We have just returned home from the country where family gathered after Christmas. Three or four days at the cabin with those who couldn't make it up for Christmas Day has left me tired and lazy, but I still need to finish reviewing books from 2017 and find slots within 2 or 3 weeks of publication to schedule a few more reviews.
While in the country, I took frequent breaks from the festivities and fireside chats with friends and family to read and relax.
I had requested Resurrection Bay from NetGalley because I just saw the author's name and was thinking it was the follow up to a book I read in 2016. Duh. It was the same book with a new cover, I'd just forgotten the title and since Resurrection Bay was also the town the protagonist came from, I was hoping for a sequel. I don't usually reread books, but I decided to reread this one because I'd already read the other books I'd downloaded.
It was even better the second time!
Below is my original review, and I can only add that it is an excellent crime novel with well-developed characters:
Resurrection Bay, Emma Viskic's debut crime novel, is set in Australia.
What I liked: the setting -- in both Melbourne and the small coastal town of Resurrection Bay; a protagonist who is profoundly deaf and struggles to understand what others are saying; his ex-wife and her Koori family who give some insight into the struggle of native aboriginal peoples.
There are some humorous moments in this dark novel--but make no mistake, there is a lot of violence. The story begins with the murder of Caleb Zelic's friend Gary, who was aiding Caleb in an investigation into warehouse robberies. His partner Frankie is a 57-year-old former member of the police force and an alcoholic who has been clean for several years, but Caleb wonders how trustworthy she is after finding a bottle of Jack Daniels.
Caleb's information is often faulty because he must rely more on reading lips than on his hearing aids, and anyone who is not directly facing him causes gaps and misunderstandings in what is said. Caleb's problems are exacerbated by his unwillingness to admit to his disability; his attempts to appear "normal" cause additional problems when he refuses to ask people to repeat themselves or he appears to be ignoring people who talk to him.
An intriguing novel that sets a fast pace, Resurrection Bay has an original protagonist who is flawed more by his pride than by his deafness. This is a case of who, as well as why. The novel has plenty of tension with a mysterious villain, secrets and betrayals, and the uncertainty of who is to be trusted.
NetGalley/Echo Publishing/Pushkin Press in US and UK
Crime. Sept. 1, 2016. Print length: 231 pages.
The original publication was in 2016, so you shouldn't really have to wait for the new publication date next month. Check your library, too. :)
I like the new cover, too. The original cover seems to depict Melbourne and the new cover, Resurrection Bay. I like both. If you missed this book the first time around, give Emma Viskic's Resurrection Bay a try. You'll be glad you did.
Hey, Ho! I just downloaded the sequel. What perfect timing--everything from the first novel is fresh on my mind!
Search This Blog
Saturday, December 30, 2017
Friday, December 29, 2017
Beware the Past by Joy Ellis
Ellis already has two series set in the Fens that I love, so I looked forward to this one, which may be the start of a new series.
As a young policeman, Matt Ballard had one case involving the murder of three young boys that was never solved. Now, with retirement in sight, Matt plans to continue the investigation on his own. Then a photo arrives that shows the crime scene of one of the murders--before the murder, a tangle of taunting letters are sent to members of Ballard's team, and another young boy goes missing.
While this stand-alone (or first in a new series) is another intriguing police procedural from Ellis, I did not enjoy it nearly as much as her previous novels.
The characters don't feel as genuine as those in her other books and the emphasis on sex felt like the book was trying to reach another audience. Perhaps if the book had come from another author, I wouldn't have focused on the fact that I didn't relate to the characters, but the depth of characterization in her previous novels set a high standard. I didn't really like any of the characters much.
I will stick to Ellis' DI Nikki Galena and her DI Jackman series.
NetGalley/Joffe Books
Crime/Police Procedural. December 19, 2017. Print length: 369 pages.
As a young policeman, Matt Ballard had one case involving the murder of three young boys that was never solved. Now, with retirement in sight, Matt plans to continue the investigation on his own. Then a photo arrives that shows the crime scene of one of the murders--before the murder, a tangle of taunting letters are sent to members of Ballard's team, and another young boy goes missing.
While this stand-alone (or first in a new series) is another intriguing police procedural from Ellis, I did not enjoy it nearly as much as her previous novels.
The characters don't feel as genuine as those in her other books and the emphasis on sex felt like the book was trying to reach another audience. Perhaps if the book had come from another author, I wouldn't have focused on the fact that I didn't relate to the characters, but the depth of characterization in her previous novels set a high standard. I didn't really like any of the characters much.
I will stick to Ellis' DI Nikki Galena and her DI Jackman series.
NetGalley/Joffe Books
Crime/Police Procedural. December 19, 2017. Print length: 369 pages.
Thursday, December 28, 2017
Plague Pits & River Bones by Karen Charlton
Plague Pits and River Bones by Karen Charlton has Detective Stephen Lavender and Constable Ned Woods investigating murder, the slave trade, and highway robbery.
Set in 1812 London, the novel is another well-written entry into this historical mystery series. The introduction of a Moriarity-like character is interesting. He will undoubtedly add another dimension to future books.
Well-researched with the benefit of Author's Notes and a bibliography. Many of the events are taken from life and woven into Lavender's investigations.
I thoroughly enjoy this series.
Blog review scheduled for 12/28/17.
NetGalley/Thomas & Mercer
Historical Mystery. Jan. 11, 2018. Print length: 343 pages.
Set in 1812 London, the novel is another well-written entry into this historical mystery series. The introduction of a Moriarity-like character is interesting. He will undoubtedly add another dimension to future books.
Well-researched with the benefit of Author's Notes and a bibliography. Many of the events are taken from life and woven into Lavender's investigations.
I thoroughly enjoy this series.
Blog review scheduled for 12/28/17.
NetGalley/Thomas & Mercer
Historical Mystery. Jan. 11, 2018. Print length: 343 pages.
Tuesday, December 26, 2017
The Running Girl by Sara Blaedel
Sara Blaedel's The Running Girl is the latest in her Detective Louise Rick series set in Copenhagen.
Louise is caring for Jonas, supposedly on a temporary basis, after his father's murder. They have a good relationship, but Louise still considers her care of Jonas temporary.
Jonas attends a farewell party for a classmate that is interrupted by a gang of older teenagers and calls Louise in a panic as the violence erupts. Louise gets there as quickly as possible, but the circumstances have deteriorated, and she arrives at the scene of a traffic accident in which one of Jonas' friends, running for help, has been hit by a car.
Louise is involved in another case, that gradually seems to link up to the party invasion.
Intense and engrossing.
NetGalley/Grand Central Publishing
Crime/Suspense. Jan. 2, 2018. Print length: 448 pages.
Louise is caring for Jonas, supposedly on a temporary basis, after his father's murder. They have a good relationship, but Louise still considers her care of Jonas temporary.
Jonas attends a farewell party for a classmate that is interrupted by a gang of older teenagers and calls Louise in a panic as the violence erupts. Louise gets there as quickly as possible, but the circumstances have deteriorated, and she arrives at the scene of a traffic accident in which one of Jonas' friends, running for help, has been hit by a car.
Louise is involved in another case, that gradually seems to link up to the party invasion.
Intense and engrossing.
NetGalley/Grand Central Publishing
Crime/Suspense. Jan. 2, 2018. Print length: 448 pages.
Sunday, December 24, 2017
Wishing All a Wonderful Holiday
I took a break from making snowmen and several other projects yesterday and just visited with a dear friend who was in town. I had run out of time on my Christmas sewing projects, but I finished up the crucial items on Friday. One project will not be completed before tomorrow, but that is OK--it was a last minute inspiration and will be finished eventually.
All of the snowmen will soon have new homes.
I had so much fun making these Christmas gifts!
Oops, blurry pic
Cat turned out to be my favorite project--
for a little girl who has a special love of cats.
Cat needed a bag and a companion...
Merry Christmas!
I wish you all many good books
in the coming year!
Thursday, December 21, 2017
Season of Blood by Jeri Westerson
Season of Blood takes the reader on another adventure with Crispin Guest as he investigates murdered monks and stolen relics. I've enjoyed several of these Crispin Guest novels and enjoy the setting during Richard II's reign. Crispin is a disgraced knight who has earned a reputation as an investigator and finder of lost objects. He has become known as the Tracker.
A beautiful and mysterious woman sets this mystery in motion. She approaches Crispin, asking for his aid in finding her niece. Things are not what they seem, however, and when a monk falls into his door with Crispin's old rival Simon Wynchecombe's dagger in his back and a blood relic in his hand, events take a perilous direction.
Crispin has a skeptical approach to relics, but this one seems unlike the usual fakes. Religious institutions were often competitive about relics because relics were a source of pilgrims and income; blood relics containing the blood of Christ were particularly desirable.
Crispin's attempts to return the relic are thwarted when the relic keeps returning to him.
Read in September; review scheduled for Dec. 21.
Goodreads/Severn House
Historical Mystery. Jan. 1, 2017. Print length: 224 pages.
A beautiful and mysterious woman sets this mystery in motion. She approaches Crispin, asking for his aid in finding her niece. Things are not what they seem, however, and when a monk falls into his door with Crispin's old rival Simon Wynchecombe's dagger in his back and a blood relic in his hand, events take a perilous direction.
Crispin has a skeptical approach to relics, but this one seems unlike the usual fakes. Religious institutions were often competitive about relics because relics were a source of pilgrims and income; blood relics containing the blood of Christ were particularly desirable.
Read in September; review scheduled for Dec. 21.
Goodreads/Severn House
Historical Mystery. Jan. 1, 2017. Print length: 224 pages.
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
Reading Challenges and Reading Itineraries
I rarely participate in reading challenges any longer, but I often choose to take a reading journey concentrating on an author, genre, setting, time period, or topic.
I recently found this DIY Reading Challenge that gives 50 ways to create your own personal reading challenge. Here are a few that interested me:
9. Go to the library once a month, browse the stacks, and pick a book that looks interesting to you, but that you have never heard of and that no one has recommended to you. Make sure you’ve never heard of the author, either.
(#9 -- I have done this many times, but not recently--choosing this way can lead to new authors and subject matter.)
11. Pick a subject you’re interested in—it could be anything. Knitting. The history of French macarons. Space exploration. Sex toys. Seriously: anything! Now make a reading list that throughly explores that subject. Make sure to include books of different genres (fiction, nonfiction, poetry, etc.) Think about the authors you’re including on your list—try to include authors from diverse backgrounds. Your reading list could be three or ten or twenty books.
(#11 -- What I like about this one is looking at a topic in different genres, including poetry.)
29. Find a class syllabus for a class you’d wish you’d taken in college, or a class that’s locally offered at a community college or continuing education center, but that you don’t have the time to actually take. Read all the books on the syllabus. Syllabi are actually quite easy to find—a quick google search of “Afro-American history” yielded dozens. Try a more detailed search to find a syllabus to match your particular interests!
(#29 -- Another version of the class syllabus is to look at the bibliography at the back of a book of fiction or nonfiction that provides great sources on the subject. I've done this with both fiction and nonfiction titles.)
39. Get a group of friends or family together. Have everyone write down a book they love on a piece of paper and put it in a hat. Pass the hat around and have everyone draw a paper. Read the book you draw. When you’re done, have tea and discuss it with the person who chose it, or get together and have a big potluck.
(#39 -- I like the idea of exchanging titles by drawing from a hat. Another version I've read about people doing is an actual book exchange. The book might not be one you would ever choose for yourself...which can prove surprising.)
-----
I also look at the books others choose for the reading challenges they are participating in and make a list of their choices. Always a great source of interesting titles!
Reading Itineraries (mostly about my fascination with the Tudors)
In 2007, I read several fascinating books recommended on Lotus's blog about the Middle East, both fiction and nonfiction.
An Arctic itinerary that started with fiction and moved to nonfiction.
There are also the yoga book itineraries and the brain/neuroplasticity book itineraries.... I can get excited about finding books to add to previous itineraries as well.
I recently found this DIY Reading Challenge that gives 50 ways to create your own personal reading challenge. Here are a few that interested me:
9. Go to the library once a month, browse the stacks, and pick a book that looks interesting to you, but that you have never heard of and that no one has recommended to you. Make sure you’ve never heard of the author, either.
(#9 -- I have done this many times, but not recently--choosing this way can lead to new authors and subject matter.)
11. Pick a subject you’re interested in—it could be anything. Knitting. The history of French macarons. Space exploration. Sex toys. Seriously: anything! Now make a reading list that throughly explores that subject. Make sure to include books of different genres (fiction, nonfiction, poetry, etc.) Think about the authors you’re including on your list—try to include authors from diverse backgrounds. Your reading list could be three or ten or twenty books.
(#11 -- What I like about this one is looking at a topic in different genres, including poetry.)
29. Find a class syllabus for a class you’d wish you’d taken in college, or a class that’s locally offered at a community college or continuing education center, but that you don’t have the time to actually take. Read all the books on the syllabus. Syllabi are actually quite easy to find—a quick google search of “Afro-American history” yielded dozens. Try a more detailed search to find a syllabus to match your particular interests!
(#29 -- Another version of the class syllabus is to look at the bibliography at the back of a book of fiction or nonfiction that provides great sources on the subject. I've done this with both fiction and nonfiction titles.)
39. Get a group of friends or family together. Have everyone write down a book they love on a piece of paper and put it in a hat. Pass the hat around and have everyone draw a paper. Read the book you draw. When you’re done, have tea and discuss it with the person who chose it, or get together and have a big potluck.
(#39 -- I like the idea of exchanging titles by drawing from a hat. Another version I've read about people doing is an actual book exchange. The book might not be one you would ever choose for yourself...which can prove surprising.)
-----
I also look at the books others choose for the reading challenges they are participating in and make a list of their choices. Always a great source of interesting titles!
For years, I've gotten lost in a number of my own itineraries:
In 2007, I read several fascinating books recommended on Lotus's blog about the Middle East, both fiction and nonfiction.
An Arctic itinerary that started with fiction and moved to nonfiction.
There are also the yoga book itineraries and the brain/neuroplasticity book itineraries.... I can get excited about finding books to add to previous itineraries as well.
What are some of your favorite book itineraries?
Monday, December 18, 2017
The Black Painting by Neil Olson
The Black Painting
Goya's Black Paintings are mysterious enough in appearance and in creation, but Neil Olson's novel gives an even more sinister legacy to the black painting owned by the patriarch of the Morse family.
Fifteen years earlier, Alfred Arthur Morse's black painting was stolen, causing accusations, suspicion, and the estrangement of family members. Now, the four cousins have been summoned to their grandfather's estate. Teresa and Audrey arrive together, but it is Teresa who discovers their grandfather's body in his study--in front of the space where the black painting had hung before its disappearance.
Teresa is intent on finding out more about the original theft and about her grandfather's death. Family secrets emerge.
Whether or not the painting was haunted, there is plenty of suspense and mystery surrounding the Morse family's association with the painting. A clever use of Goya's dark and nightmarish paintings to inspire a curse and a mystery.
(The book never mentions which black painting Morse owned; perhaps a totally fictitious one, but the cover partially reveals one painting from the series.)
read in April; blog post scheduled for Dec. 18.
NetGalley/Hanover Square Press
Mystery/Suspense. Jan. 9, 2018. Print length: 320 pages.
Goya's Black Paintings are mysterious enough in appearance and in creation, but Neil Olson's novel gives an even more sinister legacy to the black painting owned by the patriarch of the Morse family.
Fifteen years earlier, Alfred Arthur Morse's black painting was stolen, causing accusations, suspicion, and the estrangement of family members. Now, the four cousins have been summoned to their grandfather's estate. Teresa and Audrey arrive together, but it is Teresa who discovers their grandfather's body in his study--in front of the space where the black painting had hung before its disappearance.
Teresa is intent on finding out more about the original theft and about her grandfather's death. Family secrets emerge.
Whether or not the painting was haunted, there is plenty of suspense and mystery surrounding the Morse family's association with the painting. A clever use of Goya's dark and nightmarish paintings to inspire a curse and a mystery.
(The book never mentions which black painting Morse owned; perhaps a totally fictitious one, but the cover partially reveals one painting from the series.)
read in April; blog post scheduled for Dec. 18.
NetGalley/Hanover Square Press
Mystery/Suspense. Jan. 9, 2018. Print length: 320 pages.
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
The Cruel Prince by Holly Black
Oh, darn, I am in need of the next installment! The Cruel Prince didn't much engage me in the first chapter, but then I found myself so immersed in the characters and plot, I couldn't put it down.
Jude, a seven-year-old mortal child, is taken with her two sisters to live in the High Court of Faery. Her feelings become divided and a love/hate dilemma twists through her emotions...but after ten years in Faery, Jude no longer feels that she belongs in the mortal world either.
Having endured bullying and disparagement from the Fey since her arrival, Jude lives in a kind of anxious fear. When she can no longer remain inconspicuous, her anger emerges, and she begins a dangerous campaign of her own as she fights back.
The Fey are beautiful, unpredictable, cruel, capricious, and immortal, and Jude finds herself both envying and despising them. Her goal to become a knight is foiled, but Jude continues to search for a way to gain some power and security. She moves from merely wanting a respected, secure position to something darker: "If I cannot be better than them, I will be so much worse."
Even in Faery, there are conspiracies. The Faery High King is ready to step down; he has chosen one of his six children as his successor. Prince Dain is generally accepted by most of the Fae as a worthy choice, but there are political intrigues at work and not everyone is pleased.
The Cruel Prince is a rather dark story suitable for a Faery Court: a protagonist who questions her position and her motives; schemes, spies, family dysfunction; betrayals; twists and turns. After a slow buildup, the plot is engrossing. In the past, I've not been a fan of Fae books, but Holly Black's complex characters and edgy narrative kept me in suspense the entire time.
Some elements of the plot are resolved, but there are so many questions about what happens next...and I hate having to wait.
Read in Oct.; blog review scheduled for Dec. 12, 2017.
NetGalley/Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Fantasy/YA. Jan. 2, 2018. Print length: 384 pages.
Jude, a seven-year-old mortal child, is taken with her two sisters to live in the High Court of Faery. Her feelings become divided and a love/hate dilemma twists through her emotions...but after ten years in Faery, Jude no longer feels that she belongs in the mortal world either.
Having endured bullying and disparagement from the Fey since her arrival, Jude lives in a kind of anxious fear. When she can no longer remain inconspicuous, her anger emerges, and she begins a dangerous campaign of her own as she fights back.
The Fey are beautiful, unpredictable, cruel, capricious, and immortal, and Jude finds herself both envying and despising them. Her goal to become a knight is foiled, but Jude continues to search for a way to gain some power and security. She moves from merely wanting a respected, secure position to something darker: "If I cannot be better than them, I will be so much worse."
Even in Faery, there are conspiracies. The Faery High King is ready to step down; he has chosen one of his six children as his successor. Prince Dain is generally accepted by most of the Fae as a worthy choice, but there are political intrigues at work and not everyone is pleased.
The Cruel Prince is a rather dark story suitable for a Faery Court: a protagonist who questions her position and her motives; schemes, spies, family dysfunction; betrayals; twists and turns. After a slow buildup, the plot is engrossing. In the past, I've not been a fan of Fae books, but Holly Black's complex characters and edgy narrative kept me in suspense the entire time.
Some elements of the plot are resolved, but there are so many questions about what happens next...and I hate having to wait.
Read in Oct.; blog review scheduled for Dec. 12, 2017.
NetGalley/Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Fantasy/YA. Jan. 2, 2018. Print length: 384 pages.
Friday, December 01, 2017
Crime and Science Fiction
Thieves on the Fens by Joy Ellis.
Someone is targeting thieves and calling DI Nikki Galena giving details that might help her prevent a murder. Not that Mad Tom always plays the rules; he certainly cheats on the first play in his game. Nikki and her team scramble to interpret the messages and protect the intended victims.
In the meantime, a dear friend of Nikki's mother Eve dies of a sudden heart attack. Eve, who has a background with the RAF and the MOD is devastated, but also uneasy. This is the second death among a circle of close friends, and Eve fears an unseen and powerful hand at work.
If Eve is right, both she and her remaining friends are in danger. And Eve is right--but the reason the women have been targeted is the question. What did Ann and Jenny know that led to their deaths?
Joy Ellis' Nikki Galena/Joseph Easter books are always a pleasure, and I have thoroughly enjoyed the feeling of genuinely knowing the characters she has created. The Lincolnshire Fens add a sense of remoteness to many of the locations and frequently add to the suspense.
Joy Ellis is one of my favorite authors of crime/detective fiction, and I highly recommend the series--but start at the beginning and enjoy the way the characters develop.
(Her DI Jackman/DS Evans series is equally good.)
NetGalley/Joffe Books
Detective/Crime. Nov. 28, 2017. Print length: 309 pages.
The Silent Children by Carol Wyer is the fourth in a series featuring DI Robyn Carter. I haven't read any of the previous books in the series, but The Silent Children functions perfectly well as a stand-alone, even though there is an arc carried over from previous books.
Another book interspersed with sections on a back story, The Silent Children keeps the narrative bouncing between past and present.
Overall, I wasn't that impressed with this one, but Wyer has a number of fans who really loved the book. I never wanted to abandon it, but when I finished, the only character who truly engaged me was Robyn's cousin Ross, and he had a minimal role.
NetGalley/Bookoutre
Mystery/Crime. Dec. 7, 2017. Print length: 426 pages.
Evan Currie's Odysseus Awakening is the latest installment of this series featuring Confederation captain Eric Weston and the crew of the starship Odysseus.
I like science fiction and space operas and have enjoyed all the books in this series. Lots of action and suspense, but since some of the intelligence concerning the starships falls into enemy hands, another book will have to detail just how much information the enemy gained. Does it include the location of earth?
This is not my favorite in the series, but things in the Black are not over yet, and I'm eager to know what happens next.
This isn't a series that works well without having started with the first book, Odyssey One: Into the Black.
My reviews of the earlier books in the series are here.
NetGalley/47 North
Science Fiction/Space Opera. Dec. 12, 2017. Print length: 318 pages.
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
Dick Cole's War by Dennis R. Okerstrom
Dick Cole's War by Dennis R. Okerstrom was a gift from my son-in-law and personally inscribed by Dick Cole, the last of the famous Doolittle Raiders, who was at Barksdale Air Force Base recently. Even at 102, Cole was signing copies of Okerstrom's book.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and learned a great deal, not only about the famous Tokyo Raid with pilot Jimmy Doolittle and co-pilot Dick Cole, but about Hump Pilots, the CBI (China, Burma, India theater), the Air Commandos--and much more.
One poignant moment occurs when on Dec. 7, Cole writes his mother to say that he won't be home for Christmas after all. No need to say why leave has been canceled.
The problem with letters was a consistent one throughout the war. Longed for and appreciated and re-read, but not timely. Even today, it takes about 3 weeks for my letters to Melody to arrive in Singapore. As much as servicemen longed for word from home, letters took a long time and sometimes arrived out of order. Nevertheless, the letters to and from home are an important documentation of the war.
As we often note when reading history, authors can take a fascinating event or period and suck the life out of it, or as Okerstrom does, pull you in and make you feel a part of the historical drama.
You can't see all of the pages I marked, but you can probably tell that I'd have trouble trying to include all of the information that gripped my interest in the pic I took of my copy--before I quit even trying to flag all the parts that intrigued me.
Following Dick Cole is an ideal way to look at the war in the Pacific and Asia because he was involved in so many important missions during the war--his first was the Doolittle Raid over Tokyo, but his time as a hump pilot and as an air commando part of Project 9 were also critically important roles. The information about the gliders was just one amazing element.
I knew very little about this portion of WWII, and so I would frequently be stunned at the difficulties and complications involved.
My admiration for the men involved and for Dennis R. Okerstrom for making the book such an informative and engrossing read is immense.
Dick Cole's War should be on the list for anyone interested in WWII and the Pacific arena.
Nonfiction. 2015. 336 pages.
Below is the front of the postcard I made for Chris as a thank you note--the message and correct postage are on the other side. I was pleased to have a few stamps that featured planes even if they were only for air mail.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and learned a great deal, not only about the famous Tokyo Raid with pilot Jimmy Doolittle and co-pilot Dick Cole, but about Hump Pilots, the CBI (China, Burma, India theater), the Air Commandos--and much more.
One poignant moment occurs when on Dec. 7, Cole writes his mother to say that he won't be home for Christmas after all. No need to say why leave has been canceled.
The problem with letters was a consistent one throughout the war. Longed for and appreciated and re-read, but not timely. Even today, it takes about 3 weeks for my letters to Melody to arrive in Singapore. As much as servicemen longed for word from home, letters took a long time and sometimes arrived out of order. Nevertheless, the letters to and from home are an important documentation of the war.
As we often note when reading history, authors can take a fascinating event or period and suck the life out of it, or as Okerstrom does, pull you in and make you feel a part of the historical drama.
You can't see all of the pages I marked, but you can probably tell that I'd have trouble trying to include all of the information that gripped my interest in the pic I took of my copy--before I quit even trying to flag all the parts that intrigued me.
Following Dick Cole is an ideal way to look at the war in the Pacific and Asia because he was involved in so many important missions during the war--his first was the Doolittle Raid over Tokyo, but his time as a hump pilot and as an air commando part of Project 9 were also critically important roles. The information about the gliders was just one amazing element.
I knew very little about this portion of WWII, and so I would frequently be stunned at the difficulties and complications involved.
My admiration for the men involved and for Dennis R. Okerstrom for making the book such an informative and engrossing read is immense.
Dick Cole's War should be on the list for anyone interested in WWII and the Pacific arena.
Nonfiction. 2015. 336 pages.
Below is the front of the postcard I made for Chris as a thank you note--the message and correct postage are on the other side. I was pleased to have a few stamps that featured planes even if they were only for air mail.
Monday, November 27, 2017
Crossing the Line by Kerry Wilkinson
NetGalley has offered two of Kerry Wilkinson's stand-alone psychological suspense novels that I read and enjoyed. I didn't review Two Sisters here, but I did review The Girl Who Came Back. When I realized that Wilkinson's police procedurals featuring DS Jessica Daniel were available through Kindle Unlimited, I went through them like candy.
There are ten books in this UK series, and Crossing the Line, is the eighth installment here in the U.S.
I like the complex characters who become more fully developed and interesting with each new book and the skillful and well-thought out plots that are fresh and original. Oh, and I should not fail to mention the dialog that feels natural and is often cleverly amusing.
Although the books can be read as stand-alones, this is a series that benefits from seeing how the dynamic of each plot influences and alters the characters. The series gains strength as Jessica evolves and adapts to each experience. The changes in the secondary characters are less profound, but they, too, feel rounded and genuine.
Twenty-five ago, the Stretford Slasher was convicted. When he dies in prison, the media note the occasion, but then several apparently random acts of violence occur in broad daylight that evoke some of the fear experienced twenty-five years earlier. The attacks are violent, but not deadly, and the police have difficulty making any connections between the targets--except for the fact that they are all disagreeable bullies. There are a couple of other secondary story lines as well that keep the pace moving.
While the book can function in isolation, it is the way the books build, one on another, that makes this series so interesting. I can't wait for the next one.
Read in Oct.; blog review scheduled for November 27.
NetGalley/Bookouture
Crime/Police Procedural. Dec. 12, 2017. Print length: 300 pages.
There are ten books in this UK series, and Crossing the Line, is the eighth installment here in the U.S.
I like the complex characters who become more fully developed and interesting with each new book and the skillful and well-thought out plots that are fresh and original. Oh, and I should not fail to mention the dialog that feels natural and is often cleverly amusing.
Although the books can be read as stand-alones, this is a series that benefits from seeing how the dynamic of each plot influences and alters the characters. The series gains strength as Jessica evolves and adapts to each experience. The changes in the secondary characters are less profound, but they, too, feel rounded and genuine.
Twenty-five ago, the Stretford Slasher was convicted. When he dies in prison, the media note the occasion, but then several apparently random acts of violence occur in broad daylight that evoke some of the fear experienced twenty-five years earlier. The attacks are violent, but not deadly, and the police have difficulty making any connections between the targets--except for the fact that they are all disagreeable bullies. There are a couple of other secondary story lines as well that keep the pace moving.
While the book can function in isolation, it is the way the books build, one on another, that makes this series so interesting. I can't wait for the next one.
Read in Oct.; blog review scheduled for November 27.
NetGalley/Bookouture
Crime/Police Procedural. Dec. 12, 2017. Print length: 300 pages.
Monday, November 20, 2017
First Bookplate and a Few Recent Reads
The first known printed bookplate and other examples of early proof of ownership.
It isn't that I haven't been reading, but most of my books are from NetGalley and won't be published until 2018, so I hold reviews.
Look for Me by Lisa Gardner (I like the D.D. Warren books that I've read and was pleased that Flora Dane was back in this one!)
The Undertaker's Daughter by Sara Blaedel (I've only read one of Blaedel's Louise Rick series, and I enjoyed it. But this is a stand-alone and this one takes place in the states, and I liked it even better.)
City of Endless Night by Preston & Child. (You know--Special Agent Pendergast and all kinds of weirdness. I may be getting a little tired of this series, but can never resist seeing what is happening to these characters--the ones who survive, that is.)
SINthetic by J.T. Nichols. (Synths were created to perform all the jobs humans despise; they have no rights; they are disposable. This one is pretty dark, but makes you think.)
I saw this quote recently and it certainly struck a chord with me:
Ready for Thanksgiving?
1480 |
The Undertaker's Daughter by Sara Blaedel (I've only read one of Blaedel's Louise Rick series, and I enjoyed it. But this is a stand-alone and this one takes place in the states, and I liked it even better.)
City of Endless Night by Preston & Child. (You know--Special Agent Pendergast and all kinds of weirdness. I may be getting a little tired of this series, but can never resist seeing what is happening to these characters--the ones who survive, that is.)
SINthetic by J.T. Nichols. (Synths were created to perform all the jobs humans despise; they have no rights; they are disposable. This one is pretty dark, but makes you think.)
I saw this quote recently and it certainly struck a chord with me:
Warning-- Dates on calendar are closer than they appear.
Ready for Thanksgiving?
Wednesday, November 08, 2017
The Whispering Room by Dean Koontz
I haven't read a Dean Koontz novel in years, but the blurb for The Whispering Room (Jane Hawk #2) caught my attention. Although I have not read The Silent Corner, which precedes TWR, Koontz includes enough background to make this an easy read.
TWR is a fast-paced, action-driven novel about conspiracies,
hi-jacked science, nanotechnology, and the lack of privacy that is now an ever-present part of the human condition.
Jane Hawk is a rogue FBI agent on the run, pursued by the very agencies people believe can keep them safe. The conspiracy involves the mega-wealthy and has devotees in many branches of government. Jane finds it difficult to find trustworthy allies; she has a few who are willing to protect her son and provide aide, but she needs someone who can expose the conspiracy.
Jane finds an unexpected ally in Luther Tillman, sheriff of a small town that has just experienced a deadly suicide attack. Luther can't understand why 40-year-old Cora suddenly becomes... not only willing to commit suicide, but willing to take dozens of innocents with her. After a government agent shuts down the investigation and Cora's house is burned down, Luther begins reading Cora's journals. Cora's repeated phrases about a spider in her brain and the phrase "Play Manchurian with me" set Luther on his own investigation.
Suicides, nanotechnology, and mind-control?
Is it scary? Yes. Believable? I'm not sure, but science can always be abused, and there are always people who think they know what is best for others. In a world where technology reveals everything about an individual's personal and financial life and there is no way to go completely off-grid because one way or another technology will find you, what if the next step is nanotechnology implanted in your brain?
Not a book of any depth, no fully developed characters, plenty of violence--The Whispering Room is guaranteed to make readers uneasy. TWR must be read for what it is--action and suspense, combined with paranoia-inducing fears about the future.
Koontz' clever use of The Manchurian Candidate was my favorite part of the novel.
Read in Sept. Blog review scheduled for Nov. 8
----
P.S. I came back to this scheduled review after reading an interview with Franklin Foer about his new book World Without Mind. Here is an excerpt from the interview:
Franklin Foer: Let’s get apocalyptic. I worry that we’re headed to a world of total surveillance—and that the presence of watchful eyes will inhibit us from thinking original, subversive thoughts. I worry that we’re outsourcing too many of our mental activities to machines—and these machines are run by a small handful of monopolistic corporations. I worry that we’re creating an economy that squeezes producers of knowledge—the journalists, the novelists, the essayists, who produce the words that help us make sense of the world. I worry that the big technology companies use their surveillance of us to create a portrait of our mind, and that they exploit their intimate knowledge of us to keep us clicking and watching. In short, I worry that we’re headed to a world without contemplation, a world lacking in originality and depth.
Check here for another interview with Mr. Foer.
While Mr. Foer's argument is not quite the same as the novel's premise, it is interesting. Some of Foer's concerns have botheredus me for some time, but we I have become pretty cocooned by Amazon, FB, and Google, relying on Google daily. It is difficult to let go of the conveniences provided...right?
Read in Sept. Blog review scheduled for Nov. 8.
NetGalley/Random House
Techno-thriller. Nov. 21, 2017. Print length: 528 pages.
TWR is a fast-paced, action-driven novel about conspiracies,
hi-jacked science, nanotechnology, and the lack of privacy that is now an ever-present part of the human condition.
Jane Hawk is a rogue FBI agent on the run, pursued by the very agencies people believe can keep them safe. The conspiracy involves the mega-wealthy and has devotees in many branches of government. Jane finds it difficult to find trustworthy allies; she has a few who are willing to protect her son and provide aide, but she needs someone who can expose the conspiracy.
Jane finds an unexpected ally in Luther Tillman, sheriff of a small town that has just experienced a deadly suicide attack. Luther can't understand why 40-year-old Cora suddenly becomes... not only willing to commit suicide, but willing to take dozens of innocents with her. After a government agent shuts down the investigation and Cora's house is burned down, Luther begins reading Cora's journals. Cora's repeated phrases about a spider in her brain and the phrase "Play Manchurian with me" set Luther on his own investigation.
Suicides, nanotechnology, and mind-control?
Is it scary? Yes. Believable? I'm not sure, but science can always be abused, and there are always people who think they know what is best for others. In a world where technology reveals everything about an individual's personal and financial life and there is no way to go completely off-grid because one way or another technology will find you, what if the next step is nanotechnology implanted in your brain?
Not a book of any depth, no fully developed characters, plenty of violence--The Whispering Room is guaranteed to make readers uneasy. TWR must be read for what it is--action and suspense, combined with paranoia-inducing fears about the future.
Koontz' clever use of The Manchurian Candidate was my favorite part of the novel.
Read in Sept. Blog review scheduled for Nov. 8
----
P.S. I came back to this scheduled review after reading an interview with Franklin Foer about his new book World Without Mind. Here is an excerpt from the interview:
Franklin Foer: Let’s get apocalyptic. I worry that we’re headed to a world of total surveillance—and that the presence of watchful eyes will inhibit us from thinking original, subversive thoughts. I worry that we’re outsourcing too many of our mental activities to machines—and these machines are run by a small handful of monopolistic corporations. I worry that we’re creating an economy that squeezes producers of knowledge—the journalists, the novelists, the essayists, who produce the words that help us make sense of the world. I worry that the big technology companies use their surveillance of us to create a portrait of our mind, and that they exploit their intimate knowledge of us to keep us clicking and watching. In short, I worry that we’re headed to a world without contemplation, a world lacking in originality and depth.
Check here for another interview with Mr. Foer.
While Mr. Foer's argument is not quite the same as the novel's premise, it is interesting. Some of Foer's concerns have bothered
Read in Sept. Blog review scheduled for Nov. 8.
NetGalley/Random House
Techno-thriller. Nov. 21, 2017. Print length: 528 pages.
Monday, November 06, 2017
The Perfect Victim by Corrie Jackson
Sophie Kent is a journalist whose friend and colleague Charlie Swift is a murder suspect. Charlie and his wife Emily appear to be a loving couple, and Emily, whose blog and instagram sites have a huge following, wants their marriage to be as perfect-picture as her fantasy.
Sophie desperately wants Charlie to be innocent, but as he fails to come forward and details accumulate, both Sophie, friend and confidante, and Emily, the steadfast wife, begin to see fault-lines opening everywhere.
Intense and suspenseful, I didn't see where this one was going and had a number of surprises along the way. Corrie Jackson deftly moves back and forth from the present, to the weeks before the murder, and to Charlie's childhood. This could have been complicated and confusing, but somehow worked.
The Perfect Victim keeps you wondering exactly who the perfect victim is. I changed my mind more than once. Jackson's twists and turns kept me enthralled.
NetGalley/Bonnier Zaffre
Crime/Psychological Suspense. Nov. 16, 2017. Print length: 448 pages.
Sophie desperately wants Charlie to be innocent, but as he fails to come forward and details accumulate, both Sophie, friend and confidante, and Emily, the steadfast wife, begin to see fault-lines opening everywhere.
Intense and suspenseful, I didn't see where this one was going and had a number of surprises along the way. Corrie Jackson deftly moves back and forth from the present, to the weeks before the murder, and to Charlie's childhood. This could have been complicated and confusing, but somehow worked.
The Perfect Victim keeps you wondering exactly who the perfect victim is. I changed my mind more than once. Jackson's twists and turns kept me enthralled.
NetGalley/Bonnier Zaffre
Crime/Psychological Suspense. Nov. 16, 2017. Print length: 448 pages.
Sunday, November 05, 2017
Serendipity
Sometimes serendipity is a quiet coincidence, followed by another coincidence. Sometimes it snowballs.
I recently read I Know My Name by C.J. Cooke in which four-year-old Max wears Gruffalo pajamas and insists that his father read him The Gruffalo each night. (I Know My Name is a psychological mystery, not a children's book.)
I am always intrigued with the titles and illustrations of children's books that I see on various blogs and on book review sites. Gruffalo sounded familiar, but I had no picture of a Gruffalo in mind, I just liked the kid in his favorite pajamas who loved the book. So I looked up The Gruffalo, written by Julia Donaldson and illustrated by Axel Scheffler.
A day or so later, I was looking at postage stamps that intrigued me (I love mail art and whimsical stamps). I saw the following bird stamp on Pinterest, which led me to this article. Axel Scheffler had created the delightful images for The Royal Mail's 2012 Christmas Stamps!
Huh? Axek Scheffler illustrated Julia Donaldson's The Gruffalo! The stamps I'd found were serendipitously connected to a small detail in a recent novel.
Then a couple of days later, I was looking at the article again and checked Axel Scheffler's website and discovered he had illustrated a cover for T.S. Eliot's Ole Possum's Book of Practical Cats, one of my favorite books of all time.
My copy is the one illustrated by Edward Gorey, but I love Scheffler's version as well. So...I looked at other Scheffler books and found that I had a copy of Room on the Broom, also written by Julia Donaldson and illustrated by Scheffler. I bought a copy of Room on the Broom for Bryce Eleanor about five or six years ago. I had it out for Halloween as inspiration for October mail art, but didn't use it. Maybe I will next year, after finding all these serendipitous connections.
And since I love letters, postage stamps, and mail art, I think I want to read about Postman Bear, too!
I recently read I Know My Name by C.J. Cooke in which four-year-old Max wears Gruffalo pajamas and insists that his father read him The Gruffalo each night. (I Know My Name is a psychological mystery, not a children's book.)
I am always intrigued with the titles and illustrations of children's books that I see on various blogs and on book review sites. Gruffalo sounded familiar, but I had no picture of a Gruffalo in mind, I just liked the kid in his favorite pajamas who loved the book. So I looked up The Gruffalo, written by Julia Donaldson and illustrated by Axel Scheffler.
A day or so later, I was looking at postage stamps that intrigued me (I love mail art and whimsical stamps). I saw the following bird stamp on Pinterest, which led me to this article. Axel Scheffler had created the delightful images for The Royal Mail's 2012 Christmas Stamps!
Huh? Axek Scheffler illustrated Julia Donaldson's The Gruffalo! The stamps I'd found were serendipitously connected to a small detail in a recent novel.
Then a couple of days later, I was looking at the article again and checked Axel Scheffler's website and discovered he had illustrated a cover for T.S. Eliot's Ole Possum's Book of Practical Cats, one of my favorite books of all time.
And since I love letters, postage stamps, and mail art, I think I want to read about Postman Bear, too!
Without ever paying attention to the name of the illustrator,
I have consistently been attracted to Alex Scheffler's art.
Saturday, November 04, 2017
The Curious Affair of the Witch at Wayside Cross by Lisa Tuttle
The Curious Affair of the Witch at Wayside Cross is the second in the Jesperson & Lane series. The first in the series (The Curious Case of the Somnambulist & the Psychic Thief reviewed here) had a great set-up, and I remember being pleased and expectant as I read the first few pages, but I ended up being disappointed. "Maybe," I thought, "the next one will be better. The author will have a sense of direction and the characters will emerge as more than pawns."
Alas, not so. Once again, an interesting beginning full of all kinds of possibilities and intriguing characters. Once again, a failure to take advantage of what worked and instead taking a ridiculous direction that seemed almost a spur-of-the-moment inclusion.
Jesperson is controlling, holding back information and failing to keep Lane fully apprised of his theories or knowledge. Lane is ostensibly a partner in this psychic detective agency, but her purpose is largely to give a first person account of the cases they encounter. Rather than a partner as indicated on the calling card--Lane is a sort of attendant, even though her role in events is more detailed.
The best characters in the book, the ones with such potential, are the three sisters at Wayside Cross.
Read in August; blog review scheduled for Nov. 4.
NetGalley/Random House
Mystery/Supernatural. Nov. 28, 2017.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)