. The characters are all action oriented, with first person dialogue, and whole episodes are devoted individually to each of the main characters which I really like in a book. I like to see the action from each character's perspective.

    Loved the book and the characters and can't wait for the next one to be released here in America.

    posted 12 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Olivermagnus

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    Birdman by Mo Hayder
    5 Stars

    Birdman by Mo Hayder is a serial killer novel set in England. Detective Jack Caffery, new to the Area Major Investigation Pool (AMIP), gets called to a case involving a woman's body found in a deserted area. Upon closer examination they find the body has already had an autopsy done on it. At first the investigators think it looks like a medical school joke because the incision is very sloppy. They open the body and find five tiny birds inside the victim. Eventually more victims are found in the same area and the police believe the killer is just getting started.

    The crime is explained from almost the beginning. Instead of having all the pieces come together at the end, you see the two stories move toward each other from the early parts of the book. I thought this worked well.

    Birdman is the first of (currently) six novels featuring Jack Caffery. He's a very complicated character. He wants to break up with his girlfriend but he can't bring himself to because she's suffering a relapse of cancer. He can't stop thinking about the memory of his brother who has been missing for two decades and whom Jack believes was killed by a pedophile who is also a neighbor. As the story proceeds he also finds himself attracted to one of the women involved in the investigation.

    I thought this mystery was excellent but very unsettling. It's gory, disturbing and shocking. The characters are fresh and original. In some ways it reminded me of novels written by Thomas Harris. I found it hard to believe this was a debut novel from Mo Hayder and I look forward to reading the next in the series. It's an older series so all six Caffery mysteries are available as well as some stand alone Mo Hayder novels.

    This is a very graphically violent book and not for the squeamish or faint of heart. I would only recommend it to people who are fans of the Hannibal Lector type books.

    posted 12 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Olivermagnus

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    Treatment by Mo Hayder
    4.5 Stars

    Mo Hayder is definitely not scared to tackle subjects that a lot of people would prefer not to hear about. In fact, her stories verge on the horror genre. The Treatment is no exception. To sum up this book up I would use the words dark, twisted and disturbing.

    The horror starts with the discovery of the Peach family, who have been held captive in their house and their son molested over a period of days. When the police arrive at the scene the pedophile has vanished into the night along with young Rory Peach.

    The hopeless hunt for Rory brings up all of Caffery's feelings about Ewan, who is presumed dead after disappearing over two decades ago. The main suspect is a neighbor, Ivan Penderieki, but no evidence has ever been found to tie him to the case. Driven by his own guilt in Ewan's disappearance and being taunted by Penderecki, Caffery is very close to losing it on this case.

    Caffery comes to believe that another family is being victimized even though the police believe they have a suspect. This puts him at odds with his boss, Chief Inspector Daniella Souness. It also causes problems with his new girlfriend, Rebecca who suffers demons of her own. He's determined to follow every clue, discovering a web of pedophiles. The crime itself is gruesome. In this book we get to know a lot more about what happened to Ewan, and it's full of surprises. This story does not let up to the very end, and something new and grim is around every corner.

    Jack Caffery is one of the most absorbing characters I've read in a long time. He's complex, tortured and flawed and I'm enthralled with his story and what will happen in the future. My caution to other readers about this book was that the level of cruelty done to innocent victims was very painful to read.

    I look forward to Mo Hayder's next book. I think she's a master of dark, gritty stories but they are certainly not for anyone looking for a feel good, comfy mystery.

    WARNING: This story is definitely worth reading as long as you don't mind graphic sexual and violent content. Very dark, difficult subject matters.

    posted 12 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Raspberrymocha55
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    The Templar Legacy by Steve Berry
    #1 Cotton Malone mysteries
    5 ★s

    Took me a bit to get this read, but I really enjoyed it. What's not to love about action, adventure, Templars, treasure, religion and mystery. This is the first of the Cotton Malone series. Cotton Malone is a retired lawyer/agent for the US Justice Dept. He was tired of the stress filled life, so he moved to Copenhagen, Denmark to start a new life as a book seller. Then his old boss asks to meet him for coffee. She was still trying to come to terms with her estranged husband's suicide 12 years ago, as well as the death of her son 5 years ago. Her husband, Lars Nelle, spent his life searching for the treasure of the Knights Templar. The treasure disappeared with the last Master Jaques de Molay who was burned at the stake in 1308. What follows is non-stop action and adventure. I will be reading more of this series.

    posted 12 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Carol

    Carol (edited)

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    Innocent Graves by Peter Robinson #8 in the Alan Banks series (need not be read in order)
    5 stars

    A teenage pupil at the posh local private girls' school is found strangled in a graveyard. Suspicion alights on a Croatian refugee, Ive Jelacic; but while Banks is busy investigating that and other leads, his colleagues DI Barry Stott and DS Jim Hatchley get on the scent of a suspicious stranger spotted in a nearby pub and a nearby restaurant around the time of the crime. They are soon led to Owen Pierce, a local college lecturer, and very soon Pierce finds himself arrested and charged with murder.

    This book is more than just a finely crafted mystery story. Robinson delves into the human psyche with this book, and we see what circumstances can do to an ordinary man in his Owen Pierce character. After being arrested for the murder of a young girl in a graveyard, and we see what his charging and sentencing and his time in prison do to him. We also see Alan Banks struggling with the arrest. It is a tragedy of a life lost and a life wasted. This is a haunting tale that stays with you long after you close the book.

    posted 10 days ago. ( permalink )
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    • Bel ~ Fearless Leader Angharrad
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      What, not read them in order! What madness is this!

      posted 9 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Carol
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      I know, utter madness! I try really hard to read books in order even if they don't need to be. I even find myself getting them by the date published even if they aren't a series.

      posted 9 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Deborah O
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      It wreaks my head not to read books in order. I just can't do it......

      posted 9 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Carol

      Carol (edited)

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      I know what you mean Deborah. I am going to try to read the rest of this series in order.

      posted 9 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Deborah O
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      I ran out of books on holidays a few years ago (Ahh) and read a book belonging to my husband. Nearly died when I realised it was book 4 in James Rollins Sigma Force series and had get book 1 2 & 3 as soon as I got home lol....

      posted 8 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Carol
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      At least you found something to read. Just think what it could have been.

      posted 8 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Deborah O
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      Well Carol that's where the kindle comes in...... never again to run out of books lol!!

      posted 8 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Book Concierge
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    There Is No Me Without You – Melissa Fay Greene
    Audio book narrated by Julie Fain Lawrence
    4****

    Consumed by grief at the loss of her husband and daughter, Haregewoin Teferra, a middle-class Ethiopian woman, finds solace in attending daily church services – regardless of denomination – and becomes known to other regular church-goers as a very devout woman. One day the director of the Catholic Church charity surprises her when he asks if she might do a favor for the priest. A 15-year-old orphan is living on the streets; perhaps Haregewoin might be willing to take the girl into her home? A few weeks later they ask her to take in another teen; and then a pair of six-year-old girls. And in this way Haregewoin begins to foster the AIDS orphans of Ethiopia.

    Greene is a journalist and has clearly done extensive research. She writes Haregewoin’s story in a compassionate and balanced way, backed up with considerable information on the history of Ethiopia, its culture and religions, as well as the history of HIV/AIDS. For my own tastes, I wish she had concentrated on Haregewoin’s story, which I found compelling. I was far less interested in a research piece on epidemiology.

    Still, the book is well-written and held my interest. Julie Fain Lawrence does a very good job narrating the audio version. I’m glad I had a text version as well, however, or I would have missed all the photographs.

    posted 9 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Olivermagnus

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    The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon
    5 Stars

    The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time is told from the point of view of Christopher, a fifteen-year-old boy with Asperger's Syndrome who lives with his father in Swindon, a small town outside London. Christopher understands mathematics and science perfectly but is constantly bewildered by the incomprehensible behavior of those around him. When he discovers a neighborhood dog that has been killed with a garden fork (pitchfork), he decides to conduct a murder investigation modeled by hero, Sherlock Holmes.

    This investigation uncovers a lot more than the identity of the dog's killer, and Christopher is faced with several difficult emotional issues which his mind is unable to handle. Along the way we learn about his his view of the world and his family situation. Christopher's world is a small, regulated one full of things he is compelled to remember and routines he must follow to keep himself safe. Christopher loves math for its rules, order, structure and predictability. He can't stand to be touched and he hates the colors yellow and brown. He sprinkles red food coloring on his food because he loves the color red.

    The characters in this novel are very believable. Christopher's father loves him but loses patience after advising Christopher to stop investigating the dog incident. He tries hard to be patient, but can't control his frustration and anger and often takes it out on Christopher.

    I thought the book was an informative and a thoroughly enjoyable reading experience. Depending on your exposure to children with autism or Asperger's Syndrome you may or may not like it. I don't have much experience with autism or children that suffer from it, but I choose to look at this book as an introduction to a completely fascinating young man, one I'll miss now that I've finished the book.

    posted 8 days ago. ( permalink )
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    • Book Concierge
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      I also loved this book when I read it ... and the audio version is wonderful.

      posted 8 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Carol
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    Highway 61 by David Housewright
    3 stars

    Rushmore McKenzie is sweet talked by his girlfriend's daughter, Erica, into helping her father, Jason Truhler, who is being blackmailed by persons unknown. Someone has photographs of Jason lying unconscious in bed; nearby, a young girl, with her throat slashed, lies in a spreading pool of blood. McKenzie travels on Highway 61 from the Twin Cities to the Chalet Motel in Thunder Bay, Ontario, where the girl was stabbed. Jason is an unscrupulous pedophile who can't be trusted and McKenzie soon finds himself ensnared in a complex web involving drug trafficking, arson and internet prostitution. At the center of this web is a nineteen-year-old prostitute who has information for which everyone is willing to kill in order to obtain.

    I started out liking this book more than 3 stars. Toward the end there was way too much discussion about who should shoot who amd why they should or shouldn't and entirely too much lying by eveyone. The story became bogged down in useless dialog. Overall, it had the beginnings of a great storyline and I do intend to read more of this authors work.

    posted 7 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Book Concierge

    Book Concierge (edited)

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    Curse of the Spellmans - Lisa Lutz
    Book on CD read by Ari Graynor (abridged)
    3***

    Isabel (“Izzy”) Spellman is at it again! When the book opens she is making her one phone call from jail to her mother (well, technically, she gets three calls, but don’t tell her mother). Then, she backs up and tells us how she came to get arrested.

    Lutz’s debut, The Spellman Files, made it to #27 on the NY Times Bestseller list. This second effort is still whacky, and enjoyable, but the various writing devices Lutz uses are wearing thin. Also, the footnotes really add nothing to the story line. The basic plot is pretty skimpy, but the novel does begin to explore a possible relationship between Izzy and strong-silent-type Inspector Harry Stone.

    The audio is capably read by Ari Graynor, but the fact that it is abridged isn’t noted until the closing remarks. However … in this case, I think the abridged version works very well; it eliminates all the annoying footnotes and several side references that did little to advance the plot. Maybe Lutz (or her editor) should pay attention.

    posted 7 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Book Concierge
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    Love in A Fallen City – Eileen Chang (a/k/a Ailing Zhang)
    Translated by Karen S Kingsbury
    4****

    This is a collection of short stories, all dealing with love and longing, in which Chang pits the traditional values of Chinese culture against the increasing influence from the West to “modernize.” The stories are fraught with sexual tension, moral ambiguity, and pangs of conscience. While they are distinctly Chinese stories, they are universal in their themes.

    Chang is one of the most well-known and celebrated authors in modern China. Born in 1920 to an aristocratic family in Shanghai, she studied literature at the Univ of Hong Kong until 1941, when the Japanese attacked that city. She immigrated to the United States in 1952, and in 1969 obtained a position as a researcher at Berkeley. Despite a resurgence of interest in her work beginning in the 1970s, she became ever more reclusive. She was found dead in her apartment in 1995.

    posted 6 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Raspberrymocha55
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    Lion in the Valley by Elizabeth Peters
    #4 Amelia Peabody series
    4 ★s

    This the 4th of the Amelia Peabody mysteries. The only thing I really missed in this episode was the lack of archeology. I do enjoy reading about the actual work of an Egyptologist/archeologist. There was much more attention paid to character building. Especially, Ramses character was fleshed out. He is a particularly precoscious 8 year old writing a book on hieroglyphics. The Emmerson family returned to Egypt, but this year they managed to get the dig at Dashoor of the bent and black pyramids. However they become involved with the murder of an old foe. Amelia finds an opium addicted Englihman as a new watchdog for Ramses who is always into something. Then, Amelia rescues a young Englishwoman who wandered near their dig. The story is full of annoying old women, villians and native Egyptians who all seem to be intent on disrupting their dig. This was a fun book for fans of this series.

    posted 6 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Raymond Mathiesen
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    The Power, The Miracle and The Dream by Don De Lene – Book Review

    Hannah Lane is seven years old and lives in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. She has terrible asthma and has learned to think of herself as not much good at most of what she sets out to do in life. She does, however, have an active imagination and has been interested in fairies for quite some time. She has a collection of fairy dolls which she plays with often. Imagine her surprise, though, when one day she finds Brenda, a fairy, in her garden. Brenda is not so convinced that Hannah is without talent. She sets about guiding Hannah to a wiser and happier life. Hannah’s 11 year old brother Harvey thinks she is a little “crazy” (Book 1, Ch. 2) and that Brenda’s advice is a bit beyond belief. Is Hannah crazy and will she ever really improve her life?

    Particularly as children, but also through most of our life, we all have secret wishes and hidden dreams about the person we would like to be. Remember that fantasy career you longed for but never went after? We convince ourselves that we are not good enough to achieve these goals, that we are unrealistically aiming too high, and perhaps that we do not really deserve such fulfilment. It is not unusual to reach 40 years and ask, “What happened?” and “Does what I have done really mean anything to me?” If you are in this situation Don De Lene’s book is specifically for you. The book is subtitled “a beginner’s guide to lasting happiness’ and is filled with interesting, surprising and useful advice on how to achieve exactly that. This book is part novel, part self-development manual and part spiritual philosophy. Those who are “open-minded” (Book 1, Ch. 6) and have “a little willingness to believe” (Book1, Ch. 4) will benefit the most. The book is aimed at children and youth, but adults can certainly enjoy it and benefit; indeed, perhaps more so.


    For the full review please click:

    http://raymondmathiesenbookreviews.blogspot.com.au/

    posted 6 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Raspberrymocha55
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    14 by Peter Clines
    5 ★s

    I couldn't put this book down. Now that I've finished I want more by this author. Unfortunately, he mostly writes zombie type stuff, which doesn't do anything for me. This is the story of Nate Tucker, a data entry worker, who needed a new apartment. He was referred to the Kravach building, an old 1890s red brick apartment building not far from the Hollywood hills. It seemed the most prosaic of buildings at first. Then Nate began noticing little strange things like neon green 7 legged cockroaches, unusual black lighting in his kitchen, doors without doorknobs, doors painted shut with padlocks, and the place wasn't on the city electric grid. Oskar, the building supt was easy to get along with, unless one messed with the building. Nate and a few of his fellow renters decided to figure out what was going on, especially what was behind the door of apt. 14. Their questions turned into a quest taking them to places of which they couldn't even conceive of going. I must say that it was fun roller coaster of a read! Great Scifi!

    posted 4 days ago. ( permalink )
    show 2 replies
    • Olivermagnus
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      This isn't the type of book I usually read but I'll definitey give it a look based on your review. Thanks!

      posted 4 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Raspberrymocha55
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      It is serious off the wall Scifi in the last half of the book.

      posted 4 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Carol
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    Lost (Like This, Forever) in UK markets
    5 stars

    Lost is third in a series of novels featuring London detective Lacey Flint. Flint is on leave from her job, recovering from post-traumatic stress caused by an undercover operation that went very bad. Still in touch with her colleagues at the police station, Flint gets sucked into a prominent case involving a serial killer who preys on pre-teen boys. The killer, delights in leaving the police taunting messages on Facebook. At the same time, Flint is fighting her own demons, trying to sort out the emotional turmoil yet drawn inexorably into the case. Flint befriends a young neighbor named Barney, who is obsessed by the murders which are happening in their section of London. Lacey also is trying to sort out her feelings for Mark Jonesbury.

    I never sorted out the killer. The reader is led on such a merry chase throughout the entire book. You think you know...and the plot changes. I have seldom read such an intriguing book as this one. Even though it's series, it can easily be read as a stand alone. It will just make you find and read the other two when you're finished.

    posted 3 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Book Concierge
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    Looking for Me – Beth Hoffman
    3***

    Teddi finds a broken chair and her life’s calling in a ditch near her Kentucky farmstead when she is only 10 years old. As soon as she graduates high school, she leaves to build a successful career as an antiques dealer in Charleston SC. Her brother Josh’s disappearance sends her into a tailspin. Blaming herself, she cannot let go of the hope that he is somehow still alive in the wilderness he loved.

    This is decent Southern women’s fiction. We have a conflicted heroine, who seems to live from one glimmer of hope to another (though they may come years apart). She has a retinue of loyal friends and colleagues who shore her up when she’s feeling down. She’ll find love in an unexpected encounter, but will have difficulty trusting him with all her secrets.

    Hoffman moves back and forth in time, revealing the story in dribs and drabs. This is a difficult style to pull off successfully and there were a few times when I wished the story were more linear. I really liked Hoffman’s earlier work Saving CeeCee Honeycutt, but I think she may have been trying a little too hard in this novel. Still, I kept turning pages, and finished the book in two days, so there was definitely something about it which kept me engaged and interested.

    posted 3 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Carol
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    Nightrise by Jim Kelly Book #12 in the Phillip Dryden series
    3 Stars

    Phillip Dryden is shocked when police inform him that his father's body is lying in the morgue as a result of an auto accident. Phillip isn't shocked because his father is dead, he's shocked because his father died 35 years ago. He drowned when the fens flooded in 1977. As Dryden tries to sort out this complication, two more seemingly unrealated cases come to light... a bullet ridden body found hanging in a lettuce field and a young African couple who can't get their baby's body back which they say was buried in a paupers grave without permission.

    The book was a good read once it got started. This is the 12th book in the series but the first that I read. Even though it can certainly be read as a stand alone book, I beieve that if I had been more familar with the characters, I would have enjoyed it more. (Yes, I was a bad girl and read it out of order. I know this is making some of you reach for your tranqualizers.)

    posted 2 days ago. ( permalink )
    show 4 replies
    • Deborah O
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      @ Carol I was thinking that sounds good and then read its the 12th book, you read it first, ahhh yeah just reached for those tranquilizers lol.....

      posted 2 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Carol
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      I believe that The Water Clock was the first Phillip Dryden book. He also writes two other mystery series. I didn't realize that this was a series as there was nothing on the book that said so. I found out on Amazon. Would you like a glass of water for your tranqualizers?

      posted 2 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Carol
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      Okay Deborah, I checked on Amazon and they still list Nightrise as the 12th book. It's not the 12th book in the Phillip Dryden series, it's the 12th book that Jim Kelley wrote. Here is the Phillip Dryden books in order. I got them from Jim Kelly's website.
      The Water Clock
      The Fire Baby
      The Moon Tunnel
      The Coldest Blood
      The Skeleton Man
      Nightrise

      So you will still need your ttranqualizers, but it's not as bad as I thought, only the 6th book in the series.

      posted 2 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Deborah O
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      Thanks Carol that's great. Calm down again ha!!

      posted yesterday. ( permalink )
  • Olivermagnus
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    Gone by Mo Hayder
    5 Stars

    This is Mo Hayder's fifth novel featuring Jack Caffery. It won the 2012 Edgar Award for Best Mystery. Gone follows “Skin” and begins six months after the end of that story.

    Caffery is a senior member of Bristol's elite major crimes investigation unit and Phoebe "Flea" Marley is the supervisor of the police underwater search unit. They both seem to be hiding secrets from each other and their budding mutual interest has turned chilly. This only adds to the emotional conflicts simmering just below the surface of an increasingly disturbing case.

    The story begins with a car jacking. A woman is putting groceries in the trunk of her car when she's suddenly pushed aside by a man in a Santa Claus mask. He pulls open the driver's door, gets in and speeds away. She panics and screams because her daughter is still in the back seat. Caffery is trying to convince himself that this will end when the carjacker discovers the child in the back seat and drops her off at the side of the road.

    At first the kidnapping is thought to be accidental, but then Flea manages to connect the latest incident to two previous cases with striking similarities. Caffery knows in cases like this the longer the child is missing the more negative the outcome. It soon becomes clear this criminal is very clever. He begins to taunt the police and it's obvious he's ahead of them at every step.

    Gone is a gripping thriller that really pulled me in. I couldn't wait to seen how it was all going to end. My recommendation for anyone reading this is to start with Ritual, then Skin and finally Gone. The secret that Jack and Flea keep from each other is revealed in this novel. It's explained very well and doesn't detract from the general enjoyment of the story, but if you don't want the continuing story to be spoiled I wouldn't start with this one.

    posted 2 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Olivermagnus
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    Poppet by Mo Hayder
    4.5 Stars

    Poppet is the sixth novel featuring Jack Caffery following Gone.

    The first chapter of Poppet takes us to the Beechway psychiatric hospital where every resident is afraid of The Maude. The patients say that it's the spirit of a woman who once worked in the hospital years ago, but the staff believe it's just a mass delusion. Something evil is stalking the halls of Beechway, patients are involved in self mutilation, and now even the staff is afraid.

    AJ LeGrande, Senior Nursing Coordinator, is finding it more and more difficult to keep the wards adequately staffed during the night shift since that's when all the eerie things happen. AJ doesn't believe the Maude is anything supernatural. He believes the Maude could actually be one of Beechway's recently released patients, Isaac Handel. Isaac murdered his parents in a particularly gruesome way and has now been “cured” and released back into society. Melanie Arrow is the director of the center who signed off on Isaac's release, but now someone is following her. AJ believes it could be Isaac. AJ asks Caffery to quietly find out where Isaac is and if it's possible he could be involved in the deaths of the patients. Jack searches Isaac's old room and finds a holdall filled with voodoo dolls or human effigies known as “Poppets”. AJ hopes Jack might be able to keep the inquiry quiet. It would be bad for Beechway and its staff if it was discovered they'd released someone who is a danger to society. For Caffery, the case begins as a nuisance but quickly interests him.

    Along with the investigation Jack has also confronted underwater search office Phoebe “Flea” Marley about the secret these two are keeping from each other. It appears there may be some sort of ending to that continuing story line. Their personal and professional loyalties continue to be tested and the reader can't be sure how it will end.

    The synergy between all the characters makes for an excellent and also disturbing read. The story is told in alternating views in present tense and short chapters segue from one scene to the other. I thought the first quarter of the book started slowly but then I was hooked and couldn't put it down.

    I thought it was a great book and I really enjoyed it. It's the most current book in the Jack Caffery series and was just published so it will probably be awhile before the next one is available. In the meantime I'll miss Jack and all the characters I've met in the six book series. The last four should probably be read in order to understand the back story that continues from book to book.

    Birdman
    Treatment
    Ritual
    Skin
    Gone
    Poppet

    posted 2 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Olivermagnus
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    Day After Tomorrow by Allan Folsom
    5 Stars

    Day After Tomorrow begins in a Paris cafe where an American surgeon named Paul Osborn looks across the room and sees the man he thinks murdered his father thirty years before. Meanwhile, in London, a former Los Angeles homicide cop named McVey joins Scotland Yard to look into a series of decapitations involving a severed head and seven headless corpses. Osborn decides to hire a private detective to help him find the man he saw in the cafe. Eventually Osborn becomes a suspect in the decapitations. He and McVey also become involved with a powerful secret organization which seems to reach into every corner of Europe. The two plots (Osborn's father and the decapitated bodies) converge into a thrilling finale.

    The action starts immediately and in many ways this book reminded me of a Robert Ludlum or Frederick Forsyth style of novel. The author weaves together a wide array of well-developed, interesting characters in an international murder mystery in a WWII/Nazi/modern-era setting.

    I absolutely loved "The Day After Tomorrow". I was completely engrossed. It is action-packed for sure. The plot is carefully laid out so you find yourself guessing throughout the book as to who you want to trust and who you can't trust. The bad guys are truly evil.

    On the down side, there is so much action and plot that sometimes it seems like there are too many characters and it can be a bit confusing. The plots are complicated but Folsom is able to connect them over the long run.

    It was excellent story and had everything I look for in a suspense novel. It was well written with interesting characters. I had no problem with the length of the book and was sorry when I reached the end.

    posted 2 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Carol
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    A Long Line of Dead Men by Lawrence Block
    3 Stars

    More than thirty years ago in May 1961, an old man brings together thirty young men to form a club, the only purpose of which is to meet once a year for dinner and to note which of their number have passed away since the last meeting. When the next-to-last member dies, years from now, the last survivor has the duty of selecting thirty young men and beginning the next round. A form of this club has actually existed since the days of Babalyon. The members of the club's current incarnation are in their 50s now, and they're all reasonably successful, but there are only fourteen of them left -- a startlingly high rate of attrition, and they're beginning to become aware that they're beating the actuarial odds, but it seems that someone is reducing the membership. Matthew Scudder is hired to find out if this is just an unusal occurance or if someone is actually killing them.

    I thought the idea of this ancient club and the fact that it actually seemed to work, was such an unusual plot. I wish Block had focused more on this line and less on so much else in Matthew Scudder's life and other unrelated cases. I really wanted to know more about this club of 31.

    I gave it 3 stars. I have read most of the series and this was not one of the best but it was still a good book.

    posted yesterday. ( permalink )
  • Book Concierge
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    Dog On It - Spencer Quinn
    Audio book narrated by Jim Frangione
    3***

    Bernie Little is a private investigator who is having some financial difficulties. So when he’s asked to investigate a missing teenage girl, he agrees to take the case. Bernie doesn’t work alone, however; he has a wonderfully intelligent canine partner – Chet. The case is a bit of a puzzle: there’s no ransom demand to indicate kidnapping, but Bernie (and Chet) doesn’t believe the girl ran away.

    This is a delightful mystery told from the dog’s perspective. I love how Chet gets sidetracked with smells and tastes. I also love how single-minded he can be when he’s helping his beloved Bernie. There’s plenty of action, but little violence. Chet has a chance to “ride shotgun” in Bernie’s Porsche and even on the back of a motorcycle!

    Jim Frangione does a wonderful job narrating the book. I love the way he brings Chet to life. I’m not a dog lover, but I sure do love Chet. I’ll definitely read another in this series.

    posted yesterday. ( permalink )
  • Carol
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    Be Buried In The Rain by Barbara Michaels
    5 stars

    When reading Be Buried in the Rain, you can almost feel the heat of a Virginia summer as you read. The book has a lovely mixture of history, suspense, romance, and a little paranormal thrown in for seasoning ... a decaying family plantation, a toxic, bedridden grandmother, a medical student enlisted against her will for a summer of tending, an old love affair fanned throughout, great secondary characters, including a hound named "Elvis", all beginning with the discovery of the old skeletons of a mother and baby in the first scene.

    It has all the best elements of a good ghost story with enough modern skepticism to keep us enthralled. Barbara Michaels is the master of the modern gothic.

    posted 20 hours ago. ( permalink )
  • Carol
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    The Crying Child by Barbara Michaels
    5 stars

    A young struggling artist visits her wealthy sister and brother-in-law. Jo's sister Mary just had a third miscarriage, and the loss of her baby is affecting her mentally - she's clinging to the idea of a child out in the woods, who is crying for her and begging for her help. Jo begins to wonder if Mary really is crazy -- but then she hears the crying too. Jo teams up with her brother in law Ran, and the handsome (but woman-wary) doctor Will Graham, to find out what the crying is. But when the ghostly apparition of a beautiful, sad woman appears, Jo begins to dig into the past of Ran's family, and discovers a web of lies, murder, and terror centering on a lost child.

    Jo is an excellent heroine: smart, wry, brave, and loyal to her sister, who is a rather nebulous presence once it's discovered that, while unstable, she's not totally delusional. I thought Ran was something of a controlling fink, but he was very human in his flaws and strong points (loves his wife, wants a child, etc). I disliked Will initially, because of his rather hostile stance toward women, but began to warm to him as the novel progressed. A genuine ghost story which made for an entertaining read and my second favorite Barbara Michael's book,

    posted 20 hours ago. ( permalink )
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