Thursday, December 17, 2015




Coal River

by Ellen Marie Wiseman

Coal River



            Since reading Wiseman’s novel, What She Left Behind, I have been eagerly anticipating her next novel. Coal River has a great setting and premise. Unfortunately, it never lives up to its potential.

            The coal industry in the early 1900’s in Pennsylvania was a time of forced child labor, little to no safety, and mine owned stores. Into this setting, Wiseman drops nineteen year old Emma, an orphan coming to live with her aunt and uncle. Her uncle, an evil little man, is a supervisor in the mines and lives very well. Emma’s aunt is a flighty, nervous caricature who is never fully developed. Predictably, Emma is horrified with the conditions of the mine workers, children, etc. and sets out to change matters. The rest of the story is just too predictable. Even a secret revealed at the end cannot save this novel.

            I wanted to like this novel. I slogged my way through it. I put it down, I picked it back up. I hoped it would get better. It never did. The characters in Coal River are just too one dimensional, and unlikeable. Emma in particular comes off as dull, whiney and weak. The bad guys are spectacularly bad, and the good guys are saints with halos.

            Let’s hope Wiseman’s next novel is better. Leave this one at the library.


Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Wednesday, December 16, 2015




The Drifter
by Nicholas Petrie

The Drifter
            In his first novel, Petrie has created an interesting protagonist in Peter Ash, a veteran suffering from PTSA that manifests itself in extreme claustrophobia. His solution; live outdoors in the wilderness. When Ash receives word that his friend and former sergeant Jimmy has committed suicide, he feels that he has somehow failed his friend. He should have visited, called. Ash’s solution to his guilt is a visit to Jimmy’s widow offering to help with home repairs. When Ash finds a suitcase filled with money and C4 under the porch he is repairing, he wonders just what his old friend was involved in. When Ash traces his friend’s last days, he finds that all is not as it appears, and finding out the truth just may get him killed.

            Billed as a thriller, this book does not quite live up to that. It is, instead, an excellent character driven book with plenty of suspense. This is not a page turner kind of book. However, it is a very good first book with excellent character development.  I will be looking for more from this author in the future.

            Borrow this book from your local library and watch for more from this author.


Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015







The Bone Labyrinth

by James Rollins

The Bone Labyrinth (Sigma Force, #11)



            James Rollins has the ability to blend an edge-of-your-seat thriller and cutting edge technology (with a touch of sci-fi thrown in) into a white knuckle ride that will leave you breathless from start to finish.

            The 11th installment in his Sigma Force series deals with two geneticists: twin sisters, Lena and Maria Crandall who are researching the origins of human intelligence. When one sister goes missing, Sigma Force is tasked with finding her. On the other side of the globe, the other sister is attacked. What is so important about the sisters research that someone is willing to kill for it, and who is that someone?

            Rollins offers the reader a heady brew of ancient mysticism, the lost continent of Atlantis, the bible, the lost minutes of a moon landing recording, numerology and some giant hybrid apes. If this sounds too far-fetched, rest assured that James Rollins knows how to make all these elements work together to create a wholly plausible story.

            Buy this book. Turn off your phone, tell your family you’re out of town and prepare to lose a weekend to this excellent thriller.

Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.


Friday, November 6, 2015


The Hours Count


by Jillian Cantor

The Hours Count
          

            The Rosenbergs, Julius and Ethel, cold war spies who betrayed their country to the Soviets and were executed, guilty beyond all doubt of espionage. Or were they? Cantor’s novel uses the voice of a fictional neighbor of the Rosenbergs, Millie Stein to relate the story that shocked a nation, and resulted in the execution of both Julius and Ethel.  

            It is Millie’s voice that shows us who Ethel, and to a lesser extent Julius, Rosenberg were. They were the neighbors down the hall, the friends Millie came to love, the friends who introduced some light and gaiety into Millie’s life. Ethel was the mother of two boys who joined Millie and her son on outings to the park. The Rosenbergs were friends, lovers and parents. Were they spies? Maybe, maybe not. In Cantor’s capable hands, the Rosenbergs are many things, but most importantly, perhaps, they are human. They become someone who you might know, and like. They are no longer some heinous couple who may have betrayed their country, no longer an evil pair of spies whose names conjure up revulsion.  

            While this is a work of fiction, the historical details are, for the most part, very accurate. Using Millie to tell the story of the Rosenbergs allows the reader a glimpse into who this couple was, how they lived and the distinct possibility that Ethel was innocent. The book also does an excellent job of giving the reader a glimpse into what it was like to live in that time period, from the ‘killer fog’ to the suspicion that McCarthy ignited and ferociously fed. It was this climate of fear, that one’s neighbors might be communists and spies, that led to the conviction and execution of what was quite possibly at least one innocent person. Cantor shines a light into a period of xenophobia that destroyed many lives, while accomplishing little. Perhaps this is a lesson we as a society have yet to learn.


                Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Wednesday, August 12, 2015



Radiant Angel
by Nelson DeMille

Radiant Angel (John Corey, #7)


            The seventh book in DeMille’s John Corey series is a breath of fresh air after last year’s, in my opinion, flop, The Panther. Being a longtime fan of both the author and the Corey series, I was afraid the series had run its course. I can happily report that the real John Corey is back and in fine form in Radiant Angel.

            In Angel, Corey has been relegated to a dead end and boring job with the Diplomatic Surveillance Corps keeping track of Russian diplomats. It’s a job with little responsibility other than to follow the diplomat he’s assigned to, and report in. Nothing heroic or taxing here. Right. John Corey has never simply followed orders, nor has he ever been accused of being trusting. When Corey’s instincts tell him that attending a simple weekend party is not all his assigned diplomat is doing, he throws the rule book out the window and proceeds according to John’s Rules. What follows is a roller coaster ride that will keep readers on the edge of their seat, and up til the wee hours of the morning.


            Buy this book and settle in for the kind of great thriller that fans of DeMille have come to expect. John Corey is back! 

Tuesday, August 4, 2015




Darkness the Color of Snow

by Thomas Cobb

Darkness the Color of Snow: A Novel


            How can an entire life unravel in a split second? Is it possible for a single moment in time to cast out a ripple effect that grows from a tiny shimmer to a tidal wave that crashes and destroys everything in its path? Could it have been stopped, contained? Was there ever any choice?

            At the heart of Cobb’s book is young rookie police office Ronnie Forbert and one fateful night that changed his life forever. A routine traffic stop leaves Forbert’s old friend Matt Leferiere dead. Was it an accident, or did Ronnie kill his old friend? The Chief of Police stands by Ronnie, while the dead boy’s parents accuse Ronnie of deliberately killing their son. As the investigation proceeds, the local media uncovers a witness who swears that Officer Forbert killed Leferiere. Did a witness actually see this, or is this a misguided attempt to grab five minutes of fame? What really happened that night? When a political firestorm erupts, it becomes clear that the truth may no longer matter, and that justice is just a word.

            Cobb does a masterful job of delving into small town politics where everyone knows everyone, slights are never forgotten, and grudges die hard. What makes this novel shine is the author’s ability to bring the town and its people alive. These are not mere characters on a page. They become people the reader likes, loathes, understands and ultimately wants to see redeemed.

This is a book to read slowly and savor. Buy this book and prepare to be immersed in Cobb’s small town of Lydell, New York.

Scheduled for publication August 18th, 2015

Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Monday, August 3, 2015




Last Bus to Wisdom              
by Ivan Doig

            
Last Bus to Wisdom



           This delightful novel is narrated by twelve year old Donal Cameron who relates his summer adventures when he is shipped off to Wisconsin after his grandmother becomes ill. Donal’s grandmother needs an operation and has no choice but to send Donal on the ‘dog bus’ (Greyhound) to stay with her sister in Wisconsin. Having lived his entire young life in Montana, Donal is ill prepared for city life, or for his Aunt Kate. As he tries to ‘get on Aunt Kate’s good side’ Donal quickly realizes that she has no good side. Donal’s only ally is his Uncle Herman, a man cowed by Aunt Kate, who retreats to his backyard greenhouse whenever possible. When things come to a head, Aunt Kate decides to ship Donal back to Montana, and the fate of an orphanage. As Donal boards the dog bus, he is shocked to find Uncle Herman has joined him, and together, the two are running away. What follows is hilarious, heart breaking, and a wonderful story of what family is all about.

            Unlike many novels narrated by a young child, this novel doesn’t try to give Donal adult wisdom. In fact, he is very much a young boy on the cusp of figuring out who he is. Uncle Herman is a delight. His perspective on life is at times hysterical and his love for Donal is real.

            A great read, Last Bus to Wisdom is filled with characters you will love, route for, and loath. It is a rollicking good ride on the dog bus.


            Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Wednesday, July 15, 2015




From Bruges with Love
by Pieter Aspe

From Bruges with Love (The Pieter Van In Mysteries)


                When a young girl discovers a skeleton on the property her family is renovating, Asst. Commissioner Pieter Van In is charged with finding out who buried the body decades ago. As Van In looks for records of the previous property owners for a clue to the skeleton’s identity, he finds a disturbing history of prostitution, drugs and pedophilia going back decades involving some very important government officials. When he is cautioned to proceed carefully, Van In chooses to do the opposite, and in the process almost costs a young female police officer her life.

            This is the third of Aspe’s Pieter Van In series to be translated to English. The book is filled with a cast of quirky characters, however it takes a while for this book to really take off and become interesting. Part of the problem in my opinion is with the translation. There are so many characters whose last name begins with a V that it is difficult to differentiate who is who in the book. Add to this the fact that the average English reader is not familiar with Belgian names and it becomes tedious to remember which ‘V’ character is which. At one point, I made a cheat sheet list of which V character was which.

            For all its translation issues, this is still a very good book. The characters are flawed, misguided, and truly evil; but they are believable. Bruges with Love builds slowly and steadily in intensity until it captures the reader. With a couple of wonderful twists at the end, it’s a worthwhile read.
            I look forward to more of this author’s works. Hopefully the translation issues will become less pronounced with each new book.


Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Monday, July 13, 2015




The Devil’s Bridge
by Linda Fairstein

Devil's Bridge (Alexandra Cooper, #17)

                The seventeenth installment in Fairstein’s Alexandra Cooper series is a wonderful departure from her previous novels. In The Devil’s Bridge, the story is told almost exclusively from the perspective of Cooper’s new love interest, and old friend, Detective Mike Chapman. Fairstein shows a different Alexandra Cooper, one seen through the eyes of others.

            The novel opens with a successful cyber-attack on the files of Cooper. Files that contain everything about a current case; a case that is now horribly compromised. When Cooper turns up missing, the police wonder who orchestrated this attack, and did they also kidnap Cooper.

            Devil’s Bridge also shows a side of Mike Chapman that is new. When Cooper goes missing, it is not the detective in Chapman who works the case, but the lover who is distraught and not thinking clearly. As one clue leads to another, we are left wondering who will eventually find Cooper, the detective or the lover, and what price will he pay?

            This is a wonderful addition to the Cooper series. While it is a mystery, it is also an excellent character study of Cooper and Chapman. First time readers as well as fans who have followed this series will enjoy the different perspective on these two characters.

            Scheduled for publication on August 11th, this is a book to buy and enjoy.


Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Friday, July 10, 2015





Pretty Little Things
by Lori Radar-Day


Little Pretty Things


            Two young women, star athletes in high school, best friends who share everything, or do they?  Radar-Day’s latest book focuses on two young women, Juliet Townsend and Madeleine Bell. They were best friends and track stars in high school, always finishing first and second in every race. Madeleine was the star with Juliet always just one step behind in life as in their races. So why did Madeleine (Maddy) take off right after graduation without a word to anyone, even Juliet?

            Ten years later, Juliet is still living in the same small Indiana town, working as a house keeper in a run-down motel. It is an existence with little future and no surprises, until the night Maddy walks into the motel. Well dressed and sporting a large diamond ring, Maddy is clearly living better than Juliet. Theirs is a brief, tense reunion that evening. The next morning, Maddy is found hanging from the balcony of an upper room at the motel. The police’s chief suspect: Juliet. As Juliet works to clear herself of Maddy’s murder, she finds a layer of secrecy and evil that someone will do anything to protect.

            Radar-Day does a good job of capturing small town life where everyone knows everyone. Less successful is her portrayal of some of the characters. It is difficult to believe that the same petty rivalries would exist between adult women ten years after high school. At times, some of the characters act as if they were still teenagers. While this does detract somewhat from the story, it does not sink it. Pretty Little Things is still a good read. However, this is not really a suspense novel since the reader (at least this one) will easily figure out the many clues of who killed Maddy and what led to her death.

            All in all, a good entertaining read. Borrow this from your library.


                        Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015





The Forgotten Room

by Lincoln Child

The Forgotten Room (Jeremy Logan #4)


         Jeremy Logan is not your typical investigator, he’s an enigmalogist, an investigator of events that have no obvious explanation. In Child’s third novel to feature Logan, his expertise is requested at an exclusive think tank in Rhode Island. One of the researchers has seemingly gone mad and killed himself in a particularly gruesome and graphic manner. It is Logan’s job to find out what happened to precipitate this death. In the course of his investigation, Logan discovers a hidden room, long forgotten by the current staff, where the mysterious Project S was conducted decades ago. What was Project S, and why did all the files on it disappear? As more researchers become delusional and attempt suicide, Logan needs to find the answers fast.

            What makes Child’s novels so good is his ability to fuse mystery and science in wholly believable story lines. The science never slows down the breakneck speed of his novels. Instead, it only enhances the story line.  The Forgotten Room doesn’t disappoint on either.

            This is a novel for fans of mysteries, suspense and/or science. 

Monday, May 18, 2015




Gathering Prey

by John Sandford

Gathering Prey (Lucas Davenport, #25)


            The 25th in Sandford’s prey series focuses on Lucas Davenport and his adopted daughter, Lettie. Fans of this series will be pleased to see Lettie getting more involved in Davenport’s job.

            The book opens with Lettie meeting a couple of Travelers in California where she’s attending college. Travelers are people who move from city to city, panhandling, and generally causing little or no harm. Lettie is interested in their story and gives them her phone number when she finds they may be coming to Minnesota that summer. When Lettie receives a phone call later that summer telling her that one of the Travelers is missing, she enlists Davenport’s help. A skeptical Davenport agrees to help the Traveler but believes his daughter is being played. He couldn’t be further from the truth. The Traveler’s story will lead Davenport and Lettie into a world of evil they could never have imagined.

            It’s amazing that after 25 books in this series, Sandford can still keep readers on the edge of their seat. This latest appears to lay the foundation for a big change, which of course, I won’t reveal. It’s another Prey book that you will lose sleep over.


            Now, Mr. Sandford, could you write a little faster? Please? 

Thursday, May 14, 2015




The Ice Twins

by S. K. Tremayne

            The Ice Twins


           The premise of this book sounded so intriguing. A young British couple, Angus and Sarah Moorcraft, tries to cope with the death of one of their twin daughters, Kristie. A year later, the surviving twin announces that she is actually Lydia, the twin that was thought to be dead. In the midst of this turmoil, the husband inherits an island in Scotland from his grandmother. Hoping a change will help them heal, the family moves to this tiny island. Far from helping, the move only serves to compound their problems, as Kristie/Lydia becomes more and more disturbed and Angus and Sarah’s marriage fractures.

            I wanted to love this book after reading the synopsis. I really did. But this novel has so many problems. First and foremost, the characters are so unlikeable. Sarah is impulsive, shallow and just wholly unbelievable as a mother. Angus is a mystery throughout the book. He is at times portrayed as a loving father, an alcoholic, an uncaring brute and an indifferent husband. The surviving twin, whomever she is, is in need of serious psychological help. Which she never gets. The book moves very slowly. I would not call it a suspense novel at all. By the end, which is so anti-climactic as to become almost a clique, it’s hard to care what happens to this family.

            There are so many good suspense novels out there, why bother reading a bad one. This one deserves a pass.

            Scheduled for publications May 19th, 2015.


            Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Friday, May 8, 2015



Memory Man
by David Baldacci          
           
Memory Man


Amos Decker’s life has had two defining moments: when he died twice on a football field, and when his wife and daughter are murdered. The first left him with a mind that recalls everything that happens to him. The second destroyed his life.

Over a year after the murder of his family, their deaths remain unsolved, until a man walks into the police station and confesses to the murders. As Decker tries to come to grips with this, a school shooting paralyzes the town. Decker, now a private investigator is asked by his old boss to assist the police in finding the school shooter. Decker soon realizes that the shooting and his family’s murder are connected, and the connection is Decker.

You have to wonder where the fertile mind of David Baldacci comes up with his characters. Most of them are not someone you would meet on the street, or ever know. Almost all of them have their quirks, and his latest is no exception. Amos Decker is an obese ex-detective, working as a private investigator and living, just barely, in a room at a local motel. As the main character in what is being billed as a new series by Baldacci, Amos Decker is the antithesis of a hero. He’s anti-social, lacks empathy and in general doesn’t like being around people. In fact, it could be argued that he displays some Asperger symptoms. Yet, in spite of Decker’s flaws, Baldacci manages to make him a highly likable character.

Memory Man may be Baldacci’s best novel yet. This is a novel that grips the reader early and never lets up until the final crescendo. I suggest not planning on having a life while reading this, because you won’t. Yes, it’s that good.

Buy this book and plan to lose a weekend.


Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Monday, April 20, 2015


The Patriot Threat
by Steve Berry


The Patriot Threat (Cotton Malone, #10)



            The tenth book in Berry's Cotton Malone series, this is another hit. As in all his Malone books, this one is carefully researched, using real facts to base his ‘what if’ scenario on.

            Cotton Malone is working as a contract worker for the Magellan Billet on a routine assignment to track and observe a payment being made. As anyone who has read Steve Berry knows, there is nothing routine if Malone is involved! What starts out simple, quickly turns complex as Malone encounters a couple of tax protesters on the run meeting with deposed North Korean leader Kim Yong Jim. Kim is intent on wreaking havoc on the U.S. to regain his country’s leadership. His weapon: proof that the 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was never legally ratified. If this is true, then all the Federal Taxes collected are illegal and the monies due back to the people. Additionally, no new taxes could be collected until a new Amendment is properly ratified bringing the U.S. economy to a screeching halt. Cotton Malone’s mission becomes to stop this proof, if it exists, from falling into Kim’s hands.

In Berry’s hands this ‘what if’ scenario is brilliant. His ability to use actual historical facts to create terrifying scenarios is what makes his books so believable. In the Patriot Threat he succeeds admirably.


Buy the book and buckle in for a terrifyingly plausible thrill ride. 

Wednesday, April 15, 2015



At The Water’s Edge
by Sarah Gruen


 At the Water's Edge: A Novel

            Gruen’s latest novel, set during WWII tells the story of three vacuous socialites who travel from Philadelphia to Scotland in search of proof of the Loch Ness monster.

Madeline (Maddie) Hyde, her husband Ellis and their friend Hank embark on an ill-advised voyage to Scotland despite the danger from Nazi submarines. Why? Well, apparently a night of drunken revelry by the trio embarrasses Ellis’s father, who then cuts off all of Ellis’s money. Since Ellis is a vapid twit with no income, no job, and therefore no hope of obtaining money other than from his father, he’s in trouble. He needs to get back into daddy’s good graces. What to do, what to do.

Many years previously Ellis’s father discovered and photographed the Loch Ness monster but was accused of faking the photos. Ellis decides, in a eureka, moment to prove his father was correct. Surely this will redeem him in daddy’s eyes and thus restore his funds. All will be right with the world and the trio can go back to leading their insipid, wasteful lives.

Are you confused or simply don’t care at this point? I slogged through this book thinking that surely, surely it would get better. It did not. Billed as an historical novel, it has very little history in it. WW II was not even a backdrop to the novel. At several points in the novel the narrative would come to a screeching halt while Gruen threw in a paragraph or two about the war. It was as if the author thought, ‘oh, haven’t written anything about the war, better put something in here.’

None of the main characters in this novel are likable. None. Maddie is a pathetic lapdog to both her husband and Hank. Ellis is just a whiney brute. Hank is the best of the lot, and he’s a drunken womanizer. There is a hint that the relationship between Ellis and Hank is more than just friendship. The only redeeming thing in this novel are a few of the minor characters.

Pass on this book. There are too many great books out there to waste time reading this one.

Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Tuesday, April 14, 2015




The Bullet
by Mary Louise Kelly


 The Bullet

What if during a routine medical exam you were informed you had a bullet lodged in your neck. What if you’ve never been shot? You would believe it was a medical error, a funny story to tell family, friends and at parties. That’s the reaction of Caroline Cashion, a thirty-seven year old professor of French literature. In fact, she’s having dinner with her parents that evening. They’ll all get a good laugh out of it. Except, Caroline’s parents don’t laugh. They get very quiet, and in the blink of an eye, Caroline learns she isn’t who she thinks she is. In fact, most of her life has been a lie. Kelly takes this premise and runs with it at breakneck speed, crafting a book that will keep you up at night.  

During the course of the novel, Caroline transforms into a woman who directs her life, rather than simply letting it happen to her, as she sets out to find out the truth of who she really is. It is Kelly’s ability to make this alteration in Caroline’s life believable that makes this novel work. The characters in The Bullet are well developed, even the minor ones. Yet, this does not slow the pace of the novel at all. The unique premise of this novel could have failed. Kelly makes it succeed admirably. There are more twists and turns in this book than in a Grand Prix race.

   This book gets a solid 4 stars, maybe 4.5. Buy this book with one cautionary note: don’t start it late at night and don’t blame me when you can’t put it down.


            Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Thursday, April 9, 2015





The Safe Room
by B. A. Shapiro


The Safe Room 
          
            The Safe Room is two parallel stories. The first, told through her diary, is that of Sarah Harden, the daughter of a Massachusetts abolitionist whose home is a stop on the Underground Railroad.  The second story is of Lee Seymour, the modern day descendant of Sarah. Lee is helping her grandmother rehab the ancestral home Hayden House to be included on the Harriet Tubman Network to Freedom Park.

            Sarah’s diary details the attitudes, prejudices and times she and her father live in. It is also a chronicle of her affair with a runaway slave hidden in Hayden house and the consequences of that affair.

            Lee’s story of rehabbing Hayden House becomes a search for more of the history of her family as events come to light that have been hidden for over a century. As Lee delves deeper into her family’s history she begins to think she’s hearing ghost. Then she sees one.

            Billed as a paranormal suspense, this is absolutely not a book I would normally choose to read. Actually, I only read it because I received an invitation from the publisher to review an ARC copy.

            This is a really good book. The diary of Sarah Harden is worth the read in and of itself. When Lee begins hearing noises and actually seeing a ghost, Shapiro pulls this off so well that it’s not at all unbelievable. The alternating narrative between Sarah and Lee’s story is also very well done. Novels that jump back and forth in time can sometimes be confusing and not cohesive. Not so with The Safe Room.

            This is a book that fans of historical fiction and mysteries will enjoy. The paranormal parts do not detract from it in any way.


            Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Wednesday, April 8, 2015





Endangered
by C. J. Box

Endangered (Joe Pickett, #15)

            The 15th installment in Box’s Joe Pickett series is a good, solid story. Joe’s ward, 18 year April, has run off with a rodeo rider. Not just any rider, but a local boy that Joe intensely dislikes. Dallas Cates is a local boy, a rodeo champion, and the youngest son of a family that Joe suspects of breaking the law frequently. Joe’s concern for April proves well founded when she is found alongside a rural road, badly beaten and barely alive. Who beat April? Dallas or someone else? Joe plans on finding out and quite possibly meting out his own justice.

            This novel differs from the last few novels in the series since Joe’s friend Nate Romanowski does not figure as prominently as he has. I believe this is a nice change and allows the story to move in some different directions.

            Box does a good job of character development in all his novels without sacrificing the fast pace readers come to expect in this genre.

            Borrow this book from your library for a quick enjoyable read. 

Friday, March 13, 2015




The Dream Lover: A Novel of George Sand
by Elizabeth Berg      

    The Dream Lover: A Novel of George Sand  
            Elizabeth Berg’s newest book is a fictionalized story of the life of George Sand. Told in first person narrative, the story documents a woman who was perhaps the most unconventional person in her day.  This is a fabulous book, classic Elizabeth Berg.

            I confess to not knowing anything about George Sand before reading Berg’s novel. Born Amantine Lucile Aurore Dupin in 1797 in Paris, her parents were a French lieutenant from the aristocracy and his courtesan lover whom he married. This unusual beginning for the young Aurore, as she was called, was to set the tone for her entire life. While Aurone/Sands did marry and have children, she also left her husband, built a successful career as a writer and sued her husband to get her fortune back. She wore men’s clothing, smoked in public and took multiple lovers without apology. A truly gifted writer, Sands was a woman who was centuries ahead of her time in advocating for women’s rights.

It is Berg’s ability to bring this complicated and unorthodox woman to life that makes this novel shine. This is a huge, luscious novel to be read slowly and savored.  

Victor Hugo said this about George Sands upon her death: “George Sand was an “idea.” She has been released from the flesh, and now is free. She is dead, and now is living.”
In The Dream Lover, Elizabeth Berg has indeed set Sands free and she is once again living.

Scheduled for publication on April 7th, this is a book to buy, read and then read again.

Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Wednesday, March 4, 2015



The Night Crew

by Brian Haig

The Night Crew

            Just when I had given up on ever seeing Sean Drummond again, Haig returns with a new novel, and it may be his best yet.

            This novel again pairs Lt. Colonel Drummond with his old law school rival, Katherine Carlson. First appearing in Mortal Allies, Carlson and Drummond do not play well together. In The Night Crew they are the co-council of a young female army soldier accused with committing atrocities against Iraqi prisoners in Iraq. To further complicate their defense are pictures of the atrocities. Lots and lots of pictures.

            As they interview the other four defendants in the case, a picture of depravity emerges that Drummond wonders how they can defend against. While Carlson sees this case as a chance to put the Army on trial, Drummond begins to sense there is more to this case. With key witnesses dead and documents suddenly missing, Drummond believes someone is covering up. The question is who, and what.

            Haig’s books are always good, but he has outdone himself with The Night Crew. His characters face moral ambiguities that are all too plausible and real. Well done, Mr. Haig.

            With an expected publication date of March 10th, this is a book to buy and lose sleep over.  


          Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review. 

Wednesday, February 25, 2015




Motive    
     
by Jonathan Kellerman

 Motive (Alex Delaware, #30)

                Motive is the latest installment in Kellerman’s Alex Delaware series. It opens with the murder of a young woman in her apartment. The aberration is that her table has been set up post crime with a dinner for two. When another woman is murdered and her table for two is set, the case moves into Dr. Delaware’s area of expertise: motive.

                This novel is classic Kellerman. It’s a fast paced story that is a quick enjoyable read. There are plenty of red herrings along the way. In fact, Kellerman is known for this. He throws out red herrings like a crazed jester throwing beads at a Mardi Gras parade. I know this. I expect this. Every time I read a Kellerman novel, I have a conversation with myself. “You know he’s going to try to lead you down the garden path, right? Yep. You’re not going to fall for all those false clues, right? Nope.” Of course, I do fall for his misdirections and slight of hand. I don’t know why I even bother.


                For fans of Kellermans, you will not be disappointed. If you’ve never read this author, what are you waiting for?

Tuesday, February 24, 2015



The Forever Bridge

by T. Greenwood

             The Forever Bridge

            Set in a small town in Vermont, The Forever Bridge begins with a storm that fractures a family and ends with a storm that holds the possibility of healing that fracture.

            Sylvie is a woman who can no longer face the world after the death of her son in an accident. For two years she has closeted herself in her home believing the world to be a dangerous place.

            Ruby is Sylvie’s eleven year old daughter. For her, the accident took not only her brother, but also her mother. Living with her father, Ruby longs for her mother. Alternating between pity and anger, Ruby tries to navigate the mine field that is her mother’s world.

            Nessa was a throw away child. Now seventeen and pregnant, she longs for the only thing she has ever wanted; a home. Returning to Vermont to find her mother, she carries secrets that could destroy some lives and heal others.

            These three lives are on a collision course that will explode one night as a hurricane bears down on their small town.

            Beautifully written, The Forever Bridge may just be Greenwood’s best novel to date. Her books are always a joyous, sad, funny, heart breaking, lush, barren and thought provoking examinations of relationships. This book is no exception.

            If you've read T. Greenwood’s novels before, you will love this book. If not, you're in for a treat. A must buy.


Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review. 

Thursday, February 12, 2015




The Nightingale

by Kristin Hannah

 The Nightingale

            An epic novel that spans over 50 years, this is beyond a doubt Hannah’s finest book to date. Hannah is at the height of her ability on this one, and it is impressive.

            Set in France during WWII, the book follows two sisters, Vianne and Isabelle, ordinary French women who experience the evil, desperation and desolation of war in occupied France. Vianne, the elder sister, believes that if she keeps her head down and follows the rules the Germans impose, all will be well. Isabelle has seen the evil of the German army and believes that resistance is the only choice.  Each of the sister’s attitudes not only shape their choices and change their lives, but will affect many others, both in the present and in the future.

            The book moves from the present day to the past in the two sisters voices. Vianne and Isabelle in the past, and one of the sisters in the present. It is not until the end that the present tense sister’s identity is revealed.

            It is impossible to read this novel and not loose oneself in it. There is just so much to this book: love, loss, beauty, evil, horror, courage and hope.

            Hannah’s opening line to this novel sums it up best: ‘In love we find out who we want to be; in war we find out who we are.”


            Buy this book for yourself, your friends, anyone who enjoys an epic read of the first quality.

Tuesday, February 3, 2015




The Great Zoo of China
by Matthew Reilly

 The Great Zoo of China
Think Jurassic Park with dragons and you have Reilly’s latest book. Just as the dinosaurs run amuck in Jurassic Park, so do Reilly’s dragons. However, Reilly takes this idea and goes far beyond expectations.

The book begins with a media tour of a fantastical zoo, amusement park, vacation destination spot the Chinese government has been building in secret for over 40 years. Of course, the tour goes horribly awry very quickly. That’s when the fun begins!

Led by a female protagonist, CJ Cameron, the cast of characters includes a host of Chinese officials, technicians, a U.S. ambassador, scientists and dragons, dragons, dragons. Lots of dragons of varying sizes, shapes, colors and abilities.

What makes this book work so well, is the author’s ability to make the existence of dragons in the modern world seem so believable. Whatever objection your mind can conjure up, Reilly has an answer to, and that answer is very plausible.

The Great Zoo of China is a thriller, a fantasy and a sci-fi novel all rolled into one really good read. Even for readers who are not fantasy or sci-fi readers (I count myself among them) this is a novel that will be enjoyed by most.

                Buy this book, buckle your seat belt, and let Matthew Reilly take you on one fantastic ride. Oh, and when you dream of dragons, blame the author, not me.


Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review. 

Monday, January 26, 2015



If I Fall, If I Die

by Michael Christie

If I Fall, If I Die

                Christie’s debut novel focuses on a woman, Diane with agoraphobia raising her young son Will completely within the bounds of their house. Will can’t remember ever leaving their house to go Outside. His entire world consists of the rooms of his house, the Inside, and his mother Diane. Then one day, Will does the unthinkable and ventures Outside. As Will stands Outside, he waits to stop breathing, for his hair to catch fire, for all manner of calamity to consume him. Nothing happens and Will is emboldened to venture further Outside. What follows is Will’s experience with the Outside world, for which he is wholly unprepared.

                This started off as a terrific novel. Christie does an admirable job of making the novel believable and letting the reader discover the Outside from Will’s perspective.

                Unfortunately, about half way through the novel, Christie does a complete 180, and the story crashes and burns a fiery death. It seemed that Christie took the novel to a certain point, and then had no idea where to go next, so he introduced a mystery and plot points that went far beyond stretching credibility. It’s unfortunate, since If I Fall, If I Die was a wonderful novel until this point.

                I’ll look forward to Christie’s next novel, since he shows promise. But this one needs work.     
   
Borrow this book from your library and read the first half which is very, very good. Then if you have an extreme desire to punish yourself, read the rest of it.


Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review. 

Monday, January 19, 2015



First Frost

By Sarah Addison Allen

 First Frost

                Anyone who has ever read one of Allen’s books knows they are always about family, friendships and our connections to the world around us, with a little magic thrown in. This latest offering is no exception. A sequel to her novel Garden Spells, this follows the Waverley sisters as each struggles with new doubts and challenges.

                Both Claire and Sydney Waverley are now married with daughters of their own, a new generation of Waverley women with gifts. Reading this novel is like spending the weekend with old friends. It’s a comfortable, easy experience that leaves you feeling good for no specific reason.

                Allen’s gift is in her ability to make you feel a part of her character’s lives. First Frost does not disappoint on that score. The only question is: when and if we will see a sequel to this book. This reader hopes so.

                Scheduled for publication on January 20, 2015.


                Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.

Friday, January 16, 2015




Rain on the Dead  
By Jack Higgins


Rain on the Dead (Sean Dillon, #21)

Let me start out by saying that I have read Jack Higgins for a LONG time. That being said, I fear either his writing skills are deteriorating or I have just simply outgrown him. How sad. I love his Sean Dillion series and the character, but I found myself struggling to get interested in his latest offering. It’s just too formulaic. The good guys always win; the bad guys always die. There’s simply too much ‘in the right place at the right time’ happenstance to really work for me. Perhaps at the age of 85 it’s unreasonable to expect the same quality of writing from Higgins.

            Borrow this one from your library. 



Tuesday, January 13, 2015



Captured

By Neil Cross


Kenny Drummond is dying and before he dies, he wants to make amends to the people he believes he’s let down in his life. Kenny makes a list of these people, four in total. As he sets off on his personal bucket list, he finds that one of these people is missing; a little girl from his childhood who was always kind to him.  Kenny becomes obsessed with finding this girl and his quest leads to actions with consequences that no one could have foreseen.

This is a hard book to review. While it held my interest through most of the book, there was a lot of it that stretched credibility. Kenny starts out as an average man, no one with any major psychological problems, yet what he does in the course of the book is darkly disturbing. I believe the author was trying to illustrate how an average person can do truly evil things, yet he didn't quite pull it off. The metamorphosis of Kenny from an average man to one capable of evil deeds, is jerky at best. The reader is left wondering how Kenny got from point A to point B.  Kenny IS dying from a brain tumor, so perhaps the author felt this was explanation enough for Kenny’s actions. Yet Kenny’s daily behavior rarely seems to be affected by the tumor.  I just couldn’t connect the dots on this.

Captured isn't a bad book, but it isn't a great book either. It’s okay.

Borrow it from your library.

Scheduled for publication January 27th.


Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review. 

Wednesday, January 7, 2015



The German Agent by J. Sydney Jones


The German Agent



                It is early in 1917. The United States has not yet entered World War I. In fact, President Wilson is very much against the US becoming involved. Enter the Zimmerman telegram, a message from Germany to Mexico proposing an alliance of war in which Mexico would invade and take back Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. The British have intercepted this telegram and decoded it.

                Based on a real historical event, the Zimmerman Telegram, this novel presents a ‘what if’ scenario; what if the British sent an ambassador to the US president with the telegram and the Germans sent an assassin to kill that ambassador?

                This is an old fashioned espionage thriller. There are no high tech gadgets, no forensics, no cell phones. It is set in a time when shaving a beard and dying one’s hair is a disguise. A time when cutting the phone lines is all that is needed to sever communication.

                While I very much enjoyed the book, it is not without flaws. Many of the scenarios are implausible, even in 1917. The German agent is just a little TOO lucky at times. However, it did have me brushing up on my WWI history and that’s not a bad thing.

                All in all, this is a quick, easy, enjoyable read if you can suspend reality a bit.

                Borrow it from your local library.


Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review.