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Books Read in 2023

  • Medoff, Jillian: When We Were Bright and Beautiful: A Novel

    Medoff, Jillian: When We Were Bright and Beautiful: A Novel
    When Billy Quinn, a junior at Princeton, is arrested for assaulting his ex-girlfriend, his rushes home to Manhattan to join forces with her brothers and parents to support and defend Billy. The Quinns scramble to hire the best legal minds money can buy, but Billy fits the all-too-familiar sex-offender profile—white, athletic, and privileged—that makes headlines and sways juries. (****)

  • Quinn, Kate: The Rose Code: A Novel

    Quinn, Kate: The Rose Code: A Novel
    1940. As England prepares to fight the Nazis, three very different women answer the call to mysterious country estate Bletchley Park, where the best minds in Britain train to break German military codes. To me, this book was too long (650 pages) for the subject it covered, and there was too many characters and too much description of decoding machines. There were good moments and good characters, but the story was just to drawn out. It gets good reviews though, and everyone else in my book club loved it. So you might too. (***)

  • Carmen, Christa: The Daughters of Block Island: A Novel

    Carmen, Christa: The Daughters of Block Island: A Novel
    White Hall, the huge old home on an isolated island, would seem to be a perfect setting for a gothic haunted house story, which was promised. And there were a couple of hints at haunting in the beginning. But it turns out they were nothing more than evil plots of angry, evil men. I wasn't impressed. (**)

  • Ramsay, Danielle: The Perfect Husband

    Ramsay, Danielle: The Perfect Husband
    Sophie's wedding day was perfect; she was marrying the love of her life, the perfect husband. But she could barely recognize the man she was spending her wedding night with. He had changed in the blink of an eye, from the kind, attentive man she had married just hours before to a belligerent monster. Was Sophie's wedding-night trip to the emergency room with a broken wrist a picture of things to come? (***)

  • Shari Low: One Moment in Time

    Shari Low: One Moment in Time
    Zara's parents' 30th anniversary is coming up, and Zara and her sister have planned an elaborate surprise trip to celebrate. The family will fly to Las Vegas where the festivities will take place. But none of the details of the trip have been revealedl to Mom and Dad. They're in for some surprises. And so are their two daughters. (***)

  • Hepworth, Sally: The Soulmate: A Novel

    Hepworth, Sally: The Soulmate: A Novel
    Pippa and Gabe live in a cozy home in a small coastal town with their two little girls, "Irish twins," born just six months apart.. Their house is steps away from a precarious cliff, famous for people coming there to jump and commit suicide. But Gabe has a talent of talking people down. Not one person has made a successful jump at the cliff since Gabe has lived there. Until somebody does. And thus begin the secrets. Good book. (****)

  • Stephen Coonts: Saucer: Saucer, Book 1

    Stephen Coonts: Saucer: Saucer, Book 1
    This book was very good at the beginning and at the end. But most of the middle was, to me, very boring. A bunch of people fighting over who owns the flying saucer, found confined in a rock in the Sahara. Then three of the characters flying the saucer around--like that would really happen. So I give the first 1/4 and the last 1/4 four stars, and the middle half 2 stars. (***)

  • Jackson, Joshilyn: With My Little Eye: A Novel

    Jackson, Joshilyn: With My Little Eye: A Novel
    This is not this author's best book. For one thing, the characters' vocabularies are unintelligible. One assumes this is supposed to be how the people of L.A. and Atlanta talk. Also not one of the characters in this book is very likable. There's this actress woman who can't make up her mind among three men who she wants to be with. To add to her confusion, any one of them (or maybe none of them) is the threatening stalker who has followed her across the country. There's another woman, and both women have daughters; and then there's another teenager who's homeless, and there's a dog. And it's all a bit of a fish mash. (***)

  • Olsen, Gregg: I Know Where You Live

    Olsen, Gregg: I Know Where You Live
    Violet's family is a hot mess. Sexual predation, incest, and murder are their pastimes. And those who don't participate in these crimes lie and protect the ones who do. This could be a disturbing book for some. (***)

  • Ellison, J.T.: It's One of Us: A Novel of Suspense

    Ellison, J.T.: It's One of Us: A Novel of Suspense
    Imagine you and your husband have been trying for several years for a baby with no success. Then, unbeknownst to you (or to him) you find that he has dozen of children as a result of a sperm donation. And one of them is a killer. That's the story. (***)

  • Cronin, Justin: The Ferryman: A Novel

    Cronin, Justin: The Ferryman: A Novel
    I chose this book to read based on a very good reviews by Stephen King and Andy Weir. And it is a good book. Very good. But I confess I had a bit of a problem keeping up with where the characters were and in what time frame and in what state of consciousness. I'm still not sure I understand the whole thing. But it is a supremely well written apocalyptic tale. (****)

  • Getson, D.S.: Earl, Honey

    Getson, D.S.: Earl, Honey
    Ever since Pa hit him in the head with the two-by-four, Earl Hahn has been slow, the last one to catch on to things. It takes him longer to make the connections others arrive at easily. When his father is prosecuted for the crime of incest, it feels like deliverance for Earl, his mother Lizzie Belle, and the entire Hahn family. Unfortunately, his father’s abhorrent actions are not done exacting a price. Everyone in the household will pay for their patriarch’s crimes – no one more than Earl. (****)

  • Hannah, Kristin: Magic Hour: A Novel

    Hannah, Kristin: Magic Hour: A Novel
    What else can you expect from Kristin Hannah but a wonderful story That's certainly what you get here, one of the two or three best books I've read this year. It takes place in the rugged Pacific Northwest. From deep within the darkness of the Olympic National Forest, a six-year-old girl appears. Speechless and alone, she offers no clue as to her identity, no hint of her past. Had a hard time putting this one down. (*****)

  • Grant, Cathryn: The Woman In the Mirror: A Psychological Suspense Novel (Alexandra Mallory Book 1)

    Grant, Cathryn: The Woman In the Mirror: A Psychological Suspense Novel (Alexandra Mallory Book 1)
    A precarious cliff-top bungalow, a man searching for peace, a pathological liar, and an alluring sociopath, what could go wrong? Plenty. (****)

  • Markin, Wes: One Last Prayer

    Markin, Wes: One Last Prayer
    A small town in the grip of a destructive snowstorm, a missing boy, a deranged family whose history is steeped in violence, and a relentless detective combine for a chilling and absorbing thriller. (****)

  • Mullen, O. J.: Three Sisters

    Mullen, O. J.: Three Sisters
    When Lewis Stone meets the Kennedy sisters, a train of events begins that engulfs them all. One sister is left fighting for her life. One sister is left fighting for her marriage. And one sister is hellbent on revenge. Thrills and chills. (****)

  • Haines, Carolyn: Tell-Tale Bones: A Sarah Booth Delaney Mystery

    Haines, Carolyn: Tell-Tale Bones: A Sarah Booth Delaney Mystery
    This time, Sarah Booth and Tinkie are sleuthing to find the whereabouts of two women who have been missing for six years. Of course, they are joined by Sarah Booth's two furry partners, Sweetie Pie the dog and Pluto the curious cat. And from time to time, Tinkie's little dog Chablis. And hat would a Sarah Booth Delaney mystery be without some appearances by Kitty the ghost--this time dressed as Edgar Allen Poe characters, including the author himself. (***)

  • Napolitano, Ann: Hello Beautiful (Oprah's Book Club): A Novel

    Napolitano, Ann: Hello Beautiful (Oprah's Book Club): A Novel
    I think of this book as a modern adult version of Little Women--sort of. It's a beautiful story. And especially if one has sisters, which I do) it will touch your heart. Keep the Kleenex box handy, especially for the last few chapters. (****)

  • Nugent, Liz: Strange Sally Diamond

    Nugent, Liz: Strange Sally Diamond
    Reclusive Sally Diamond causes outrage by trying to incinerate her dead father. Now she’s the center of attention, not only from the hungry media and police detectives, but also a sinister voice from a past she does not remember. As she begins to discover the horrors of her early childhood, Sally steps into the world for the first time, making new friends, big decisions, and learning that people don’t always mean what they say. (****)

  • Lehane, Dennis: Small Mercies: A Novel

    Lehane, Dennis: Small Mercies: A Novel
    Takes place during the school bussing riots in Boston in 1974. The author squeezes in a Boston crime family as a big part of this story. Riveting plot, but the racism is hard to take. But I'm sure it's based on reality. After all I grew up near Birmingham, Alabama, and lived through racism, segregation, and race riots there. (****)

  • Walls, Jeannette: Hang the Moon

    Walls, Jeannette: Hang the Moon
    Set in the Appalachian area of Virginia during Prohibition, Duke Kincaid runs the county and sets the laws. Moonshining and rum running support the county's economy. Duke's 19-year-old daughter Sallie inherits her father's dynasty after he and her older siblings die. This is a good book, but I have to confess it's a little hard to keep up with who fathered (and mothered) whom. Seems like every time you turn a page, someone is sleeping with someone else they shouldn't have. (****)

  • Cannon, J.M.: Blood Oranges: A Pulse-Pounding New Thriller Packed With Twists

    Cannon, J.M.: Blood Oranges: A Pulse-Pounding New Thriller Packed With Twists
    I love a good thriller; and dang! is this ever a good thriller! I didn't much like the ending, but up until that point, it was amazing. (****)

  • Quay Tyson, Tiffany: The Past Is Never: A Novel

    Quay Tyson, Tiffany: The Past Is Never: A Novel
    If you're a fan of southern gothic literature (or even if you aren't) you might love this book. I did. It's the best book I've read this year and one of the best I've read ever. (****)

  • Jackson, Jenny: Pineapple Street: A Novel

    Jackson, Jenny: Pineapple Street: A Novel
    This book has no discernible plot whatsoever. It reads like a soap opera--various events in the lives of the old-money, Brooklyn Heights family. That said, I was pulled into the events of their lives immediately. Nothing memorable about this book--just a fairly entertaining narrative. (***)

  • Deangelis, Camille: Bones & All

    Deangelis, Camille: Bones & All
    Although the author did a good job with her narrative, her premise was just stupid in my opinion. Every major character in this book (and some of the minor ones) are cannibals. We're not talking Jeffrey Dahmer types here, where the cannibals prepare their meals piecemeal, as it were, and keep them in the refrigerator. Oh no. These guys and gals somehow take their victims down with no weapons involved and finish them off (bones and all) in minutes. Except this one dude who claims he doesn't eat anyone who isn't already dead. One of the few good things I can say about this book is that we don't have to watch the victims being consumed, to we don't know how these horrors are completed in such a short time. It's also a movie on Amazon Prime; you can rent it for $5.29. I think I'll save my money for something that obeys the suspension of disbelief rule. Pooh on this ridiculous book. (*)

  • Hendrix, Grady: Horrorstor: A Novel

    Hendrix, Grady: Horrorstor: A Novel
    Imagine an IKEA built over an ancient prison site. You just know it's going to be haunted. It is. Not Grady's best effort, but not bad. (***)

  • Audrain, Ashley: The Push: A Novel

    Audrain, Ashley: The Push: A Novel
    Whee doggies! What a book! I read this one in two late-night sessions. Another "bad seed" plot--or is it?. You have to wait until the very last sentence to know for sure. From an online review: "It’s a story about the most life-changing and literal “push” that is childbirth, and the more figurative “push” that society places on women to have children." But it's so much more. Most reviewers say that it might be too raw and intense for new or expectant mothers. (****)

  • Follett, Ken: Never: A Novel

    Follett, Ken: Never: A Novel
    If you tell me that Ken Follett is an amazing writer, you'll get no argument from me. But if you say, as Stephen King has, that Follett "can't write a bad book," I'll beg to differ. I'm only halfway through this 800-plus-page tome, but so far it's one of the most tedious and pointless books I've ever tried to read. I say "tried" because I'm not sure I'll make it through the next 400 pages. I'll give it another chapter or two to get better, then I'm moving on if it doesn't. (*)

  • Gilman, Charlotte Perkins: The Yellow Wallpaper

    Gilman, Charlotte Perkins: The Yellow Wallpaper
    This short story was first published in1892 by American write Charlotte Perkins Gilman. It is regarded as an important early work of American feminist literature, illustrating attitudes in the 19th century toward women's health, both physical and mental. But to me its just a good old scary story and reminds me a lot of the work of more recent writers like Shirley Jackson and even Stephen King. Good story. (****)

  • Frazier, Charles: The Trackers: A Novel

    Frazier, Charles: The Trackers: A Novel
    Painter Val Welch travels westward to the rural town of Dawes, Wyoming where he has landed a New Deal assignment to create a mural representing the region for their new Post Office. Wealthy art lover John Long and his wife Eve have agreed to host Val at their sprawling ranch. When Long's wife disappears, he offers John a tempting sum of money to travel the country searching for her. Every Charles Frazier book since COLD MOUNTAIN has disappointed me, and this one is no exception. None of them measures up to that wonderful novel. (***)

  • Green, S. E.: The Family

    Green, S. E.: The Family
    This is a story about a young girl who is dissatisfied with homelife with her single mom and goes to live with her father in what she believes to be a commune where everyone is equal and nobody is the leader. She soon finds out that this is a cult and her own father is the leader, a harsh and authoritative leader. (***)

  • Green, S. E.: The Third Son

    Green, S. E.: The Third Son
    As he is in the process of building a family with his wife of two years and her two young sons, architect Carter Grady learns that a one night stand of which he'd been a part years ago had produced Carter's biological son. The boy's mother has died, leaving him an orphan. Carter has the option of taking the boy to raise or letting him go into the foster system. Of course, As far as Carter is concerned, there's no decision to be made: of course, he'll bring the boy to live with him and his family. Problem #1: he has to tell the family about the boy. Problem #2: there's something definitely wrong with the kid. This is a darn good book. (****)

  • Sottile, Leah: When the Moon Turns to Blood: Lori Vallow, Chad Daybell, and a Story of Murder, Wild Faith, and End Times

    Sottile, Leah: When the Moon Turns to Blood: Lori Vallow, Chad Daybell, and a Story of Murder, Wild Faith, and End Times
    Lori Vallow and her husband, grave digger turned doomsday novelist, Chad Daybell (as well as just about everyone else in this book) are members of the Mormon Church. But I hope that nobody reads it as a statement against Mormons. I know a few Mormons who are not serial killers nor enablers of them. That said, Lori and Chad are psycho killers of the worst kind. This book was hard to get through, not only because of Lori and Chad's hideous crimes but also because the author spends by far more time talking about the history and makeup of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. I suppose she thought the reader could only. know the killers by know about their church. But I don't think so. The two were just nuts. They would have, in my opinion, done the same thing had they been Baptists, Catholics, Jews, atheists, etc. I didn't care for this book. (**)

  • Picoult, Jodi: Mad Honey: A Novel

    Picoult, Jodi: Mad Honey: A Novel
    Is a son likely to inherit a father's violent tendencies? Did Ash do what he's accused of doing? Is everybody in this book who/what they appear to be. You'll have to read it and find out. Just be assured that Jody Picoult and her co-author Jennifer Finney Boylan hit one out of the park with this great book that tackles in an exciting but sensitive way one of the controversies of our times. And gives a lot of interesting fat-de-rol about bees and beekeeping too. (****)

  • Hoover, Colleen: Verity

    Hoover, Colleen: Verity
    This is an excellent fast-paced thriller with lots of suspense. But the end doesn't wrap things up. But I didn't like the ending at all. One big bad unfleshed toilet. (FYI, and unfleshed toilet is what a college prof of mine called situations in stories that are left hanging with non clear solution.) (****)

  • Prince Harry: Spare

    Prince Harry: Spare
    After reading this book, I fully understand why Harry and Megan fled Britain and the Palace crap. It should be a crime the way this young couple was treated not only by the British media but also by Harry's own family. Enough said. You'll just have to read it for yourself and decide. And you should. (****)

  • Stevenson, Benjamin: Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone: A Novel

    Stevenson, Benjamin: Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone: A Novel
    After I got a little comfortable with the manner in which Australian talk (and write),, I really liked this book. Even so, there were some sentences that I have no idea what they said. Lots of characters introduced all at once at the very beginning, which I think was a problem. But there's a great snow and ice storm during which the suspense and some murders take place. So all-in-all, it's a good one. (****)

  • Hart, Josephine: Damage: A Novel

    Hart, Josephine: Damage: A Novel
    Damage is the gripping story of a man’s desperate obsession and love affair with his son's fiancee. This was a disturbing book to me, but an even more disturbing movie (Netflix). Still it was well written and exciting but still disturbing. (****)

  • Kepnes, Caroline: You: A Novel

    Kepnes, Caroline: You: A Novel
    When a beautiful Guinevere Beck strides into the East Village bookstore where Joe Goldberg works, he does what anyone would do: he Googles the name on her credit card--and Beck now has a stalker on her hands. This is a good boo if you like thrillers. Stephen King calls it hypnotic and scary--and I agree. It's also a Netflix series, but I haven't checked that out yet. (****)

  • Unger, Lisa: Secluded Cabin Sleeps Six: A Novel of Thrilling Suspense

    Unger, Lisa: Secluded Cabin Sleeps Six: A Novel of Thrilling Suspense
    Take a secluded luxury cabin with a dark history, three couples looking forward to a relaxing weekend, a horrendous storm, and a mysterious and dangerous something or somebody hanging around in the dark and what do you got? A spine-tingling thriller. (***)

  • Hendrix, Grady: We Sold Our Souls: A Novel

    Hendrix, Grady: We Sold Our Souls: A Novel
    If scary stories upset you, I advise against reading this book. It's scary as heck. That said, it's also a gripping story that hooked me right away. I'm not a fan of heavy metal music, but that didn't bother me. Grady Hendrix is an excellent spinner of thrilling stories. His prose is so well crafted and in places almost poetic. One of the best craftsmen writing thrillers today, IMO. (****)

  • St. James, Simone: The Broken Girls

    St. James, Simone: The Broken Girls
    Vermont 1950. Idlewild is a school for girls that nobody wants. Four of these girls become roommates and fast friends. Jump to 2014. The school has been closed for decades. Nobody lives there anymore except the ghost of Mary Hand. A young journalist and enters the scene to solve the mystery of her murdered sister whose body was found on the school property. A haunting and sometimes sad story. (****)

  • Connelly, Michael: The Black Echo (A Harry Bosch Novel, 1)

    Connelly, Michael: The Black Echo (A Harry Bosch Novel, 1)
    Maverick homicide detective Harry Bosch lives in a stilt house in The Hollywood Hills, which he bought with the proceeds from a book and a tv show that he leant his name to. When a body is discovered in a drain pipe at the Mulholland Dam, the case becomes personal for Harry. It won't be the only body to show up in this, Connelly's first book in his Harry Bosch series. And you'll wonder if Harry, who never met a rule he wouldn't break, might be lucky to come out of it unscathed. I love Harry Bosch, the books and the tv show. (****)

  • Kurian, Vera: Never Saw Me Coming: A Novel

    Kurian, Vera: Never Saw Me Coming: A Novel
    Chloe is one of seven students at her DC-based college who are part of an unusual clinical study of psychopaths—students like herself who lack empathy and can’t comprehend emotions like fear or guilt. Somebody is murdering the seven--one by one. Chloe holds a murderous grudge against a male student who is not in the study, whom she knows from pre-college times. (***)

  • Rose, Jeneva: The Perfect Marriage: a completely gripping psychological suspense

    Rose, Jeneva: The Perfect Marriage: a completely gripping psychological suspense
    The wife is a successful attorney; the husband is a struggling stay-at-home writer. And then there's the mistress who has had other affairs and relationships. Whoever designed the cover of this book was correct in crossing out the word "perfect." This is a whodunit mystery that kept me reading and guessing throughout. (****)

  • Haines, Carolyn: Booty Bones: A Sarah Booth Delaney Mystery

    Haines, Carolyn: Booty Bones: A Sarah Booth Delaney Mystery
    When Sarah Booth and her critters accompany her fiancé on a Gulf getaway, they encounter all kinds of trouble including a hurricane, a theft, a murder, and romantic heartache. If you're a fan of cozy mysteries and haven't yet met private detective Sarah Booth Delaney and friends, you should really check her out. I love these books. You can find her on Amazon.com. (****)

  • Prose, Nita: The Maid: A Novel

    Prose, Nita: The Maid: A Novel
    Molly the Maid is not like everyone else. She doesn't always understand others, and she's quite lacking in social skills. Molly lives alone in her Gran's house, where she has lived all her life. Gran has recently passed, and Molly feels the loss deeply. She works at a luxury hotel, cleaning guest rooms and 'returning them to perfection." When she finds a wealthy guest dead in his bed, Molly's uneventful but orderly life is upended and she is faced with challenges she's not ready to handle. Or is she? (****)

  • Albanese, Laurie Lico: Hester: A Novel

    Albanese, Laurie Lico: Hester: A Novel
    Hester is the main character in Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel THE SCARLET LETTER. This book is not about her. It's about Isobel Gambel, who sails from Scotland to the New World with her husband Edward. After Edward sails away to seek his fortune, Isobel meets and falls in love with young Nathaniel Hawthorne. They have an affair. For fear of letting too many cats out of the bag, I'll say no more. (***)

  • Hendrix, Grady: The Final Girl Support Group

    Hendrix, Grady: The Final Girl Support Group
    Not his best book, IMO. In horror movies, the "final girl" is the last one left standing after all the slashing is done. Lynnette Tarkington is a final girl and a member of the support group, the members of which find that their horror is not yet over. (***)

  • Winman, Sarah: Still Life

    Winman, Sarah: Still Life
    1944 Tuscany. A young soldier, a precocious little girl, an art historian named Evelyn, and a surprisingly communicative parrot name Claude are just a few of the many characters in this novel. It has received glowing reviews for it's "beautiful prose, extraordinary tenderness, and bursts of humor and light." Sad to say, I found most of it quite boring and hard to read. I did like the bird and the little girl though. This is the March selection for my book club. (**)

  • Feeney, Alice: Rock Paper Scissors

    Feeney, Alice: Rock Paper Scissors
    Screenwriter Adam Wright has lived with face blindness his whole life. He can't recognize friends or family, or even his own wife. Every anniversary the couple exchanges traditional gifts—paper, cotton, pottery, tin—and each year Adam's wife writes him a letter that she never lets him read. Until now. Ten years of marriage. Ten years of secrets. And an anniversary they will never forget. (****)

  • Nethercott, GennaRose: Thistlefoot: A Novel

    Nethercott, GennaRose: Thistlefoot: A Novel
    The Yaga siblings inherit a house--but this is no ordinary house. It has legs and feet and is mobile. Thistlefoot, as the house is called, has arrived from the Yagas’ ancestral home outside Kyiv—but not alone. A sinister figure known only as the Longshadow Man has tracked it to American shores, bearing with him violent secrets from the past: fiery memories that have hidden in Isaac and Bellatine’s blood for generations. As the Yaga siblings embark with Thistlefoot on a final cross-country tour of their family’s traveling theater show, the Longshadow Man follows in relentless pursuit, seeding destruction in his wake. (****)

  • Hendrix, Grady: How to Sell a Haunted House

    Hendrix, Grady: How to Sell a Haunted House
    Grady Hendrix hits another literary home run with this novel. I love the way he grabs my interest from the very first sentence and never lets go. I also like how his stories start out as normal suspense with the paranormal elements creeping in until midway through the reader is immersed in ghosts, demons, vampires, or in this case, an evil talking puppet. (****)

  • Dawidziak, Mark: A Mystery of Mysteries: The Death and Life of Edgar Allan Poe

    Dawidziak, Mark: A Mystery of Mysteries: The Death and Life of Edgar Allan Poe
    If you think this book will shed much light on what caused the death of EAP, which has remained a mystery since his death in September 1849, you might be disappointed. We learn, from eye-witness accounts that Poe was either a raging alcoholic or that he rarely took a drink, that he was outgoing and friendly or that he was a narcissist with a dysfunctional personality, that he was ethical in his work or that he sometimes stooped to plagiarism. So after reading this book, I feel like I know less about the life and death of one of my favorite authors than I did before I read it. (***)

  • Hawkins, Rachel: The Villa: A Novel

    Hawkins, Rachel: The Villa: A Novel
    Some of the critics say that the author was inspired to write this story by the ban Fleetwood Mac, the Manson murders, and the novel FRANKENSTEIN. Actually I saw none of those thing specifically, but it does involve sex, drugs, and rock and roll. Pretty good story too. (***)

  • Hendrix, Grady: My Best Friend's Exorcism: A Novel

    Hendrix, Grady: My Best Friend's Exorcism: A Novel
    I guess almost every parent of teenagers at some point believes their child to be possessed by an evil demon. It's hardly ever true, however. That's just the nature of the teenager. IMO, Grady Hendrix is one of the best writers around. He had me boo-hooing at the end of this book. But I'll never forgive him for what happened to GDM. (****)

  • Ambrose Bierce: An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge: By Ambrose Bierce - Illustrated

    Ambrose Bierce: An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge: By Ambrose Bierce - Illustrated
    Set in rural Alabama during the Civil War, this is a psychological thriller that takes many emotional turns and finally catches the audience off guard as it ends with an unsettling, macabre twist. Written by Ambrose Bierce, a veteran of that war and a mysterious figure himself, this is a story about death and life. I've read this one many times, and will probably read it many more. (*****)

  • Bryson, Bill: The Road to Little Dribbling: Adventures of an American in Britain

    Bryson, Bill: The Road to Little Dribbling: Adventures of an American in Britain
    Bill Bryson takes us from Bognor Regis in the south of England to Cape Wrath in the north, through places that many people outside of England have never heard of. Parts of this book are very funny, and parts (to me) were just boring. A little of a travel book goes a long way for me. This is the February selection for my book club. (***)

  • Sletten, Deanna Lynn: Miss Etta: A Novel

    Sletten, Deanna Lynn: Miss Etta: A Novel
    A fictional story based on fact. Etta Place was for years the constant companion of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. She and Sundance had a romantic relationship, and some say there might have been something between her and Butch. But Etta as well as Butch and Sundance disappeared into history, and no one knows quite for sure what happened to any of them. In this book, Etta herself tells how it might have been. I enjoyed this book a lot. (***)

  • Johnson, Mayme: Harlem Godfather: The Rap on My Husband, Ellsworth "Bumpy" Johnson

    Johnson, Mayme: Harlem Godfather: The Rap on My Husband, Ellsworth "Bumpy" Johnson
    I had just watched the MGM+ series, "Godfather of Harlem" and wanted to know more about Bumpy Johnson. This account is told by Bumpy's widow Mayme. Very interesting, but a little editing could have made it easier to read. (***)

Books Read in 2022

  • Burke, James Lee: Every Cloak Rolled in Blood (A Holland Family Novel)

    Burke, James Lee: Every Cloak Rolled in Blood (A Holland Family Novel)
    First one of this acclaimed author's books I've read. I have mixed feeling. Well plotted, well written, good characterization. But somehow I didn't feel the paranormal elements fit. And I didn't like the main character. Of course, he was dealing with a lot. So overall, I give it an A-. (****)

  • Swanson, James L.: Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln's Killer (P.S.)

    Swanson, James L.: Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln's Killer (P.S.)
    The title says it all. Except that I feel like the author spent more time on Booth's co-conspirators than on Booth himself. Still, a pretty good book. (***)

  • Tremblay, Paul: The Cabin at the End of the World: A Novel

    Tremblay, Paul: The Cabin at the End of the World: A Novel
    A true horror story, the likes of which have probably happened to human beings already, even though the world has not yet ended. It's an edge-of-the-seater. (***)

  • Bruce, Camilla: All the Blood We Share: A Novel of the Bloody Benders of Kansas

    Bruce, Camilla: All the Blood We Share: A Novel of the Bloody Benders of Kansas
    A sinister novel based on the real Bloody Benders, a family of serial killers in the old West bound by butchery and obscured by the shadows of American history. I read another book about the Benders some while back, but this one was much better. (***)

  • Proulx, Annie: Brokeback Mountain

    Proulx, Annie: Brokeback Mountain
    This is one of the saddest stories ever. Actually more of a novelette than a full novel, it's a fast read if you don't have to stop too often to dry your eyes. It's not preachy or political, just a good story about two good ol' boys who learned that love is love, no matter what you call it. (****)

  • Kingsolver, Barbara: Demon Copperhead: A Novel

    Kingsolver, Barbara: Demon Copperhead: A Novel
    Barbara Kingsolver's latest novel gets its inspiration from Charles DIckens's classic DAVID COPPERFIELD. The Dickens novel has long been one of my favorites since I read it in college. Now I've added Kingsolver's version to that favorites list. It is not at all necessary to have read the Dickens novel to enjoy this one, which takes place not in England but in the southern Appalachians. The main character and narrator Damon, born to a teenaged addict, has the cards stacked against him from the beginning. Through Damon's young and hard life, Kingsolver addresses many of the concerns of our modern culture. Actually, the only beef I have with the book is that Damon occasionally becomes a bit preachy about these concerns, which for me interrupts the flow of the story to some extent. The preaching is out of character. But it's not a big deal. I love this book and, as I have read the Dickens novel three or four times, I know I will read Kingsolver's wonderful book again. (****)

  • McPhail, Diane C.: The Seamstress of New Orleans: A Fascinating Novel of Southern Historical Fiction

    McPhail, Diane C.: The Seamstress of New Orleans: A Fascinating Novel of Southern Historical Fiction
    Set against the backdrop of the first all-female Mardi Gras krewe at the turn-of-the-century, this mesmerizing historical novel tells of two strangers separated by background but bound by an unexpected secret—and of the strength and courage women draw from and inspire in each other. --Amazon (****)

  • Tryon, Thomas: The Other

    Tryon, Thomas: The Other
    I first read this book many years ago, sometime in the 70s I believe. In my opinion, Tryon is a fantastic writer and this book is one of the best thriller/horror works ever. Although there are no ghosts, vampires, or anything paranormal, it is quite horrible. It takes place is 1930s New England, and the main characters are 13-year-old twins Niles and Holland. One good boy and one bad seed, and sometimes it's hard to know which is which. The horrors that the bad twin commits get more horrible as the story progresses, and the last one is really disturbing. Don't read this book unless you have a strong constitution and really like thrillers. (****)

  • St. James, Simone: The Book of Cold Cases

    St. James, Simone: The Book of Cold Cases
    A murder mystery, a haunted mansion, and a budding romance are the themes that make up this book. True crime blogger Shea Collins becomes involved in all three when interviewing a woman acquitted 40 years earlier of two murders. (***)

  • Myers, Adele: The Tobacco Wives: A Novel

    Myers, Adele: The Tobacco Wives: A Novel
    It's 1946 in North Carolina tobacco country. Maddie and her grandmother are seamstresses who create beautiful dresses and gowns for the wives of the wealthy tobacco producers and merchants who live in Bright Leaf. Producers, sales people, and even the town doctor extol the health benefits of the company's new tobacco, which is marketing especially to women. But factory workers are getting sick, expectant mothers are miscarrying, and it seems that the new cigarette is not quite the great thing it's cracked up to be. Maddie inadvertently uncovers evidence of the harmful effects of the tobacco and is caught between wanting to report what she has learned and not wanting to harm the women with whom she has formed a bond. Good book. (****)

  • Koontz, Dean: The Other Emily

    Koontz, Dean: The Other Emily
    I haven't read many of Dean Koontz's books, although he is a very popular writer of one of my favorite genres, mystery and horror. But when this book popped up on the Amazon Prime free books list, I decided I'd give it a try. It was exciting, interesting, and scary. They only criticism I have is that Koontz's very flowery prose distracts me from the story. I had to keep looking up words. (***)

  • Reid, Iain: Foe: A Novel

    Reid, Iain: Foe: A Novel
    I like the way Iain Reid's stories take place totally in the minds of his narrators--and that things are never as they seem in the beginning. This is my second reading of FOE. I had some questions after the first read, a few years ago. I thought another read might clear them up. It didn't. I still don't know what the meaning of those bugs are or who/what the title refers to. But I enjoyed my second read anyway. (****)

  • Reid, Iain: We Spread

    Reid, Iain: We Spread
    Iain Reid's books are suspenseful and surreal. This one, a story of psychological suspense, takes place mostly in a assisted living home. It puts proof to the adage that getting old is not for sissies. (****)

  • Sager, Riley: Survive the Night: A Novel

    Sager, Riley: Survive the Night: A Novel
    Wow! Talk about a page-turner: this is one for sure. Twists and turns o'plenty. At times I wasn't sure what was real and what was a mind movie--and I think that was the point. I love this book. I love all Riley Sager's books. He admits this is a pen name and claims he's male. But I do declare his books read like they were written by a woman. He knows his female characters. (****)

  • Polatin, Daria: Devil in Ohio

    Polatin, Daria: Devil in Ohio
    I enjoyed the mini series on Netflix and decided to read the book. Didn't care for the book so much. I complained on a Facebook group that it read that it was written by and for teenagers. I was quickly told by I group member that that's because it was. I wasn't aware it was a Teen/Y.A. novel until then. I suppose under that classification it's fine. (***)

  • S. E. Hinton: The Outsiders

    S. E. Hinton: The Outsiders
    I don't normally go for Y.A. novels. But one sure way to get me to read a book (if I haven't already) is for some self-righteous group who thinks they know what's best for the reading public and it's children to "ban" it. That's how I came across The Outsiders. Written and published in the 1960s by a teenage girl who has since published many many books, this one, required reading in some high schools, has become controversial for some reason. It does contain some violence, but since when has violence been a cause for book banning? Have any of these people read the Bible? I was touched by the characters in this book. The teenage years aren't easy for most teenagers--for some of the teens is this book, the years were traumatic. (****)

  • Haig, Matt: The Dead Fathers Club: A Novel

    Haig, Matt: The Dead Fathers Club: A Novel
    This is the first audible book I've listened to in a long long time. The narrator Andrew Dennis, is a young English/Puerto Rican man whose voice is captivating. You think you a really listening to an 11-year-old boy, although Dennis looks quite a bit older. The story is also captivating about a boy whose dead father's ghost appears to him asking that he kill the man, the father's brother, who killed him. (****)

  • Everett, Percival: Trees

    Everett, Percival: Trees
    An uncanny literary thriller addressing the painful legacy of lynching in the US. This book starts out with lots of laughs--even the gruesome crime scenes illicit chuckles. I wondered if it were meant as allegory. But slowly the whole thing ceases to be funny. The ending is almost fantasy I thought. And I still wonder if it qualifies as allegory. Please click on the link to learn more about this important story. (****)

  • Walsh, Rosie: The Love of My Life: A Novel

    Walsh, Rosie: The Love of My Life: A Novel
    This is a well written page-turner with lots of twists. It took me being on the waiting list for a library copy from April till August. Warning: Anyone who was adopted or who has released a child for adoption and is sensitive about the subject should use discretion. (****)

  • Fowler, Karen Joy: Booth

    Fowler, Karen Joy: Booth
    Another very good historical novel. This book is not only about John Wilkes Booth who murdered President Lincoln, but about his entire family. Of course, the life of John Wilkes, including the assassination, is included, but each member of his large nuclear family receive equal attention. It's actually about the family. (****)

  • Perry, Thomas: The Old Man

    Perry, Thomas: The Old Man
    This is the book on which the Netflix series by the same name was based. I actually think the book, whose plot diverges quite a bit from the series, is better. (****)

  • Chen, Katherine J.: Joan: A Novel of Joan of Arc

    Chen, Katherine J.: Joan: A Novel of Joan of Arc
    This historical novel about the life of Joan d'Arc is quite interesting and mostly enjoyable. I did get a little bored with the battle descriptions, and if not for that I would have given it another star. I was very interested that Joan's mother's name (Isabelle Romée) are variations of my paternal grandparents sir names (Isbell and Ramey). (***)

  • Nicastro, Nicholas: Hell's Half-Acre

    Nicastro, Nicholas: Hell's Half-Acre
    This is a fictionalization of a true story--the story of a family of Kansas serial killers, the Benders, during the Civil War era.I'm not sure how a story about serial killers can be boring, but I have to admit that parts of this book almost put me to sleep. (**)

  • Howard, Ron and Clint: The Boys: A Memoir of Hollywood and Family

    Howard, Ron and Clint: The Boys: A Memoir of Hollywood and Family
    The fun part of this book is listening to (reading) Ron and Clint tell the stories of growing up in Hollywood, spending more time on studio back lots and sound stages than in classrooms and playgrounds. How did they do this, actually beginning their acting careers at age 3 (Clint) and 5 (Ron), without becoming incorrigible, narcissistic, and dysfunctional--without experiencing early deaths or going into old age broke and broken? By having strong, loving, involved parents who kept the boys' heads out of the clouds and taught them how to look out for their interests and the interests of those they love. I loved this book. I'll probably read it again. (****)

  • Feeney, Alice: His & Hers

    Feeney, Alice: His & Hers
    Talk about your murder mystery with twists! This one has twists galore! The title implied that there are two sides to every story--but actually this story has a few more than two. Every time I was sure I knew whodunnit, the next chapter would change my mind and I'd have another character picked for the murders. Good book. (****)

  • Davis, Fiona: The Magnolia Palace: A Novel

    Davis, Fiona: The Magnolia Palace: A Novel
    When this book was chosen as my book club's July assignment I was less than thrilled. I was sure I was in for a boring read about art history. I was wrong. This turned out to be one of the best books I've read this year. The story switches between two eras to solve a mystery that had been hanging over one of New York City's most prominent families for almost 50 years. Most of the characters (the Frick art collector family as well as the beautiful woman who modeled for much of New York's acclaimed statuary) are actually historical people, but the book is fiction. (****)

  • Ellroy, James: The Black Dahlia

    Ellroy, James: The Black Dahlia
    Fiction based on true story. You've probably heard of the most famous unsolved murder in California history. Setting is Hollywood in the late 40s. Part mystery, part love story, good bit of sex. I had some trouble getting into to it at the beginning because of all the Damon Runyon and cop lingo. But once I got into the rhythm of it I found it to be an engaging (although sad and brutal) story. (***)

  • Bartz, Andrea: We Were Never Here: A Novel

    Bartz, Andrea: We Were Never Here: A Novel
    One of those books where all the while you're reading it you want to yell at the lead character, "Don't do it! Don't do it!" Well I didn't have it all figured out by the end, but I was on the right track. (****)

  • Gardner, Lisa: Live to Tell: A Detective D. D. Warren Novel

    Gardner, Lisa: Live to Tell: A Detective D. D. Warren Novel
    A real page turner. Actually I was busy turning pages backwards and forwards because I kept getting the women (moms) confused. But it was a very good book with a surprise ending--at least for me. (****)

  • Scottoline, Lisa: What Happened to the Bennetts

    Scottoline, Lisa: What Happened to the Bennetts
    This exciting story is peopled with good bad guys and bad good guys and some dogs- It's a pretty good story with lots of twists ad turns- Spoiler ahead: don't worry about the dogs (***)

  • Frankland, Maria: The Hen Party: A death before marriage story with a shock twist

    Frankland, Maria: The Hen Party: A death before marriage story with a shock twist
    In the tradition of the classic who-dunnit - Caitlyn's wedding is scheduled in a few weeks so her bride's maids and friends and family whisk her off to Dublin (from I believe 'tis the north of England) for her Hen Party - You would never want to meat a more unlikable group of women - They quarrel and bicker and complain even after one of them discovers their friend murdered in her bed- But the unpleasant characters did nothing to dampen my interest and enjoyment of the book Note: I wrote above while I still had a few pages to read - I have finished the entire book now and I have to say I hate the ending - I thought sure it would turn out differently and I was very disappointed I still say it's a good book but just not the ending (****)

  • Walker, Karen Thompson: The Age of Miracles: A Novel

    Walker, Karen Thompson: The Age of Miracles: A Novel
    This is the same author who wrote The Dreamers that I recently read - I'll be looking for more of her books - She is an excellent writer - I loved this story and think it's probably one of the best books I've read all year - I'm not quite sure I "get" the title - In the story the earth is slowing its rotation and the planet and its inhabitants are suffering - Although attempting to go on with life in as normal a way as possible the ever-increasing length of days brings changes and tragedies - I think the proper title for this book would have been AS THE WORLD TURNS (throwback to an old soap opera) - I recommend the book highly (****)

  • Walker, Karen Thompson: The Dreamers: A Novel

    Walker, Karen Thompson: The Dreamers: A Novel
    In an isolated college town in Southern California people begin to fall into deep sleep from which they cannot be wakened- Doctors find that those stricken display unusual levels of brain activity, higher than has ever been recorded before. They are dreaming heightened dreams—but of what? Walker's beautiful prose style combines with intriguing characters and a gripping premise for great page turner (****)

  • Rowley, Steven: The Guncle

    Rowley, Steven: The Guncle
    When two young children lose their mother to cancer and their dad checks himself into rehab their Uncle Patrick steps up to fill the role of their guardian and caretaker- No one knows better than Patrick how ill equipped he is to care for two small children- But Patrick too has recently lost someone he loves and he vows to do his best to comfort and tend his charges- As it turns out his best is pretty good after all- A heartwarming book (***)

  • Guskin, Sharon: The Forgetting Time: A Novel

    Guskin, Sharon: The Forgetting Time: A Novel
    Four-year-old Noah knows things he shouldn't- He talks of people and places that he has never seen or known- From the time he can talk he begs his mother to take him home and her efforts to assure Noah that he is home do nothing to assure the little boy that he is home- Whether you believe in reincarnation or not (the jury's still out for me) this is a well written and intriguing story (****)

  • Lucas, Frank: Original Gangster: The Real Life Story of One of America's Most Notorious Drug Lords

    Lucas, Frank: Original Gangster: The Real Life Story of One of America's Most Notorious Drug Lords
    Harlem gangster Frank Lucas's autobiography- Oh how I wish I'd been satisfied with Denzel Washington's portrayal of Lucas in the movie "American Gangster" Turns out the real Frank wasn't nearly as charming as Denzel's Frank- It was a well written and interesting book however--and I suspect that is at least in part thanks to Lucas's co-author Aliya S King (***)

  • Durham, Jonathan Edward: Winterset Hollow: A Novel

    Durham, Jonathan Edward: Winterset Hollow: A Novel
    This thrilling and terrifying novel follows a group of friends as they visit the place that inspired their favorite book- There they learn that what they have thought of as fiction might be all too real Unfortunately they meet their much-loved book's characters but don't expect anything quite as tame as WATERSHIP DOWN here- I absolutely loved this book- (****)

  • Slaughter, Karin: Pieces of Her: A Novel

    Slaughter, Karin: Pieces of Her: A Novel
    When a trip to the mall for Andrea and her mother Laura turns violent Andrea begins to suspect that she doesn't really know the woman who has been her mother for 31 years- Unlike many of the reviewers on Amazon I liked this book and I also liked the Netflix movie that was based on the book (***)

  • Valerie Fraser Luesse: Under the Bayou Moon

    Valerie Fraser Luesse: Under the Bayou Moon
    Restless with her life in Alabama young Ellie Fields accepts a teaching job in a small town in Lousiana bayou country in the late 1940s- There she meets a lonely Cajun fisherman named Raphe who introduces her to the legendary and somewhat mysterious white alligator- There's excitement and danger in this novel but also love and friendship- I've liked all of Valerie's books but this one is by far my favorite- I recommend it highly (****)

  • Shriver, Lionel: We Need to Talk About Kevin

    Shriver, Lionel: We Need to Talk About Kevin
    This is my second reading of this disturbing book- I don't recall now why I chose to reread it- Eva is a career-oriented wife with ticking biological clock- She never really wanted to be a mother and certainly not the mother of a psychopath which it seems Kevin was from the time he emerged from her womb- i'm not crazy about this author's writing style but this novel hooked me and I'll probably read it again- I've also seen the movie (****)

  • Savage, Thomas: The Power of the Dog

    Savage, Thomas: The Power of the Dog
    After watching the Netflix movie based on Savage's novel I decided to read the book- Both the book and the film are riveting- It's the story of two brothers — one magnetic but cruel (and hiding a personal secret), the other gentle and quiet — and of the mother and son whose arrival on the brothers’ ranch shatters an already tenuous peace. It takes place in on a montana ranch in the 1020s (****)

  • Egan, Timothy: The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl

    Egan, Timothy: The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl
    For thousands of years the buffalo grass that covered the American Great Plains kept the soil in place and the area with its harsh winds and blizzards habitable - Then came the European immigrants with their plows and wheat and within a few year the result was "The Dust Bowl" But it was not just dust that swept the area but giant black clouds of Great Plains top soil - The storms destroyed the land and machinery killed the animals and many people It also made a few greedy men quite wealthy - just not the men women and children who suffered to coax wheat and other crops from this area that should never have known a plow's presence (***)

  • Brandt, Charles: I Heard You Paint Houses: Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran & Closing the Case on Jimmy Hoffa

    Brandt, Charles: I Heard You Paint Houses: Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran & Closing the Case on Jimmy Hoffa
    I had already read this book a couple of years ago but was halfway through it this time before I realized it - Just as good the second time around - Frank Sheeran - "The Irishman" of the Netflix movie - tells of his close association and friendship with Jimmy Hoffa and his part in the Teamster leader's mysterious disappearance (****)

  • Langan, Sarah: Good Neighbors: A Novel

    Langan, Sarah: Good Neighbors: A Novel
    Maple Street, a picture-perfect slice of suburban Long Island, its residents bound by their children, their work, and their illusion of safety in a rapidly changing world. A new family's arrival - an environmental disaster - the death of a neighborhood child - and one woman's dark secret combine to turn this quiet neighborhood into a war zone - A very good book (****)

  • Frankland, Maria: The Man Behind Closed Doors: The other side of domestic bliss (Domestic Thrillers You Can't Put Down)

    Frankland, Maria: The Man Behind Closed Doors: The other side of domestic bliss (Domestic Thrillers You Can't Put Down)
    I read this book in less than 24 hours Couldn't put it down Finished up at 4:00 this morning But although it was quite a page-turner I was a little underwhelmed by the ending But you might not be (****)

  • Stephen King and Richard Chizmar: Gwendy's Final Task (Gwendy's Button Box Trilogy, 3)

    Stephen King and Richard Chizmar: Gwendy's Final Task (Gwendy's Button Box Trilogy, 3)
    The last of three Gwendy books Our heroine is now a US Senator and has been tasked with making sure the Button Box can do no further harm It's a long and arduous job and many obstacles are put in her way Can she accomplish what mysterious Richard Farris has told her she's the only one trustworthy enough to do it? (****)

  • Gresham, William Lindsay: Nightmare Alley

    Gresham, William Lindsay: Nightmare Alley
    In answer to all the book banning that's going on in this country, II read this book after watching both the old (1946) and new (2021) versions of the movie. Written in the 30s and first published in 1946, this book has been banned and corrupted into oblivion. The 2021 remake of the 1948 movie has brought new attention to Gresham's creation. I have seen both movies, and am now reading the book. It's an amazing book, but a bit of a challenge to read due to the early 20th century and carnival slang and idiom. It is also one of those books that leaves you with a somewhat sleazy feeling. None of the characters are admirable, but they're all strikingly drawn. (****)

  • Callahan, Patti: Once Upon a Wardrobe

    Callahan, Patti: Once Upon a Wardrobe
    Sixteen-year-old Megs's 8-year-old brother George has a heart condition and a short time to live. George is obsessed with C.S. Lewis's THE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDROBE. He knows that Mr. Lewis teaches at the university where Megs is a student. He asks his sister to ask Lewis where his land of Narnia came from. Thus begins a wonderful novel that explores the power of storytelling and its ability to inspire and bring hope. (****)

  • Benjamin, Melanie: The Children's Blizzard: A Novel

    Benjamin, Melanie: The Children's Blizzard: A Novel
    In 188(something), on a warmer-than-usual-day, and unexpected blizzard hit Nebraska and the Dakota Territory. Many people were caught outside, including children returning from school. VIsability was zero, and many couldn't find their way to shelter. This fiction account of a real-life tragedy centers on two teachers and their students, many of whom didn't make it. It's a hard-to-put-down book, and one that will break your heart. (*****)

  • Jewell, Lisa: The Night She Disappeared: A Novel

    Jewell, Lisa: The Night She Disappeared: A Novel
    On a beautiful summer night in a charming English suburb, a young woman and her boyfriend disappear after partying at the massive country estate of a new college friend. The couple's year-old son is left with the girl's single mother. Over the next year, the mother and the girlfriend of the head teacher at the college come together to figure out what happened to the couple. (****)

  • Lehr, Dick: White Hot Hate: A True Story of Domestic Terrorism in America's Heartland

    Lehr, Dick: White Hot Hate: A True Story of Domestic Terrorism in America's Heartland
    Spring of 2016, three men in a militia group, the Crusaders, grow irate over one Kansas town’s growing Somali community.The men plot to bomb a mosque, aiming to kill hundreds and inspire other attacks against Muslims in America. But they would wait until after the presidential election, so that their actions wouldn’t hurt Donald Trump’s chances of winning. An FBI informant befriended the three men, acting as law enforcement’s eyes and ears for eight months. His secretly taped conversations with the militia were pivotal in obstructing their plans and were a lynchpin in the resulting trial and convictions for conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction. (****)

  • Caitlin R. Kiernan: Cambrian Tales
    Some of Cait's early work, some as far back as her childhood and teens. I truly enjoyed reading these short pieces. Can't be found on Amazon. 90% sold out. https://subterraneanpress.com/news/caitlin-r-kiernans-vile-affections-cambrian-tales-over-90-sold-out/ (*****)
  • Vogel, Jennifer: Flim-Flam Man: The True Story of My Father's Counterfeit Life

    Vogel, Jennifer: Flim-Flam Man: The True Story of My Father's Counterfeit Life
    Major motion picture Flag Day starring Sean Penn and his daughter Dylan Penn is based on this father-daughter story of a charming criminal—told by the daughter who loved him. Both the book and the movie are excellent. (****)

  • Olsen, Gregg: Snow Creek: An absolutely gripping mystery thriller (Detective Megan Carpenter)

    Olsen, Gregg: Snow Creek: An absolutely gripping mystery thriller (Detective Megan Carpenter)
    When I first started reading I thought was going to be one of the best murder mysteries ever. But things began to get complicated. There were so many characters who had maybe committed the exact same crime (parricide), with the same family makeup, the same family problems. About halfway through the book I got totally confused. Then almost at the end, the author gave us a section that explained who everyone was in relation to everyone else and what they did or might have done. But in the end, he left one mystery hanging (the one I was most anxious to have cleared up, the one that he teased us throughout the book about). No problem. Just purchase his next book in which he promises to clear it all up. Maybe. Greg Olsen is a good writer, but I feel he tried to cover too much ground in this book. (***)

  • Bohjalian, Chris: The Flight Attendant: A Novel

    Bohjalian, Chris: The Flight Attendant: A Novel
    Flight attendant, alcoholic, compulsive liar, and bed hopper Cassie Bowden has finally picked the wrong guy to sleep with. When she wakes up in a hotel in Dubai, hardly remembering the events of the drunken night before, she finds a dead man in the bed beside her. She doesn't think she killed him, but she's not sure. I wasn't crazy about this book, and I think it's because I had hard time having any sympathy for the main character. But it's an exciting read, to be sure. (***)

  • Barclay, Linwood: Find You First

    Barclay, Linwood: Find You First
    Tech millionaire Miles Cookson has more money than he can spend in his lifetime--which due to a recently diagnosed illness, could be shorter than he had planned. Years, ago, when Cookson was but a struggling young entrepreneur, he sold sperm in order to bankroll a business. Now he learns that his disease can be passed on to his offspring, of which it turns out he has nine. Cookson wants to find them to inform them of their chances of contracted this terminal illness--and he plans to also leave his fortune to them whether or not they get the disease. But someone else doesn't care for Cookson's plan. Thus the race to find his "children" before it's too late. (****)

  • Dearth, Paige: When Smiles Fade

    Dearth, Paige: When Smiles Fade
    Young Emma kills people, but only if they deserve it. Sort of a young female Dexter Morgan, huh? But the most disturbing element of the book for me is getting a look at the lives of runaway teens. (***)

  • Ware, Ruth: The Woman in Cabin 10

    Ware, Ruth: The Woman in Cabin 10
    This book does for cruises what "Psycho" did for showers. The murder mystery follows somewhat the Agatha Cristie format. Warning: If you suffer from claustrophobia you might want to read something else. I do, but for me, the close quarters in this small cruise ship just added to the suspense. (***)

Books Read in 2021

  • Van Zandt, Stevie: Unrequited Infatuations: A Memoir

    Van Zandt, Stevie: Unrequited Infatuations: A Memoir
    Sex, drugs, and rock and roll. Mostly rock and roll, but somehow it lost the magic. As much as I love Stevie, Bruce, and the whole E Street Band as well as most of the performers of classic Rock and Roll, this book bored me stiff. I don't even know why I finished it. I've never heard of most of the people that Stevie talks about. Bruce (and even Stevie) takes up very little of the book. And the amazing Clarence Clemmons (the late E Street sax player) gets one whole paragraph. Unless you enjoy reading the intricate history, technicalities, and details of the greatest music genre in the history of the world, pass this one up and put on a Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band album, and relax. (**)

  • Chesterton, R. B.: The Darkling: A Novel

    Chesterton, R. B.: The Darkling: A Novel
    R.B. Chesterton is the pen name of my friend and prolific writer Carolyn Haines. The book has now been published under her actual name, so if interested, you could find it credited to either name. I really liked this book. It is an engrossing and exciting story. I looked forward to the ending to have everything made clear. In that, I was disappointed. The ending cleared up nothing. In fact the ending left me scratching my head. Among several puzzles, I have no idea who was the bad guy (girl) and who was the good. I would rate the book up until the end as as 4 stars, but the ending gets no stars at all--just a big old "HUH?" (***)

  • Silva, Samantha: Mr. Dickens and His Carol

    Silva, Samantha: Mr. Dickens and His Carol
    A fictional telling of the events in Charles Dickens's life that led to his writing A CHRISTMAS CAROL. Good story. (****)

  • Carson, Scott: Where They Wait: A Novel

    Carson, Scott: Where They Wait: A Novel
    This was a good book, a pretty unique plot for a thriller. In fact, I'm not sure I even understand what was going on, especially the ending. It was sort of like coming out of the theatre after the first time I saw "2001: A Space Odyssey." Everyone, including me, was wondering what the heck was that? That's sort of how I felt when I had finished this book. But, like "2001," I'm glad I had the experience. (***)

  • Charles Martin: Chasing Fireflies: A Novel of Discovery

    Charles Martin: Chasing Fireflies: A Novel of Discovery
    Chase Walker was one of the lucky ones. He was in foster care as a child, but he finally ended up with a family who loved him and cared for him. Now, as a journalist for the local paper, he’s moved on and put the past behind him. But when he’s assigned the story of this young boy, painful, haunting questions about his own childhood begin to rise to the surface. (***)

  • Jiles, Paulette: Simon the Fiddler: A Novel

    Jiles, Paulette: Simon the Fiddler: A Novel
    THe adventures of a group of ragtag musicians in south Texas as the Civil War comes to an end. This was my book club's pick for November. Excellent writing. The author really puts the reader in the story--and not all of it is so nice. (****)

  • Clark, Julie: The Last Flight

    Clark, Julie: The Last Flight
    Two women, each finding herself in a desperate situation, meeting in the airport and decide to switch flights with each other in order to disappear and start new lives. Really good story. (****)

  • King, Stephen: The Breathing Method

    King, Stephen: The Breathing Method
    A creepy short story by the Kind of Horror. A men's club of sorts meets to tell stories. The club is creepy, and so are their stories, espcially the last one.I read it online, but it's you can find the story in King's anthology DIFFERENT SEASONS. (****)

  • Miranda, Megan: Such a Quiet Place: A Novel

    Miranda, Megan: Such a Quiet Place: A Novel
    Hollow’s Edge use to be a quiet place. A private and idyllic neighborhood where neighbors dropped in on neighbors, celebrated graduation and holiday parties together, and looked out for one another. But then came the murder of Brandon and Fiona Truett. A year and a half later, Hollow’s Edge is simmering. The residents are trapped, unable to sell their homes, confronted daily by the empty Truett house, and suffocated by their trial testimonies that implicated one of their own. Ruby Fletcher. And now, Ruby’s back. (****)

  • Newman, T. J.: Falling: A Novel

    Newman, T. J.: Falling: A Novel
    WOW! If, like me, you enjoy an exciting edge-of-your-seat thriller, you're bound to like this book. It had me holding my breath at times. Very exciting and well written. (****)

  • Trimnell, Edward: 12 Hours of Halloween: a novel

    Trimnell, Edward: 12 Hours of Halloween: a novel
    The year is 1980. Jeff Schaeffer, Leah Carter, and Bobby Nagel decide to go out for "one last Halloween" before adolescence takes away their childhood forever. But this Halloween is different. An outing that was supposed to be light-hearted and fun becomes a battle for sanity—and perhaps even survival. Pretty gorey and scary in places. (***)

  • Driscoll, Teresa: Her Perfect Family

    Driscoll, Teresa: Her Perfect Family
    family’s happiest days. But when she stumbles and falls on stage during the ceremony, a beautiful moment turns to chaos: Gemma has been shot, and just like that, she’s fighting for her life. Talk about some twists and turns! This is really an intriguing page turner. (****)

  • McNeil, Kelley: A Day Like This: A Novel

    McNeil, Kelley: A Day Like This: A Novel
    Annie Beyers leads a charmed like in her Upstate NY farmhouse with her husband and little girl. On her way to vist her daughter's pediatrician, Annie has an car wreck. She wakes up in the hospital to learned that she has never had a daughter, her farm house has been sold, and she is separated from her husband. This is a fascinating and wonderfully written story---the best on this subject Iand I won't say exactly what the subject is here) that I've ever read. (****)

  • Jewell, Lisa: Watching You: A Novel

    Jewell, Lisa: Watching You: A Novel
    The mysterious murder at the book's center unfolds gradually, as piece by piece the past and present relationships between its cast of characters begin to fit together. Not this author's best effort IMO. (**)

  • Green, John: Turtles All the Way Down

    Green, John: Turtles All the Way Down
    The story centers on 16-year-old Aza Holmes, an American high school student with OCD and anxiety, and her search for a fugitive billionaire who happens to be a neighbor's father. I felt that the author concentrated too much on the OCD and not enough on the mystery. But still a good book. (***)

  • O'Farrell, Maggie: Hamnet

    O'Farrell, Maggie: Hamnet
    A fictional account of the life of William Shakespeare and his family during the Black Plague. Hamnet is the tutor's (Shakespeare's) son, and only one of so many children and other characters that I found it hard to keep everyone straight. This book gets great reviews so you might like it a whole bunch more than I di. (**)

  • Chizmar, Richard: Chasing the Boogeyman: A Novel

    Chizmar, Richard: Chasing the Boogeyman: A Novel
    Small town evil set in the late 80s, disappearing girls, mutilated bodies--all elements for a good horror read. Well-used elements, I might add. I think Chizmar might be trying a little too hard to be Stephen King. Also, I had to check several times to remind myself whether this was fiction or non-fiction. The author uses a lot of his own life and experiences (even his very own hometown). I'm still not sure exactly how much is fiction. (***)

  • Walter, Susan: Good as Dead: A Novel

    Walter, Susan: Good as Dead: A Novel
    A hit-and-run driver takes Holly's husband but gives her and her daughter their dream home and everything they need for a luxurious life. Answers the question, can money make everything all right? Fast and exciting read. (***)

  • Marcott, Lindsay: Mrs. Rochester's Ghost: A Thriller

    Marcott, Lindsay: Mrs. Rochester's Ghost: A Thriller
    A modern retelling of Charlotte Bronte's JANE EYRE. Set on a rocky cliff above the crashing surf of Big Sur, the foggy climate is right, but somehow some of the spookiness is lost. Still a good story. (***)

  • Marrs, John: What Lies Between Us

    Marrs, John: What Lies Between Us
    Another dysfunctional mother/daughter story. And I would have considered it a darn good one if I could ever for a while forgot the fact that somebody is bound to notice when people disappear into thin air. (***)

  • Korelitz, Jean Hanff: The Plot: A Novel

    Korelitz, Jean Hanff: The Plot: A Novel
    Another story-within-a-story format, which became a little bit of a problem to me. I almost needed a chart to remember where each character belonged in the format. We have an unusual mother/daughter, and each one has three names, according to which version of the story she's appearing in. And they both turn out to be--well, best not go there. Also the entire tale is driven by a case of "plagiarism," which is not plagiarism at all. As is actually stated a few times in the novel, one cannot copyright a plot. And finally, I was expected some earth-shattering plot that would really be a surprise; didn't get one. But for all these problems, I still had a fun time reading this book. (***)

  • King, Stephen: Billy Summers

    King, Stephen: Billy Summers
    Billy Summers, Iraq war sniper turned professional hit man, it the leading man of this thriller (not horror as you might expect). When he rescues Alice after she has been gang raped, the young woman becomes Billy's partner. It's a story-within-a-story (Billy is writing and book based on his war experience), just might be one of King's best efforts yet. (****)

  • Jones, John Isaac: A Quiet Madness: A Biographical Novel of Edgar Allan Poe

    Jones, John Isaac: A Quiet Madness: A Biographical Novel of Edgar Allan Poe
    I love Poe. And I would have loved this book more except for the sloppiness. Typos, missing words, extra words, transposed words. No copy editor in evidence. This was the Kindle edition; maybe the hard copy editions are better. Be advised that this is a mixture of fact and fiction. So before you take any of it to heart, fact check. (***)

  • Hepworth, Sally: The Good Sister: A Novel

    Hepworth, Sally: The Good Sister: A Novel
    This book was a doozy of a page turner. Lots of twists. I can't say too much without risking spoilers, so I'll just add this: "A stunningly clever thriller made doubly suspenseful by not one, but two unreliable narrators." — People (***)

  • Brundage, Elizabeth: All Things Cease to Appear

    Brundage, Elizabeth: All Things Cease to Appear
    Late one winter afternoon, professor George Clare knocks on his neighbor’s door with terrible news: he returned from work to find his wife, Catherine, murdered in their bed. Someone took an ax to her head while their three-year-old daughter, Franny, played alone in her room across the hall. I found only one thing to dislike about this book. The author insists upon giving every character a back story. This makes for a bit of a tedious read. But still worth four stars. And it's not the kind of ghost story that the Netflix adaptation presents it as. The ghosts in this novel are there, but there all right--but they "cease to appear." (****)

  • Latham, Irene: D-39: A Robodog's Journey

    Latham, Irene: D-39: A Robodog's Journey
    A dog pandemic has made dogs illegal and sent robodogs to serve as pets. A civil war has made life dangerous and difficult for all. In this environment, heroes emerge--one of them is a wonderful "robodog" named D-39. I loved this book. (****)

  • Henry, Christina: The Ghost Tree

    Henry, Christina: The Ghost Tree
    Something terrifying is loose in Smiths Hollow. This monster makes Pennywise the clown look almost sweet. Surely this is the book that Stephen King wished he had written. It even scared me, and I'm not that easy to scare any more. Read it only if you aren't allergic to terror and gore. (****)

  • Backman, Fredrik: Anxious People: A Novel

    Backman, Fredrik: Anxious People: A Novel
    This is a book about a bank robbery, a hostage situation, an apartment viewing, a suicide,a rabbit of sorts, and a bunch of other stuff. A mix of wry humor, human tragedy, and human compassion come together to make a wonderful read. I recommend highly. (****)

  • Siddons, Anne Rivers: The House Next Door

    Siddons, Anne Rivers: The House Next Door
    Stephen King described this books as "one of the finest horror novels of the 20th century." I agree. It is often described as a haunted house book, but I see it more as a book about a bunch of haunted people. Whatever, it's a good one. Kept me turning pages frantically. (****)

  • Kosa, S. F.: The Quiet Girl: A Psychological Thriller

    Kosa, S. F.: The Quiet Girl: A Psychological Thriller
    Sort of a GONE GIRL, but with much more likeable characters and a much different kind of ending. Very suspenseful, well written. (***)

  • Williams-Garcia, Rita: A Sitting in St. James

    Williams-Garcia, Rita: A Sitting in St. James
    A detailed and brutal look at slavery in 19th century America. Well written, well developed characters, and an important subject. However, I was shocked that this is listed as a book for teens. Some even rate it as a children's book. It contains frequent graphic, detailed, and sometimes violent sex. Parental guidance definitely advised. (***)

  • Kleier, Glenn: The Prophet of Queens

    Kleier, Glenn: The Prophet of Queens
    I liked everything about this book: the title (which is really what the story's about), the writing, the plot, the characters, the ending--everything. I've been Facebook friends with Glenn Kleier for a while without realizing he's an excellent novelist. When he told me he thought I would like this book, I groaned inwardly. A lot of times when friends suggest you read their books, it's not a pleasant task. This was pleasant, and not a tast. I LOVE THIS BOOK! (****)

  • Sittenfeld, Curtis: Rodham: A Novel

    Sittenfeld, Curtis: Rodham: A Novel
    Having been an admirer of Hillary Rodham Clinton for many years, I expected to like this fictional account of her life. Boy, was I wrong! This is a ridiculous book. If you're a Hillary Hater or a lover of soft porn, you might like it. But I found nothing to like--especially not the image of a naked Bill Clinton serenading Hillary with this saxophone. The whole book is shameful. Minus 5 stars.

  • Connolly, John: The Dirty South: A Thriller (18) (Charlie Parker)

    Connolly, John: The Dirty South: A Thriller (18) (Charlie Parker)
    I had trouble with this book. The title should have tipped me off that it wasn't going to be kind of my part of the country. And I know that the south has problems, but probably no more than most other areas. This read almost as a satire of the South. From the unusual first names to the Boss Hogg type patriarch of the town, Connolly seems to take a very clichéd attitude toward these people. Also there were far too many characters and the book was too long. All that said, I think Connolly is an excellent writer. I just didn't like this one. (**)

  • McLain, Paula: The Paris Wife

    McLain, Paula: The Paris Wife
    A fictional account of the lives of Hemingway and his first (0f 4) wives Hadley. Didn't make me any fonder of Hemingway or his writing. He was a first-class s of a b, as far as I'm concerned. It also didn't endear me very much to Hadley. I thought that if she had stood up to her husband more and hadn't enabled him at every turn while he was young, he might have gone on to be a better mad. But, good book. (****)

  • Krueger, William Kent: Ordinary Grace

    Krueger, William Kent: Ordinary Grace
    For me, this book got off to a slow start. But it picked up about halfway through and got much more interesting. That's when the murder takes place that is the subject of this murder mystery/coming of age story. I think maybe the book would have been easier for me to get into if the author had dealt with only one mysterious death instead of three or four. Still and all, it's well worth the read. (***)

  • Heller, Peter: The Dog Stars

    Heller, Peter: The Dog Stars
    I suppose the prose style of this book is part of the reason that I had trouble getting into it and sticking with it. Almost stream-of-consciousness. But it's also pretty much lacking in plot. Just a bunch of people who live (and die) after a deadly worldwide pandemic, and don't do much else. (I have previously read THE RIVER by this author, which I truly enjoyed.) (**)

  • Abrams, Stacey: While Justice Sleeps: A Novel

    Abrams, Stacey: While Justice Sleeps: A Novel
    Until I saw this book advertised online, I had no idea that Stacey Abrams (lawyer, voting rights activist, Nobel Peace Prize nominee, etc.) was also a novelist. This book is an intriguing page turner. I recommend it for anyone who enjoys legal thrillers. Better than Grisham, imo. (****)

  • Paris, B. A.: Behind Closed Doors: A Novel

    Paris, B. A.: Behind Closed Doors: A Novel
    I read this book a few years back. For some reason, I thought I wanted to read it again. I think I must have liked it better the first time I read it. This time it sort of left me feeling meh. The "bad guy" is a bit one-dimensional and unbelievable. More caricature than character. Still it might raise your hackles a bit. I remember it made me irate the first time I read it. (**)

  • Weir, Andy: Project Hail Mary: A Novel

    Weir, Andy: Project Hail Mary: A Novel
    If you thought The Martian was good (and I did), just wait till you read Project Hail Mary. One of the best books I've read this year. And one of the most appealing characters you'll ever meet--if you can get over how he looks. I happily give this book five stars. I'd give it more if there were more to give. (*****)

  • Bohjalian, Chris: Hour of the Witch: A Novel

    Bohjalian, Chris: Hour of the Witch: A Novel
    17th-century Massachusetts is not a safe place for women. as 24-year-old Mary Deerfield learns when she tries to divorce her cruel, lying, drunkard husband. This is the first book I've rated five stars in some time. (*****)

  • Foley, Lucy: The Guest List: A Novel

    Foley, Lucy: The Guest List: A Novel
    Take one rugged island off the western coast of Ireland, complete with jagged cliffs, peat bogs, and a roaring storm. Add 150 drunk wedding guests, many of them harboring dark secret pasts and grudges against one another. You know somebody's going to be murdered. But who and by whom? I loved this one. (****)

  • Jackson, Joshilyn: Mother May I: A Novel

    Jackson, Joshilyn: Mother May I: A Novel
    To get her son back alive, Bree must complete one small but critical task. It seems harmless enough, but this one action comes with a devastating price. And now Bree finds herself complicit in a terrible crime, caught up in a tangled web of secrets that threatens to destroy the perfect life she has built. In my opinion, this is Ms. Jackson's best book yet. (****)

  • Hemingway, Ernest: The Snows of Kilimanjaro

    Hemingway, Ernest: The Snows of Kilimanjaro
    Following the PBS Hemingway series, my book club decided that we would each read a Hemingway selection and discuss them at our May meeting. I chose this the short story The Snows of Kilimanjoro. Hemingway is, to say the least, not my favorite writer, and I didn't want to get bogged down in one of his long, angsty, narcissistic tales of male dominance and adventure. I'm glad this one was relatively short. It was the knowledge that I didn't have far to go that kept me reading. In Snows, we have a man lying on a cot in camp at the foot of Mt. Kilimanjaro, dying of gangrene after scratching his leg on a thorn and failing to treat the scratch. While he lingers, with his current wife (he has had several) by his side, he reminisces about the book he didn't write and the women he treated like s--t. The end. (*)

  • Haines, Carolyn: The House of Memory (Pluto's Snitch Book 2)

    Haines, Carolyn: The House of Memory (Pluto's Snitch Book 2)
    I've read several of Carolyn Haines's books, and so far, to me, this is the best. Haines gives us ghosts of murdered young women, a haunted insane asylum, an antebellum house where evil lurks, and a still-living young woman threatened by human and superhuman forces. Two of Alabama's favorite daughters, Tallulah Bankhead and Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald are main fictional characters in this spooky tale. (****)

  • Hardiman, Rebecca: Good Eggs: A Novel

    Hardiman, Rebecca: Good Eggs: A Novel
    When Kevin Gogarty’s irrepressible eighty-three-year-old mother, Millie, is caught shoplifting yet again, he has no choice but to hire a caretaker to keep an eye on her. Kevin, recently unemployed, is already at his wits’ end tending to a full house while his wife travels to exotic locales for work, leaving him solo with his sulky, misbehaved teenaged daughter, Aideen, whose troubles escalate when she befriends the campus rebel at her new boarding school. This Irish family seems to have more than its share of problems, especially poor old Kevin. I loved this book. It was a nice change for me from murder and mayhem. (****)

  • Swanson, Peter: Every Vow You Break: A Novel

    Swanson, Peter: Every Vow You Break: A Novel
    This is definitely one of the best thriller/mystery novels I can remember reading. It's bookish, engrossing, not overly gory and impossible to solve. Every time I thought I had it figured out, I found out I didn't. It's cliche to say "I couldn't put it down," but I couldn't--except when absolutely necessary. I also have to say that I've always thought Sting's "letter from a stalker" song would make a good novel. Peter Swanson proved I was right. (****)

  • Flynn, Gillian: The Grownup: A Story by the Author of Gone Girl

    Flynn, Gillian: The Grownup: A Story by the Author of Gone Girl
    The first line of this book is definitely adults only. So if you're easy to shock or somewhat prudish, pass this one by, because it gets even more shocking. But it's a good, fast-paced novella narrated by an unnamed, born-and-raised scam artist who sees a chance to leave light sex work behind for a career in what she does best, reading people and telling them what they want to hear. But, often happens in a Gillian Flynn story, things are not what they seem (or course). (***)

  • Kiernan, Caitlin R.: Low Red Moon (A Chance Matthews Novel)

    Kiernan, Caitlin R.: Low Red Moon (A Chance Matthews Novel)
    Psychic Deacon Silvey and his wife Chance are on the hunt for an inhuman serial killer--or is she on the hunt for them? One of Kiernan's best books. Exciting, compelling page-turner. (****)

  • Mandel, Emily St. John: Station Eleven

    Mandel, Emily St. John: Station Eleven
    Set in the eerie days of civilization's collapse, Station Eleven tells the spellbinding story of a Hollywood star, his would-be savior, and a nomadic group of actors roaming the scattered outposts of the Great Lakes region, risking everything for art and humanity. Reading this book during a pandemic told me that things could be so much worse. (****)

  • Jewell, Lisa: The House We Grew Up In: A Novel

    Jewell, Lisa: The House We Grew Up In: A Novel
    Horror doesn't always involve monsters, and haunted houses don't always house actual ghosts. This faults and troubles this family suffered numerous and indeed horrible. The worst of which, to me, and the one that all the other horrors connect to, was the mother's addiction to hoarding. She turned her lovely home into death trap, which had devastating effects on her family and friends. (****)

  • McBride, James: The Color of Water: A Black Man's Tribute to His White Mother

    McBride, James: The Color of Water: A Black Man's Tribute to His White Mother
    Interspersed throughout his mother's compelling narrative, McBride, the author of GOOD LORD BIRD, shares candid recollections of his own experiences as a mixed-race child of poverty, his flirtations with drugs and violence, and his eventual self- realization and professional success. This book was well written and interesting, but I got often got confused with characters. There were so many of them. (***)

  • Flagg, Fannie: The Wonder Boy of Whistle Stop: A Novel

    Flagg, Fannie: The Wonder Boy of Whistle Stop: A Novel
    More about Idgy, Ruth, Bud, Evelyn, and all the Whistle Stop characters that we first met in Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe. It took me a while to get into the one, but about halfway through, things picked up. (***)

  • King, Stephen: Later

    King, Stephen: Later
    He sees dead people, Jamie does. And it gets him in a bunch of trouble. This was a fun read, and not nearly as long as most of S.K.'s books. (****)

  • Pinborough, Sarah: Behind Her Eyes: A Suspenseful Psychological Thriller

    Pinborough, Sarah: Behind Her Eyes: A Suspenseful Psychological Thriller
    I was interested in watching Netflix's miniseries based on this book, but decided I first wanted to read the book. About 50 pages into it, I started having serious deja vu. I did a bit of research and found that I had read it in 2017. But I didn't remember that controversial ending at all. After finishing the book, I still don't remember it, and I don't like it at all. In fact, I hate the ending. I've started on the series now. But I don't think the ending is going to change there. I'm giving the book four stars, but the ending gets only 1. (****)

  • Torre, Alessandra: The Ghostwriter

    Torre, Alessandra: The Ghostwriter
    Romance writer Helena Ross, with the help of her competitor and most ardent critic (who turns out to be not quite what she seems) is about to begin the last story she'll ever write. As far as I'm concerned, this is a must-read. It's not a ghost story, and it's not a romance. It's the story of a mother who is living with a load of guilt and grief that would destroy many. Read it and weep. I did. (****)

  • St. James, Simone: The Sun Down Motel

    St. James, Simone: The Sun Down Motel
    The Sun Down Motel has a very bad reputation. Even the owner tries to stay away from the place. But it still has its guests, some of them not quite in this world. Carly Kirk has taken a job at the motel, the same job her aunt held 35 years prior when she disappeared. Carly is determined to find out what happened to her Aunt Viv. But to do so, she has to do battle with some some pretty angry and evil spirits. The Sun Down gives the Overlook Hotel quite a run for scariest haunted hotel. (****)

  • Haines, Carolyn: A Gift of Bones: A Sarah Booth Delaney Mystery

    Haines, Carolyn: A Gift of Bones: A Sarah Booth Delaney Mystery
    No. 19 or 23 Sarah Booth Delaney mysteries, set in the Mississippi Delta. Christmas is just around the corner and Sarah Booth and her friend and partner Tinkie are preparing for a festive holiday season. Sarah Booth and Sheriff Coleman Peters have finally got together, and this is the first holiday they’re celebrating as a couple. But just as the hall-decking gets going in earnest, Sarah Booth's friend Cece Dee Falcon shows up needing Sarah Booth’s help. Cece's very pregnant cousin Eve has been abducted. Eve's due date is Christmas Eve, so time is of the essence. (****)

  • Walker, Wendy: Don't Look for Me: A Novel

    Walker, Wendy: Don't Look for Me: A Novel
    They called it a “walk away.” The car abandoned miles from home. The note found at a nearby hotel. The shattered family. It happens all the time. Women disappear, desperate to start over. But what really happened to Molly Clarke? This is a very fast paced page-turner. Good book! (****)

  • Wright, Lawrence: The End of October: A novel

    Wright, Lawrence: The End of October: A novel
    It is truly uncanny how the plot of this story so closely resembled what the world has been experiencing since early 2020. Our plague has, thank God, not been quite as bad as the Kongoli virus that the world of this novel suffers, What turns out to be the source of the virus isn't revealed until the very end of the book. Don't tell and spoil the fun. This is a very good book. (****)

  • Willett, Anna: Dear Neighbor

    Willett, Anna: Dear Neighbor
    When Amy and her abusive, loser boyfriend Zane move into a house together, she hopes they can put their rocky past behind them. She gets a job and befriends the older couple who live in the house next door. The couple and Amy eventually develop an almost parent/child relationship. Zane's hold over Amy has been strong, yet cracks are beginning to show. When a policeman knocks on Amy's door one day, it is the start of series of events that will make the two households clash together in a fatal entanglement. (***)

Books Read in 2020

  • Patterson, James: The Last Days of John Lennon

    Patterson, James: The Last Days of John Lennon
    This book was not what the title led me to expect. The author spends more time on telling the history of the Beatles than on dealing with the last days of Lennon and his murder. Still, pretty good book, especially for Beatles and/or Lennon fans. (***)

  • Brooks-Dalton, Lily: Good Morning, Midnight: A Novel

    Brooks-Dalton, Lily: Good Morning, Midnight: A Novel
    Something catastrophic has happened on earth, leaving one scientist and a mysterious little girl stranded in the Arctic and five astronauts in space on their flight home from Jupiter. One of the best books I've read in a while. Inspiration for Netflix's film "Midnight Sky." (****)

  • Hendrix, Grady: The Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying Vampires

    Hendrix, Grady: The Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying Vampires
    I'm not a fan of vampire books. In fact, the only ones that have ever earned good reviews from me are DRACULA and INTERVIEW WITH A VAMPIRE. I can now add a third. I found the beginning of this book to be humorous. I could readily relate to this group of ladies who think of themselves as "just housewives." Later on, when they put on their badass panties (and the author pretty much dropped the humor) and fight against evil for their families and neighbors, I could relate to that too--although I can't say I've ever fought anything as gross and evil as James Harris. (****)

  • Sager, Riley: Home Before Dark: A Novel

    Sager, Riley: Home Before Dark: A Novel
    Is it a ghost story or a murder mystery? You'll have to read to the end to find out. When I began reading, I thought it was going to be an Amityville Horror knockoff, but I was wrong. Good read. Exciting page turner. Note: The title really doesn't fit. I don't know where that came from. I think I would have titled it The Ghosts of Baneberry Hall. The word "dark" seems to be a draw these days, in novels and in Netflix movies. (***)

  • Haig, Matt: The Midnight Library: A Novel

    Haig, Matt: The Midnight Library: A Novel
    Matt Haig gives us truly imaginative plots and story lines. In this book, a young woman, Nora, can find no meaning nor purpose in her life and finally decides to end it. After taking the pills, she finds herself in what appears to be an endless library with her librarian, Miss Elm, who explains to Nora that each of the endless supply of books will take her to a life that she is living in a parallel universe. The purpose: to give Nora a reason for living and get rid of her many regrets. The book reminds me just a tiny bit of THE WIZARD OF OZ. (****)

  • Coben, Harlan: The Boy from the Woods

    Coben, Harlan: The Boy from the Woods
    Thirty years ago, Wilde was found as a boy living feral in the woods, with no memory of his past. Now an adult, he still doesn't know where he comes from, and another child has gone missing. I was pretty dissatisfied with the ending. (***)

  • North, Alex: The Shadows: A Novel

    North, Alex: The Shadows: A Novel
    25 years ago, a group of teenage boys participated in a ritualistic murder. One murderer was apprehended, the other, Charlie Crabtree, disappeared without a trace. Linked to the crime, Paul Adams left his hometown without looking back. Forced to return home to visit his dying mother, it appears a copycat is on the loose. Part horror novel, part detective story, part mystery. At times I enjoyed the story, but at times, it seemed to bog down. (***)

  • Little, Bentley: The Haunted

    Little, Bentley: The Haunted
    A very scary haunted house book--but the sex and violence, in my opinion, crept over into the gratuitous category. I'm no prude. I like scary books with lots of danger, and I don't mind a little sex. This one jsut went a little too far for me. But plenty scary. (***)

  • Follett, Ken: Third Twin: A Novel of Suspense

    Follett, Ken: Third Twin: A Novel of Suspense
    Scientist Jeannie Ferrami stumbles across a baffling mystery: Steve and Dan appear to be identical twins, but were born on different days, to different mothers. A law student and a convicted murderer, they seem a world apart, but as Jeannie begins to fall in love with Steve, who is charged with a horrendous crime he swears he didn't commit, she finds her professional - and personal - future threatened. A true page turner. (****)

  • Jewell, Lisa: The Family Upstairs: A Novel

    Jewell, Lisa: The Family Upstairs: A Novel
    Twenty-five years ago, police were called to 16 Cheyne Walk with reports of a baby crying. When they arrived, they found a healthy ten-month-old happily cooing in her crib in the bedroom. Downstairs in the kitchen lay three dead bodies, all dressed in black, next to a hastily scrawled note. And the four other children reported to live at Cheyne Walk were gone. In this chilling novel, the author brings us the can’t-look-away story of three entangled families living in a house with the darkest of secrets. (****)

  • Napolitano, Ann: Dear Edward: A Novel

    Napolitano, Ann: Dear Edward: A Novel
    Best book I’ve read in months, maybe years. At 12 years of age, Eddie (Edward) Adler survives an airline crash in which 191 people die, everyone except him, including his mom, dad, and older brother. For the next six years, Edward struggles to find his place in a world without his family. I highly recommend this book. (*****)

  • Hudson, Suzanne: The Fall of the Nixon Administration

    Hudson, Suzanne: The Fall of the Nixon Administration
    This is a silyl book. And if you were to remove all the profanity, obscenity, and pornography, you wouldn’t have three paragraphs left, nor a story (which you don’t have much of anyway). The only good thing about this book is the chickens. But it does have some funny dialogue. So I’ll give it three starts for that. (***)

  • Levy, Andrea: Small Island: A Novel

    Levy, Andrea: Small Island: A Novel
    Hortense Joseph arrives in London from Jamaica in 1948 with her life in her suitcase, her heart broken, her resolve intact. Her husband, Gilbert Joseph, returns from the war expecting to be received as a hero, but finds his status as a black man in Britain to be second class. His white landlady, Queenie, raised as a farmer's daughter, befriends Gilbert, and later Hortense, with innocence and courage, until the unexpected arrival of her husband, Bernard, who returns from combat with issues of his own to resolve. (***)

  • Kehlmann, Daniel: You Should Have Left: A Novel

    Kehlmann, Daniel: You Should Have Left: A Novel
    Super chilling story of a writer who can’t seem to write anything except notes to himself. He and his wife and 4-year-old daughter have retreated to a secluded house in the German mountains so that he can finish a screenplay. Things do not go well. (****)

  • Erdrich, Louise: The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse: A Novel

    Erdrich, Louise: The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse: A Novel
    This was our book club selection for August. I found it sort of cumbersome and confusing. There were far too many characters to keep track of, and many of the characters were more than one person. If you’re interested in the plot, click on the link and read about it on Amazon. I’m to tired of this book to go into detail. (**)

  • Morgenstern, Erin: The Starless Sea: A Novel

    Morgenstern, Erin: The Starless Sea: A Novel
    A mythical story about stories, is how one reviewer describes this book. Did I like it? I did at the beginning and for maybe halfway through. But so much description, repetition, and repetition of descriptions got on my last nerve, and I confess I didn’t quite finish the book. I just found that I didn’t care much how it ended, so I gave up. But the premise was a good one. (***)

  • Adams, Taylor: No Exit: A Novel

    Adams, Taylor: No Exit: A Novel
    On her way to Utah to see her dying mother, college student Darby Thorne gets caught in a fierce blizzard in the mountains of Colorado. With the roads impassable, she’s forced to wait out the storm at a remote highway rest stop. Inside are some vending machines, a coffee maker, and four complete strangers. Desperate to find a signal to call home, Darby goes back out into the storm . . . and makes a horrifying discovery. In the back of the van parked next to her car, a little girl is locked in an animal crate. (***)

  • Wright, Kim: Last Ride to Graceland

    Wright, Kim: Last Ride to Graceland
    Blues musician Cory Ainsworth is barely scraping by after her mother’s death when she discovers a priceless piece of rock ‘n’ roll memorabilia hidden away in a shed out back of the family’s coastal South Carolina home: Elvis Presley’s Stutz Blackhawk, its interior a time capsule of the singer’s last day on earth. (***)

  • Haines, Carolyn: The Book of Beloved (Pluto's Snitch 1)

    Haines, Carolyn: The Book of Beloved (Pluto's Snitch 1)
    As a young woman widowed by World War I, Raissa James is no stranger to ghosts. But when an invitation arrives from Caoin House, her uncle’s estate in Mobile, Alabama, she’s finally ready to cast off the shadows of her past. A spooky old house, a gaggle of ghosts, and murder combine for a chilling read. (****)

  • Haines, Carolyn: Them Bones: A Mystery from the Mississippi Delta (Sarah Booth Delaney Mystery Book 1)

    Haines, Carolyn: Them Bones: A Mystery from the Mississippi Delta (Sarah Booth Delaney Mystery Book 1)
    First in the Sarah Booth Delaney mysteries. Sarah Booth is over 30, unmarried, alone and broke, and about to lose the family plantation. She has her own personal ghost, the nanny of her great great grandmother. When kidnapping her friend’s doggie Chablis with plans exchange her for ransom falls through, Chablis’s owner hired Sarah Booth to solve a murder. Thus begins this someone unlikely southern belle’s career as a sleuth. (***)

  • King, Stephen: If It Bleeds

    King, Stephen: If It Bleeds
    I enjoyed the first three novellas in this collection. But the 4th one, the title story “If It Bleeds,” is a continuation of the Bill Hodges/Holly Gibney saga. I got tired of them halfway through the first book, I think. I didn’t finish this one.Four stars for first three stories, two stars for “If It Bleeds." (***)

  • King, Stephen: The Outsider: A Novel

    King, Stephen: The Outsider: A Novel
    An eleven-year-old boy’s violated corpse is discovered in a town park. Eyewitnesses and fingerprints point unmistakably to one of Flint City’s most popular citizens—Terry Maitland, Little League coach, English teacher, husband, and father of two girls. Detective Ralph Anderson, whose son Maitland once coached, orders a quick and very public arrest. Maitland has an alibi, but Anderson and the district attorney soon have DNA evidence to go with the fingerprints and witnesses. (***)

  • McBride, James: The Good Lord Bird: A Novel

    McBride, James: The Good Lord Bird: A Novel
    Henry Shackleford is a young slave living in the Kansas Territory in 1857, when the region is a battleground between anti- and pro-slavery forces. When John Brown, the legendary abolitionist, arrives in the area, an argument between Brown and Henry’s master quickly turns violent. Henry is forced to leave town—with Brown, who believes he’s a girl. (***)

  • Ng, Celeste: Little Fires Everywhere: A Novel

    Ng, Celeste: Little Fires Everywhere: A Novel
    I had some trouble getting into this book. But about halfway through, I was hooked. Most of the main characters are teenagers. And most of the grownup characters aren't very well fleshed out, with maybe the exception of Mia. Sort of like Charlie Brown grownups. I was a little disappointed with the book as a whole. (***)

  • Coben, Harlan: Gone for Good: A Novel

    Coben, Harlan: Gone for Good: A Novel
    Will Klein’s older brother Ken was his hero. Then, on a warm suburban night in the Kleins’ affluent New Jersey neighborhood, a young woman is found murdered. The prime suspect: Ken Klein. Ken vanishes, and for ten years, his family has no word from him. They are sure he is gone for good--until a decade later, on her death bed, Will’s mother gives Will reason to think otherwise. (***)

  • Karen Thompson Walker: The Dreamers: A Novel

    Karen Thompson Walker: The Dreamers: A Novel
    A plague has hit this small college town. People are falling asleep and not waking up. But that’s only the beginning. What happens to them in their dreams is the real story. I loved this book. It reminded me a bit of SLEEPING BEAUTIES by Stephen and Owen King. (****)

  • Harlan Coben: The Stranger

    Harlan Coben: The Stranger
    The stranger digs around in people’s private lives to learn secrets they’d like to keep secret, then blackmails them (or sometimes he just tells them to ruin lives) to keep their secrets. A page turner for me. (***)

  • Kristin Hannah: Firefly Lane

    Kristin Hannah: Firefly Lane
    I rarely give up on a book once I start reading it. But this is the second book I failed to finish this year. It reads like a book for young girls. Not this author’s best effort. I can’t believe the same woman who wrote THE NIGHTINGALE wrong this. (**)

  • Sarah M. Broom: The Yellow House: A Memoir (2019 National Book Award Winner)

    Sarah M. Broom: The Yellow House: A Memoir (2019 National Book Award Winner)
    This was my book club’s February selection. I know it won awards. I know it gets glowing reviews. I admit the writer has a way with words. But I found this book tedious and slow going. I couldn’t keep the characters straight, so I finally gave up trying to remember who was who. Eventually, I gave up on the whole book. Didn’t finish it. (**)

  • Taylor Adams: No Exit: A Novel

    Taylor Adams: No Exit: A Novel
    A kidnapped little girl, two psychopathic killers, and a blizzard combine to make a rip-roaring thriller. I really enjoyed this one. (****)

  • Michael Crummey: The Innocents: A Novel

    Michael Crummey: The Innocents: A Novel
    A brother and sister are orphaned in an isolated cove on Newfoundland's northern rocky, wild coastline. Still children with only the barest notion of the outside world, they have nothing but the family's boat and the little knowledge passed on haphazardly by their mother and father to keep them. (****)

  • Susan May: Best Seller

    Susan May: Best Seller
    A young female writer is mentored by an experienced award-winning male author. Female writer’s career takes off, while male author’s hits the skids. Then all hell breaks loose. This is one of the best thrillers, and most original plots, I’ve ever read. I can recommend it gladly to all thriller lovers. (****)

Books Read in 2019

  • Herman Koch: The Dinner

    Herman Koch: The Dinner
    Forgot one. This is a darkly suspenseful, highly controversial tale of two families struggling to make the hardest decision of their lives—all over the course of one meal. I liked this one. (****)

  • David Koepp: Cold Storage: A Novel

    David Koepp: Cold Storage: A Novel
    An alien biohazard, buried deep underground for decades, has escaped. This is a fast-paced, scary read. Very entertaining if you’re a fan of thrillers. This was my last read of 2019. (***)

  • Charles Brandt: I Heard You Paint Houses: Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran & Closing the Case on Jimmy Hoffa

    Charles Brandt: I Heard You Paint Houses: Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran & Closing the Case on Jimmy Hoffa
    After watching the fantastic movie “The Irishman” recently, I wanted more. So I read the book from which the movie was taken. It recounts the mobster career of Frank Sheeran, who before his death, confessed to the assassination of Jimmy Hoffa. (****)

  • Jeffrey Lent: Lost Nation: A Novel

    Jeffrey Lent: Lost Nation: A Novel
    Another book that I had a difficult time finishing. I think maybe because I didn’t really like any of the characters. Set in the early nineteenth century, Lost Nation is about a man known as Blood with a secret past and Sally, a sixteen-year-old girl that Blood won from the madam of a brothel over a game of cards. Set on the isolated land that could belong to Canada or the United States, the story is brutal, as are the characters. I think maybe some judicious cutting and editing and fleshing out of characters might have made reading this book more enjoyable for me. (***)

  • Leigh Bardugo: Ninth House

    Leigh Bardugo: Ninth House
    Sort of a Harry Potter for adults (although this adult enjoyed the actual Harry Potter more). It deals with the actual secret societies at Yale (one in particular), but in a fictional kind of way. For some reason, I had a hard time finishing this book. Maybe it was the pace, not sure. The writing was good, and the story premise intriguing, but I had a hard time maintaining interest. (***)

  • Gregg Olsen: If You Tell: A True Story of Murder, Family Secrets, and the Unbreakable Bond of Sisterhood

    Gregg Olsen: If You Tell: A True Story of Murder, Family Secrets, and the Unbreakable Bond of Sisterhood
    Harrowing and heartrending, If You Tell is a survivor’s story of absolute evil—and the freedom and justice that Nikki, Sami, and Tori risked their lives to fight for. Sisters forever, victims no more, they found a light in the darkness that made them the resilient women they are today—loving, loved, and moving on. A good book, if you can stand the descriptions of true evil and cruelty. (****)

  • J. T. Ellison: Lie to Me

    J. T. Ellison: Lie to Me
    Sutton and Ethan Montclair's idyllic life is not as it appears. They seem made for each other, but the truth is ugly. Consumed by professional and personal betrayals and financial woes, the two both love and hate each other. As tensions mount, Sutton disappears, leaving behind a note saying not to look for her. Is she a alive? Is she dead? Did her husband do it? What about their baby? Think of it as GONE GIRL, but better written with more likable characters. A great page-turner. (****)

  • Stephen King: The Institute: A Novel

    Stephen King: The Institute: A Novel
    As is often the case with King’s best books, the character list of the one is peopled with adolescents. These kids become the victims of a sinister institute that is using their special skills to prevent the end of the world. It’s a hefty book, 577 pages, but a real page turner. (****)

  • Ellis Nassour: Honky Tonk Angel: The Intimate Story of Patsy Cline

    Ellis Nassour: Honky Tonk Angel: The Intimate Story of Patsy Cline
    Lots of information on Patsy, but it reads more like a reporter’s notebook than a real story. The account of the plane crash and its aftermath is hard to read. (***)

  • Elie Wiesel: Night (Night)

    Elie Wiesel: Night (Night)
    Elie Wiesel's masterpiece, a candid, horrific, and deeply poignant autobiographical account of his survival as a teenager in the Nazi death camps. It will make you shudder at the true evil in the world; it will amaze you and the strength of the human spirit. (*****)

  • Joshilyn Jackson: Never Have I Ever: A Novel

    Joshilyn Jackson: Never Have I Ever: A Novel
    A tense tale of human frailty and human strength, or blackmail and betrayal, and ultimately of redemption. A fan of thrillers, I loved this book. (****)

  • Robert Inman: Dairy Queen Days

    Robert Inman: Dairy Queen Days
    I love how this author mixes humor with human tragedy. This story takes places in a small Georgia town in 1979, told from the view point of 16-year-old Trout Moseley, new to this place that bears his family’s name and legacy, his mother is a patient in an Atlanta psychiatric facility and his father -- a 300-pound motorcycle-riding Methodist minister -- is delivering scandalous sermons comparing Jesus with Elvis and the Holy Ghost with his college football coach. (****)

  • Jennifer McMahon: The Invited: A Novel

    Jennifer McMahon: The Invited: A Novel
    Ghost story with a twist. They didn’t move into a haunted house. They built one. Excellent read. (****)

  • Peter Heller: The River: A novel

    Peter Heller: The River: A novel
    The DELIVERANCE of the 21st century. This is a very exciting and interesting read. The only negative criticism I have is that the characters weren't developed enough. The ending should have brought tears, but it didn’t for me. (***)

  • Casey Cep: Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee

    Casey Cep: Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee
    I cannot believe someone wrote an entire book about somebody not writing a book. That’s the best I can say for this one. I found most of it quite boring. (*)

  • Jodi Picoult: A Spark of Light: A Novel

    Jodi Picoult: A Spark of Light: A Novel
    A hostage situation at the last remaining abortion clinic in Mississippi is the setting for this book. Picoult does a good job, I think, of presenting the complicated subject of choice and abortion. Maybe it was the format of the book (jumping back and forth in time) that bothered me. But for whatever reason, I didn’t feel this measured up to most of her other books. (***)

  • Adrian McKinty: The Chain

    Adrian McKinty: The Chain
    If you’re a fan of thrillers, this is a book for you. A really tense page-turner. The story involves a rather unique kidnapping/ransom plot. I chose it because it was recommended by Stephen King. Sometimes his recommendations have been a little disappointing, but not this one. I enthusiastically recommend it too. (****)

  • Max Shulman: Rally Round the Flag Boys!

    Max Shulman: Rally Round the Flag Boys!
    Master satirist Max Shulman’s talent shines in this novel of life in 1950s bedroom community Putnam’s Landing, Connecticut. There’s adultery, juvenile delinquency, Saturday morning cartoons, teenage angst, commuter train rides, booze o’plenty, disagreements among citizens--and of course Cold War anxiety. When the army moves in with its base to house Nike missiles, things get worse, and then worse still, and then all hell breaks loose. I fell in love with Schulman’s writing while i was still in high school. It has been more than 50 years since I first read this book. It holds up extremely well. Hilarious. (****)

  • Sean Dietrich: Stars of Alabama

    Sean Dietrich: Stars of Alabama
    A pregnant teenager whose parents have kicked her out, a child preacher, a couple of migrant farm workers, a houseful of prostitutes, and various other characters, both good and not-so-good populate this delightful book. Reading it made me laugh, broke my heart, made me angry, and caused me to marvel at the human spirit. I strongly recommend. (****)

  • Paul Tremblay: The Cabin at the End of the World: A Novel

    Paul Tremblay: The Cabin at the End of the World: A Novel
    This is one of the most tense and gripping novels I’ve ever read. A couple and their seven-year-old daughter are vacationing at a remote cabin by a quiet New Hampshire when they are visited by four weird and dangerous strangers. The tension builds page by page until the shattering conclusion, one on which the fate of a loving family and perhaps all of humanity hangs. (****)

  • Elin Hilderbrand: Summer of '69

    Elin Hilderbrand: Summer of '69
    Four siblings, summering on Cape Cod, experience the drama and upheaval of a summer when everything changed. There isn’t a lot of suspense in this story. No twisting plot nor intrigue. But I found it to be very readable and mildly enjoyable. (***)

  • Stephen King: Elevation

    Stephen King: Elevation
    Pretty good little novella. But, uh, didn’t SK already write this story? I seem to remember another book, much longer (maybe 400 pages) that he released in about 1984 called THINNER. Yeah, he published that one under the name of Richard Bachmann. But we know that was you S.K. ELEVATION is about another guy who is losing weight (or at least the effects of gravity) slowly, but ever more quickly. He isn’t, however, losing mass or girth or fat or any of those things--just weight. Just like the lawyer in THINNER. (***)

  • Tayari Jones: An American Marriage (Oprah's Book Club): A Novel

    Tayari Jones: An American Marriage (Oprah's Book Club): A Novel
    Newlyweds Celestial and Roy are the embodiment of both the American Dream and the New South. He is a young executive, and she is an artist on the brink of an exciting career. But as they settle into the routine of their life together, they are ripped apart by circumstances neither could have imagined. Roy is arrested and sentenced to twelve years for a crime Celestial knows he didn’t commit....This stirring love story is a profoundly insightful look into the hearts and minds of three people who are at once bound and separated by forces beyond their control. An American Marriage is a masterpiece of storytelling, an intimate look deep into the souls of people who must reckon with the past while moving forward—with hope and pain—into the future. (****)

  • Greer Hendricks: An Anonymous Girl: A Novel

    Greer Hendricks: An Anonymous Girl: A Novel
    Looking to earn some easy cash, Jessica Farris agrees to be a test subject in a psychological study about ethics and morality. But as the study moves from the exam room to the real world, the line between what is real and what is one of Dr. Shields’s experiments blurs. If you like thrillers, I recommend. (****)

  • Richard Grant: Dispatches from Pluto: Lost and Found in the Mississippi Delta

    Richard Grant: Dispatches from Pluto: Lost and Found in the Mississippi Delta
    Richard Grant and his girlfriend were living in a shoebox apartment in New York City when they decided on a whim to buy an old plantation house in the Mississippi Delta. Dispatches from Pluto is their journey of discovery into this strange and wonderful American place. Nonfiction. (****)

  • Nicole Seitz: The Cage-maker

    Nicole Seitz: The Cage-maker
    This was our book club selection for May. I tried, but I just couldn’t finish it. I was so confused about who everyone was and who did what, I gave up. That seemed to be the prevailing attitude at our meeting, although most members finished it. I was weak. (*)

  • Philip Shirley: The Graceland Conspiracy

    Philip Shirley: The Graceland Conspiracy
    Young Matt Boykin, 27, becomes caught in a government conspiracy where no price is too great to stop the release of information on a 22-year-old crime that could bring down many powerful government figures. (***)

  • Caitlin R. Kiernan: Black Helicopters

    Caitlin R. Kiernan: Black Helicopters
    Something strange is happening on the shores of New England. Something stranger still is happening to the world itself, chaos unleashed, rational explanation slipped loose from the moorings of the known. Two rival agencies stare across the Void at one another. Two sisters, the deadly, sickened products of experiments going back decades, desperately evade their hunters. An invisible war rages at the fringes of our world, with unimaginable consequences and Lovecraftian horrors that ripple centuries into the future. (****)

  • Greg Iles: Cemetery Road: A Novel

    Greg Iles: Cemetery Road: A Novel
    A great southern crime novel populated with the requisite dysfunctional southern family and a well ensconced southern “mafia” of greedy, powerful men. There’s a murder or two and some near misses. Good book. Iles is a gooooood writer. Pat Conroy on steroids. (****)

  • Clayton Lindemuth: My Brother's Destroyer

    Clayton Lindemuth: My Brother's Destroyer
    Baer Creighton is a gifted distiller of fruited moonshine, capable of detecting even the subtlest lies. He lives in the woods next to his house, philosophizes with his dog Fred, and writes letters to his high school love Ruth--who long ago chose Baer's brother. Baer keeps a low profile. Everyone is happy drinking his sublime moonshines--until Fred goes missing. When you discover who stole Fred, you'll know you've found a new master of the dark surreal. And when you see what Baer does to him...them. Well, suffice to say this is a very dark story. Three stars mostly because of the dog fighting. If I had known it was involved, I never would have started reading this book. But once started, I was hooked. (***)

  • Louise Penny: Still Life

    Louise Penny: Still Life
    This is the second time I’ve attempted to read this book, the first in Penny’s Inspector Gamache series. I have a friend who is obsessed with these books, thinks they are beautiful. For some reason, this one just doesn’t grab me and I find myself plodding through and uninterested. I got over 2/3 of the way finished this time. Maybe third time will be a charm, but I don’t know when that will be. (**)

  • Margaret Atwood: Alias Grace: A Novel

    Margaret Atwood: Alias Grace: A Novel
    It's 1843, and Grace Marks has been convicted for her involvement in the vicious murders of her employer and his housekeeper and mistress. Some believe Grace is innocent; others think her evil or insane. Now serving a life sentence, Grace claims to have no memory of the murders. An up-and-coming expert in the field of mental illness is engaged by a group of reformers and spiritualists who seek a pardon for Grace. He listens to her story while bringing her closer and closer to the day she cannot remember. Then he gets himself in a pickle and the story gets even more bogged and boring. There was way too much descriptive prose and too many tangents in this book. I’m sure some loved it, but I was just glad when it ended. (***)

  • Jen Waite: A Beautiful, Terrible Thing: A Memoir of Marriage and Betrayal

    Jen Waite: A Beautiful, Terrible Thing: A Memoir of Marriage and Betrayal
    If you’ve ever been in a marriage where your eyes, ears, and brain tell you you’re being betrayed but your spouse tells you you’re being paranoid and crazy, you’ll relate to this books main character. Nonfiction. (***)

  • James Patterson: The President Is Missing: A Novel

    James Patterson: The President Is Missing: A Novel
    This book is at once very entertaining and very terrifying. It’s isn’t a big jump to believe that a foreign government who can control our elections can control everything else that we depend upon in this country. I recommend this book highly. (****)

  • Lou Berney: The Long and Faraway Gone: A Novel

    Lou Berney: The Long and Faraway Gone: A Novel
    In the summer of 1986, two tragedies rocked Oklahoma City. Six movie-theater employees were killed in an armed robbery, while one inexplicably survived. Then, a teenage girl vanished from the annual State Fair. Neither crime was ever solved. the book kept me turning pages, although not at a frantic pace. My main problem was there there were too many mysteries (actually, more than the two mentioned above) and unrelated characters. And neither of the two main events is ever totally resolved. (***)

  • Delia Owens: Where the Crawdads Sing

    Delia Owens: Where the Crawdads Sing
    It took me 50 or 60 pages to really get into this book, but I’m glad I stuck it out. It’s about a little girl who grows up all alone in a shack in the wetlands of North Carolina. Beginning at seven years old, Kya, whose entire family has abandoned her, fends for herself and does it quite well. It’s a coming-of-age story and also a mystery story of a murder (or not) of a local man. It’s a love story or Kya and Tate’s lifelong connection. And the ending? Well, you might see it coming, but I sure didn’t. I’m happy to recommend this book to anyone who like beautiful writing and excellent storytelling. (****)

  • Agatha Christie: And Then There Were None

    Agatha Christie: And Then There Were None
    As a book lover, especially a mystery/thriller lover, one would think me an Agatha Christie fan. But I must confess I had never read one of Ms. Christie’s books until this month when I read this jewel. I’ve since learned that this is one of her best and most famous works, and I can see why. I loved it. The plot is similar to other mid-century mysteries in that it involves a room full (in this case a houseful) of strangers who meet, one of them is murdered, then the murder is solved. Except in this case, they’re all getting murdered in what seems to be impossible circumstances. If you love a good who-done-it about strangers in a spooky old house, you should like this one. (****)

  • Greer Hendricks: The Wife Between Us

    Greer Hendricks: The Wife Between Us
    Can’t say a lot, good or bad, about this one without creating spoilers. I will say, though, that the bombshell about 1/3 of the way through is more of a distraction to me than a plot device. It threw me for a loop, and I had a hard time getting back on track. Also the ending seemed a little unrealistic and happy-ever-after for my approval. But all-in-all it was pretty entertaining if you like a Lifetime-movie-type story with several twists and turns. (***)

  • Robert Jackson Bennett: American Elsewhere

    Robert Jackson Bennett: American Elsewhere
    Another great story about what happens sometimes when scientists mess around with things best left alone. This particular group has delved into the realm of alternate universes with dire consequences to the small town of Wink, New Mexico. The Main character, Mona Bright, has been lured to Wink to learn something of her mother, who died of suicide when Mona was a little girl. It’s a long book, almost 700 pages, and I found myself a little bogged down during pages 500-600 or thereabouts. But the ending is exciting and satisfying. (***)

  • Taylor Brown: Gods of Howl Mountain: A Novel

    Taylor Brown: Gods of Howl Mountain: A Novel
    This story is set in the North Carolina mountains amidst bootleggers, whiskey runner, snake handlers, folk healers, and all manner of violence. The hero, Rory Docherty has returned from the Korean War, with one leg missing and a determination to learn the details of his mother’s debilitating trauma when her boyfriend was beaten to death before her eyes.II loved this book, although I’m still not sure of the details of who did what to whom. I think I have to read it again. (****)

  • Lou Berney: November Road: A Novel

    Lou Berney: November Road: A Novel
    Set against the assassination of JFK, a poignant and evocative crime novel that centers on a desperate cat-and-mouse chase across 1960s America—a story of unexpected connections, daring possibilities, and the hope of second chances. In this story, the New Orleans Mafia is the perp in this crime of the century. And I, for one, agree with the concept. (****)

  • Lorna Landvik: Oh My Stars: A Novel

    Lorna Landvik: Oh My Stars: A Novel
    Physically and emotionally abandoned by her parents, Violet comes of age during the Depression, learning early on to fend for herself as an accomplished seamstress. When a violent factory accident takes part of one arm, her dreams of becoming a fashion designer die, as Violet wishes she could, too. Physically recovered but emotionally bereft, Violet hops a bus headed for San Francisco, planning to commit suicide once she reaches the Golden Gate Bridge. But when the bus breaks down outside a small North Dakota town, Violet encounters a handsome young musician who changes the course of her life, and vice versa. (****)

  • Kristin Hannah: Winter Garden

    Kristin Hannah: Winter Garden
    And intriguing story of family relations--especially those between sisters and between mothers and daughters. Nina and Meredith were never close to their mother, never really even knew her nor felt any love from her. Not until their father, on his death bed made them promise to remedy that. A Russian fairytale, told by the Russian mother, becomes the device by which the mother tells her story and brings this family together. Wonderful book, one of Hannah’s best, I think. (****)

Books Read in 2018

  • Esi Edugyan: Washington Black: A novel

    Esi Edugyan: Washington Black: A novel
    George Washington Black, or "Wash," an eleven-year-old field slave on a Barbados sugar plantation, is terrified to be chosen by his master's brother as his manservant. To his surprise, the eccentric Christopher Wilde turns out to be a naturalist, explorer, inventor, and abolitionist. Soon Wash is initiated into a world where a flying machine can carry a man across the sky, where even a boy born in chains may embrace a life of dignity and meaning--and where two people, separated by an impossible divide, can begin to see each other as human. But when a man is killed and a bounty is placed on Wash's head, Christopher and Wash must abandon everything. What follows is their flight along the eastern coast of America, and, finally, to a remote outpost in the Arctic. (****)

  • T.K. Thorne: House of Rose (A Magic City Story Book 1)

    T.K. Thorne: House of Rose (A Magic City Story Book 1)
    Rookie patrol officer Rose Brighton chases a suspect down an alley. Without warning, her vision wavers, and the lone suspect appears to divide into two men—the real suspect, frozen in time, and a shadow version with a gun. Confused by what she’s just seen, but with no time to second guess it’s meaning, Rose shoots the real suspect in the back.Forced to lie to detectives, she risks her job and her life to discover the shocking truth of who she really is—a witch of an ancient House, the prey of one powerful enemy, and the pawn of another. Set in Birmingham, Alabama, it is first book of the Magic City Stories. (***)

  • Amazon: Dark Corners Collections
    Don't believe what they say. There really is something to be afraid of in the dark. You'll find it in a quiet motel in the middle of nowhere, on the other side of an attic door, under the bed when the lights go out, and in your own imaginings when your mind starts playing tricks. Whatever your fears may be, the nightmares begin here. This collection of short stories and novellas by some well known authors is great for those who like to do a little delving into dark corners. (****)
  • Matt Haig: The Radleys: A Novel

    Matt Haig: The Radleys: A Novel
    Not TWILIGHT, not TRUE BLOOD, nothing like Anne Rice, but a vampire story nonetheless. Dr. Peter Radley and his wife, Helen, are trying to live a normal family life in a small English village. They haven't told their 15-year-old daughter, Clara nor 17-year-old son Rowan that they're vampires. A crisis occurs and the cat is out of the bag (***)

  • Reginald Hill: The Woodcutter

    Reginald Hill: The Woodcutter
    Wolf is a self-made man who has been robbed of everything he worked for, including his home and family. He has spent the last 12 years in prison for financial crimes and for child pornography charges. But now he’s back, and all his friends and associates whom he blames for his incarceration are getting nervous--and for good reason. It’s especially joyful to find a book that is both wonderfully written as well as an unputdownable story. This is one of my favorite books of the year. You must read it if you’re a fan of the psychological thriller. (****)

  • Lisa Unger: Under My Skin

    Lisa Unger: Under My Skin
    One year ago, Poppy Lang's husband Jack was murdered while out running in a Manhattan park. Poppy had a nervous breakdown that left her with holes in her memory. She’s now trying to move on from this tragedy, but disturbing dreams and the feeling she's being followed are keeping Poppy from healing. One of the best crime thrillers ever. A real page-turner. (****)

  • Laura Purcell: The Silent Companions: A Novel

    Laura Purcell: The Silent Companions: A Novel
    When Elsie marries Rupert Bainbridge, she believes she is destined for a life of luxury. But pregnant and widowed just weeks after their wedding, Elsie has only her late husband’s awkward cousin, along with distrustful servants and some mysterious wooden figures, to keep her company in her unfamiliar and mysterious new surroundings. This Victorian ghost story will keep you reading into the night--if you dare. (****)

  • Matt Haig: The Humans: A Novel

    Matt Haig: The Humans: A Novel
    When an extra-terrestrial visitor arrives on Earth, his first impressions of the human species are less than positive. Taking the form of Professor Andrew Martin, a prominent mathematician at Cambridge University, the visitor is eager to complete the gruesome task assigned him and hurry home to his own utopian planet, where everyone is omniscient and immortal. He is disgusted by the way humans look, what they eat, their capacity for murder and war, and is equally baffled by the concepts of love and family. But slowly, unexpectedly, he forges bonds with Martin’s family. He begins to see hope and beauty in the humans’ imperfection, and begins to question the very mission that brought him there. (****)

  • Iain Reid: Foe: A Novel

    Iain Reid: Foe: A Novel
    In this haunting, philosophical puzzle of a novel, set in the near-future, Junior and Henrietta live a comfortable, solitary life on their farm. One day, a stranger from the city arrives with alarming news: Junior has been randomly selected to travel far away from the farm...very far away. The most unusual part? Arrangements have already been made so that when he leaves, Henrietta won't have a chance to miss him, because she won't be left alone. Henrietta will have company. Familiar company. This story has a most surprising ending--well, actually two surprises. (****)

  • Iain Reid: I'm Thinking of Ending Things!

    Iain Reid: I'm Thinking of Ending Things!
    This is my second reading of this book. And with each reading, I understood it a little differently. So there’s no need in trying to explain the story. Just know that it’s tense and creepy with a surprise ending (which actually surprised me both times). Amazon calls it a literary thriller. I’m not sure what that is, but I really liked it. Several of the women in my book club didn’t like it at all. So before digging into it, you might want to read some other reviews on Amazon, Goodreads, or your favorite book review site. (****)

  • A. J. Finn: The Woman in the Window: A Novel

    A. J. Finn: The Woman in the Window: A Novel
    Anna Fox lives alone—a recluse in her New York City home, unable to venture outside. She spends her day drinking wine (maybe too much), watching old movies, recalling happier times . . . and spying on her neighbors.Then the Russells move into the house across the way: a father, a mother, their teenage son. The perfect family. But when Anna, gazing out her window one night, sees something she shouldn’t, her world begins to crumble—and its shocking secrets are laid bare. This is a wonderfully tense, well written thriller. I think I could have come up with a better title, but the book is great. (****)

  • Stephen King: Blaze: A Novel

    Stephen King: Blaze: A Novel
    Reminiscent of the classic OF MICE AND MEN, with a Stephen King touch. Your heart will break for Blaze as you hold your breath awaiting the fate of the baby boy he has kidnapped. Not as well known as some of King’s works, I feel that this is some of his best writing. (****)

  • Scott Thomas: Kill Creek

    Scott Thomas: Kill Creek
    When best-selling horror author Sam McGarver is invited to spend Halloween night in one of the country’s most infamous haunted houses, he reluctantly agrees. At least he won’t be alone; joining him are three other masters of the macabre, writers who have helped shape modern horror. But what begins as a simple publicity stunt will become a fight for survival. The entity they have awakened will follow them, torment them, threatening to make them a part of the bloody legacy of Kill Creek. A darn good haunted house book. (****)

  • Mike Burrell: The Land of Grace

    Mike Burrell: The Land of Grace
    Looking like Elvis and sounding like Elvis are not enough for tribute artist Doyle Brisendine. Deep in his heart, Doyle wants to be Elvis. After performing in front of a wildly enthusiastic group of seniors, he realizes the absurdity of his fantasy and sees a dead end looming. Then, in the midst of his despondency, his world brightens as a beautiful young woman offers him not only flattery and a dinner invitation, but a pile of cash and a ride in an antique pink Cadillac. He thinks he’s died and gone to Elvis heaven after she takes him to a replica of Elvis’s Graceland. At first he believes the place is an amusement park staffed by actors portraying characters from Presley’s life, including the Memphis Mafia and the man known as the King--an Elvis impersonator who looks like the singer in his final years. The longer he stays, the more he realizes he’s in the company of a zealous cult, ruled by a ruthless matriarch called Mama and founded on worshiping the King. And when he attempts to leave, Doyle finds out that what he took to be Elvis Heaven is actually Elvis Hell. I loved this book. (****)

  • Kristin Hannah: The Great Alone: A Novel

    Kristin Hannah: The Great Alone: A Novel
    It’s the 1970s. Ernt Allbright returns from Vietnam a volatile and often violent man. When he loses yet another job, he makes an impulsive decision to move his family to Alaska, where they will live off the grid in America’s last true frontier.Thirteen-year-old Leni, caught in the riptide of her parents’ stormy relationship, hopes that a new land will lead to a better future for her family. Her mother, Cora, will do anything and go anywhere for the man she loves. At first, Alaska seems to be a good move.The long, sunlit days and the generosity of the locals make up for the Allbrights’ lack of preparation and dwindling resources. But as winter approaches and darkness descends on Alaska, Ernt’s fragile mental state deteriorates and the family begins to fracture. During the last half of this book, I put it down only when absolutely necessary. Another winner by the author of THE NIGHTINGALE. (****)

  • Richard Montanari: The Rosary Girls: A Novel (Jessica Balzano & Kevin Byrne)

    Richard Montanari: The Rosary Girls: A Novel (Jessica Balzano & Kevin Byrne)
    This suspenseful thriller begins with a teenage parochial school girl, artfully posed in death with her arms chained around a graffiti-scarred pillar, a rosary clutched in her praying hands. The next three murder victims are found in similar tableaus, each one suggesting the next in a string of calculated killings whose themes follow the Rosary meditations. Philadelphia detective Jessica Balzano, new to Homicide, and her new partner Kevin Byrne, a former superstar cop, team up to find the killer. This is the first book by this author I have read. I don’t think it will be the last. (****)

  • Zoje Stage: Baby Teeth: A Novel

    Zoje Stage: Baby Teeth: A Novel
    Afflicted with a chronic debilitating condition, Suzette Jensen knew having children would wreak havoc on her already fragile body. Nevertheless, she brought Hanna into the world, pleased and proud to start a family with her husband Alex. Estranged from her own mother, Hanna proves to be a difficult child. Now seven-years-old, she has yet to utter a word, despite being able to read and write. Defiant and anti-social, she refuses to behave in kindergarten classes. Resentful of her mother’s rules and attentions, Hanna lashes out in anger, becoming more aggressive every day. The only time Hanna is truly happy is when she’s with her father. Suzette knows her clever and manipulative daughter doesn’t love her. She can see the hatred and jealousy in her eyes. And as Hanna’s subtle acts of cruelty threaten to tear her and Alex apart, Suzette fears her very life may be in grave danger. I found this book to be a suspenseful page-turner. The only complaint I have is the ending, which I found a little unsatisfying. (***)

  • Virginia Foster Durr: Outside the Magic Circle: The Autobiography of Virginia Foster Durr

    Virginia Foster Durr: Outside the Magic Circle: The Autobiography of Virginia Foster Durr
    Outside the Magic Circle gives the background on the life of Virginia Durr, and how she, a conventional southern belle from Birmingham, Alabama, ended up as a prominent civil rights activist. Mrs. Durr talks about how she began to question the ideas of white supremacy and southern traditions that she was brought up with. She mentions her brother-in-law Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black and other Washington politicos such as Harold Ickes, and Eleanor Roosevelt that she met over the years. She tells of how redbaiting damaged the fight for civil rights and how the red scare, which started under Truman and helped to create McCarthy, paralyzed America. Although Mrs. Durr was happy about the abolition of segregation, she knew that integration didn't solve all of America's problems and that America is still divided by race and class. (from Amazon reviews) (***)

  • Jodi Picoult: Leaving Time: A Novel

    Jodi Picoult: Leaving Time: A Novel
    For more than a decade, Jenna Metcalf has never stopped thinking about her mother, Alice, who disappeared in the wake of a tragic accident. Refusing to believe she was abandoned, Jenna searches for her mother regularly online and pores over the pages of Alice’s old journals. A scientist who studied grief among elephants, Alice wrote mostly of her research among the animals she loved, yet Jenna hopes the entries will provide a clue to her mother’s whereabouts. Jenna enlists two unlikely allies in her quest: Serenity Jones, a psychic who rose to fame finding missing persons, only to later doubt her gifts, and Virgil Stanhope, the jaded private detective who’d originally investigated Alice’s case. As Jenna’s memories dovetail with the events in her mother’s journals, the story races to a mesmerizing finish. A really surprising surprise ending. (****)

  • Valerie Fraser Luesse: Missing Isaac

    Valerie Fraser Luesse: Missing Isaac
    It is 1965 when black field hand Isaac Reynolds goes missing from the tiny town of Glory, Alabama. The townspeople's reactions range from concern to indifference, but one boy will stop at nothing to find out what happened to his unlikely friend. White, wealthy, and fatherless, young Pete McLean has nothing to gain and everything to lose in his relentless search for Isaac. In the process, he will discover much more than he bargained for. Before it's all over, Pete--and the people he loves most--will have to blur the hard lines of race, class, and religion. And what they discover about themselves may change some of them forever. (****)

  • Stephen King: The Outsider: A Novel

    Stephen King: The Outsider: A Novel
    An eleven-year-old boy’s violated corpse is found in a town park. Eyewitnesses and fingerprints point unmistakably to one of Flint City’s most popular citizens. He is Terry Maitland, Little League coach, English teacher, husband, and father of two girls. Detective Ralph Anderson, whose son Maitland once coached, orders a quick and very public arrest. Maitland has what should be an iron-clad alibi, but Anderson and the district attorney soon add DNA evidence to go with the fingerprints and witnesses. Terry Maitland seems like a nice guy, but is he wearing another face? IMO, one of King’s best books yet. (****)

  • Alex Marwood: The Darkest Secret: A Novel

    Alex Marwood: The Darkest Secret: A Novel
    Twelve years ago, Mila Jackson’s three-year-old half-sister Coco disappeared during their father’s fiftieth birthday celebration, leaving behind her identical twin Ruby as the only witness. The girls’ father, thrice-married Sean Jackson, was wealthy and influential, as were the friends gathered at their seaside vacation home for the weekend’s debauchery. The case ignited a media frenzy and forever changed the lives of everyone involved. Now, Sean Jackson is dead, and the people who were present that terrible night must gather once more for a funeral that will reveal that the secrets of the past can never stay hidden. (***)

  • Matt Haig: How to Stop Time

    Matt Haig: How to Stop Time
    Tom Hazard has just moved back to London, his old home, to settle down and become a high school history teacher. And on his first day at school, he meets a captivating French teacher at his school who seems fascinated by him. But Tom has a dangerous secret. He may look like an ordinary 41-year-old, but owing to a rare condition, he's been alive for centuries. Tom has lived history--performing with Shakespeare, exploring the high seas with Captain Cook, and sharing cocktails with Fitzgerald. Now, he just wants an ordinary life. (****)

  • Sebastian Barry: The Secret Scripture: A Novel

    Sebastian Barry: The Secret Scripture: A Novel
    The setting is Ireland throughout most of the 20th century and into the present day. Roseanne was born into a world with very little in the way of rights for women and children. A bright beautiful woman, Roseanne threatens the old fashioned values of her village by existing. The priest works for years to have her marriage annulled, she is committed for her entire life to an insane asylum. At the age of 100, still living in the asylum, she writes her memoire as her doctor records his experiences and observations of her. The story is told through these simultaneous writing. This is the type of novel--much like THE SCARLET LETTER, THE DOLLMAKER, THE HANDMAID’S TALE, etc.--that will get under the skin of anyone who is disturbed by injustice and unfairness. But the unexpected ending wraps it all up nicely. (****)

  • Alma Katsu: The Hunger

    Alma Katsu: The Hunger
    A tense and gripping reimagining of one of America's most fascinating historical moments: the Donner Party with a supernatural twist. I enjoyed this book but feel it would have been better if the plot and characters had been fleshed out (pardon the pun) a bit more. (***)

  • Neil Gaiman: American Gods: A Novel

    Neil Gaiman: American Gods: A Novel
    Shadow Moon is released from prison early when his wife and best friend die in a car accident. Alone now, he takes a job as bodyguard for a mysterious con man, Mr. Wednesday. Shadow and Wednesday travel across America visiting a cast of unusual characters until Shadow learns that Wednesday is really an incarnation of the Norse god Odin. Wednesday is recruiting American manifestations of the Old Gods of ancient mythology, whose powers have waned as their believers have decreased in number, to participate in an epic battle against the New American Gods – manifestations of modern life and technology, such as the Internet, media, and modern means of transport. This book would have benefitted from some judicious cutting--about 200 pages worth, I think. Although the premise and story are fascinating, the narration frequently bogs down in scenes that don’t feel important to the story. (***)

  • Michael Goorjian: What Lies Beyond the Stars

    Michael Goorjian: What Lies Beyond the Stars
    Lost soulmates drawn together through time and space, or perhaps their meeting is only the beginning of a much deeper mystery. As Adam Sheppard awakens to the possibility that his life could be destined for more than a bleak virtual wasteland, he soon finds himself a crucial pawn in a game that pits forces intent on enslaving the human spirit against those few quixotic souls who still search for meaning, beauty, and magic in the world. This book ends without answering many of the questions I had. That’s why I can only give it three stars. It was a real page turner, but it just stopped short of a real ending. (***)

  • Tom Clavin: Dodge City: Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson, and the Wickedest Town in the American West

    Tom Clavin: Dodge City: Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson, and the Wickedest Town in the American West
    This long and rambling history of Dodge City, Kansas, made famous by a parade of lawmen, gunslingers, prostitutes, cowboys, businessmen and women, and all manner of characters during the westward expansion of the United States, takes perseverance to finish. I love books about the Old West, but I’m afraid this one just tries to cover too much ground. It seems there is not a person who passed through Dodge City during the 19th Century, famous and unknown, that isn’t mentioned (usually at length) in this book. And the author does so much jumping back and forth among years (no chronological order to speak of) that it’s easy for the reader to get confused. If you are really really into the history of the West, and not so much the story, you might like this book. I was disappointed. (***)

  • Brendan Duffy: The Storm King: A Novel

    Brendan Duffy: The Storm King: A Novel
    In this atmospheric thriller, Dr. Nate McHale returns to a small town he left many years before, to attend a funeral. As a hurricane lashes Greystone Lake, Nate's past mistakes catch up with him, and he finds that history is repeating itself in the worst way possible. Alternating between the present and the last few years of Nate's high school career, this thriller will have you guessing till the end. (****)

  • C. J. Tudor: The Chalk Man: A Novel

    C. J. Tudor: The Chalk Man: A Novel
    In 1986, Eddie and his friends are just kids on the verge of adolescence. They spend their days biking around their sleepy English village and looking for any taste of excitement they can get. The chalk men are their secret code: little chalk stick figures they leave for one another as messages only they can understand. But then a mysterious chalk man leads them right to a dismembered body, and nothing is ever the same. Shades of Stephen King’s “The Body.” I enjoyed it. (***)

  • Octavia E. Butler: Kindred

    Octavia E. Butler: Kindred
    Dana, a modern black woman, is celebrating her twenty-sixth birthday with her new husband when she is snatched abruptly from her home in California and transported to the antebellum South. Rufus, the white son of a plantation owner, is drowning, and Dana has been summoned to save him. Dana is drawn back repeatedly through time to the slave quarters, and each time the stay grows longer, more arduous, and more dangerous until it is uncertain whether or not Dana's life will end, long before it has a chance to begin. (****)

  • Hannah Tinti: The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley: A Novel

    Hannah Tinti: The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley: A Novel
    Hawley has been on the run for decades. He’s had various side-kicks – his con-man partner Jove, the love of his life, Lily – but for the past decade and a half, it’s been his daughter, Loo. When she turns twelve, Hawley buys a house in Olympus, Massachusetts, the hometown of his deceased wife, and settles down for good. But his penchant for violence and his dark past make settling in far from easy. Loo, too, has picked up the ways of her father – but she doesn’t know the half of it. The novel deftly alternates between present day Massachusetts and Hawley’s younger years to tell the story of the twelve bullets that have scarred his body. Tinti’s gritty, deeply flawed characters are rendered with such empathy that it’s impossible not to root for them. I had some trouble getting into the story, but once I did, about 1/3 of the way in, it was a page turner. (***)

  • Ania Ahlborn: Seed

    Ania Ahlborn: Seed
    This book was recommended by a friend who shares my love of scary stories. She described it as her “favorite horror novel.” I’m afraid I can’t agree. It was a poorly written retelling of an old story, demon possession of children. (**)

  • Michel Faber: The Book of Strange New Things: A Novel

    Michel Faber: The Book of Strange New Things: A Novel
    Peter and Bea are a young devout Christian couple who live in England.The story begins as Peter is called to the mission of a lifetime that takes him galaxies away from Bea. Peter becomes immersed in the mysteries of an astonishing new environment, overseen by an enigmatic corporation known only as USIC. His work introduces him to the native population, small, strange creatures who are struggling with a dangerous illness and hungry for Peter’s teachings. Peter is rattled when Bea’s letters from home become increasingly desperate: typhoons, earthquakes, violence, shortages, and governments crumbling. Should Peter leave his new flock who has come to depend on him (and he on them) and return to his wife while he can still can? My second reading got this book. (****)

  • Charles Martin: The Mountain Between Us: A Novel

    Charles Martin: The Mountain Between Us: A Novel
    When a blizzard strands them in Salt Lake City, two strangers agree to charter a plane together, hoping to return home; Ben Payne is a gifted surgeon returning from a conference, and Ashley Knox, a magazine writer, is en route to her wedding. But when unthinkable tragedy strikes, the pair finds themselves stranded in Utah’s most remote wilderness in the dead of winter, badly injured and miles from civilization. Without food or shelter, and only Ben’s mountain climbing gear to protect themselves, Ashley and Ben’s chances for survival look bleak, but their reliance on each other sparks an immediate connection, which soon evolves into something more. Keep the tissues handy. This book is mesmerizing. Now that I’ve discovered this author, I’ll be reading more of his books. (****)

Books Read in 2017

  • Hannah Kent: Burial Rites

    Hannah Kent: Burial Rites
    A brilliant literary debut, inspired by a true story: the final days of a young woman accused of murder in Iceland in 1829. (****)

  • Stephanie Dray: America's First Daughter: A Novel

    Stephanie Dray: America's First Daughter: A Novel
    This is an historic novel about the lives of Thomas Jefferson and his family, including his slave/mistress Sally Hemming. The book was well written, but fact that none of the characters were sympathetic or likable made this a tedious book for me to read. Back in my ancestral annals, there were Randolphs akin to some of these people. But having read what a bunch of scoundrels they were, I’m not inclined to brag about them. (***)

  • Joe Hill: Strange Weather: Four Short Novels

    Joe Hill: Strange Weather: Four Short Novels
    This is a collection of four short novels or long stories, however you want to think of them. I love Joe Hill’s writing, just as I love his father’s (Stephen King), but I have to say that these stories left a little to be desired. They just didn’t measure up to his previous storytelling. My favorite was the third one entitled “Aloft.” In it, Hill tells of a reluctant skydiver’s encounter with an alien craft that is truly original. (***)

  • Kent Haruf: Our Souls at Night

    Kent Haruf: Our Souls at Night
    On Tuesday, I watched the new Netflix movie by this same title, starring Jane Fonda and Robert Redford. I liked the movie so much that I immediately downloaded the novel and read it on Wednesday. It's a sweet by poignant story of a widow and a widower in their 70s who find romance and love in a very unexpected way. It isn't a fairytale, however. Their romance comes up against the obstacles of their former lives, and they find they must adjust their relationship accordingly. (****)

  • James Scott: The Kept: A Novel

    James Scott: The Kept: A Novel
    This is a somewhat strange book with a strange premise. In the late 1800s, Elspeth marries a man of a different race and moves with him to a isolated farm in upstate New York. Elspeth takes frequent trips to the nearest town to work as a midwife, staying away from her growing family for months at a time. She returns from one of these trips t find all her children except for 12-year-old Caleb have been slaughtered. She and Caleb set out on a dark and treacherous journey to find the murderers and exact revenge. This author's writing style, as well as his use of violence and carnage as almost characters in themselves, reminded me of Cormack McCarthy. (****)

  • Stephen King and Owen King: Sleeping Beauties: A Novel

    Stephen King and Owen King: Sleeping Beauties: A Novel
    This is a great story told by the father/son Kings in a 700-page book. The story line goes: all the women in the world begin to fall asleep (like Sleeping Beauty of fairytale fame). And while their sleeping bodies remain in this world, another version of each woman's self travels to a world they call Our Place. That's all I'll tell you about the plot, except that it's a really good one. I did have one problem with this book, however. It has far too many characters. I finally had to give up about halfway through with remembering who was whom, and just concentrate on the major actors--and there are quite of few of them. (****)

  • Katherine Clark: The Headmaster’s Darlings: A Mountain Brook Novel (Story River Books)

    Katherine Clark: The Headmaster’s Darlings: A Mountain Brook Novel (Story River Books)
    "With a style reminiscent of Tom Wolfe, Katherine Clark takes aim at the 'tiny kingdom' of Mountain Brook, Alabama, in her frank and feisty debut novel, The Headmaster’s Darlings. In her riveting narrative, Clark delves into the mores and foibles of a hermetically sealed southern suburb and its prep school, where an obese, quixotic college counselor Norman Laney – a combination of Ignatius Riley, Truman Capote, and a Florentine prince – wields his wit, aspiring students, and sheer size as weapons of social change in his battle against a traditional Confederate mythology.” (***)

  • Sarah Waters: The Little Stranger

    Sarah Waters: The Little Stranger
    The narrator, Dr. Faraday (no first name revealed) is called to a crumbling English country mansion, Hundreds Hall, to treat and ailing maid. Faraday subsequently becomes acquainted with Mrs. Ayres and her two adult children, Roderick and Caroline (the likewise crumbling family at Hundreds) and becomes their family doctor. As days go by, Hundreds Hall and its occupants continue to deteriorate. Everyone except Faraday suspects a haunting. The ending, or culmination, of this book was a surprise to me, although looking back at the entire story, foreshadowing certainly exists. This is a very good book, not as downright scary as I had expected (after all, Stephen King said it was scary), but certainly dreadful. And the last 25% of the book is a real page-turner. And one finds that the title must be rethought in light of the whole of the story. (****)

  • Lisa Wingate: Before We Were Yours: A Novel

    Lisa Wingate: Before We Were Yours: A Novel
    Once in a while, a book comes along that has a profound effect on me, that I can truly say is one of the best books I’ve ever read. This is one of those books. Most of the characters are fictional, but unfortunately Georgia Tann and the Tennessee Children’s Home Society were all too real. "Told with stunning imagery, wonderfully fleshed-out characters, and a story that is spellbinding, heart-wrenching, and uplifting. The story tells of families torn apart by a horrible injustice, and how revealing the secrets of that past can somehow reunite them. The story is told from two points of view, generations apart; Rill, a 12-year-old river gypsy, who endures unspeakable heartbreak and horrors; and Avery, a young woman from an established southern family who unwittingly unearths family secrets that have been buried for decades. The love leaps off the pages of this book, landing directly in my heart...a stunningly beautiful tale of finding our place in the world, finding the people who will love us, finding where we belong, despite the twisty, perilous, heart-aching journey that takes us home,” --Amazon Review (*****)

  • Wendy Walker: Emma in the Night: A Novel

    Wendy Walker: Emma in the Night: A Novel
    Really good “who dunnit and what did they do.” This was one of those couldn’t-put-it-down thrillers that I love so much. It deals with sisters Emma and Cass who grew up under the domination of a narcissistic mother, a weak father, and a mostly uninvolved stepfather. The results are devastating for both sisters. (****)

  • Michael Brooks: 13 Things that Don't Make Sense: The Most Baffling Scientific Mysteries of Our Time

    Michael Brooks: 13 Things that Don't Make Sense: The Most Baffling Scientific Mysteries of Our Time
    When I read this description of this book I thought it would be a fascinating read. I found it one of the most boring books I’ve ever tried to read, and I admit that I skipped over the end of almost every chapter. How someone can make things like quantum science, alien life, death, sex, etc., boring is beyond me. One star, and that’s stretching it. (*)

  • Sarah Schmidt: See What I Have Done

    Sarah Schmidt: See What I Have Done
    Fictionalized retelling of the famous Lizzie Borden story. I have long had a fascination with this story and a longing to know for sure who really axed Lizzie’s parents. My reaction to this book was: yeah, it could have happened that way. But nothing really convinced me. There’s just too much we don’t know and will never know. Pretty good book. (***)

  • Christopher Golden: Snowblind: A Novel

    Christopher Golden: Snowblind: A Novel
    A dozen years ago, a blizzard visited the small town of Coventry, bringing with it unimaginable horror. When the storm leaves, it has taken the lives of some of Coventry’s citizens. When those lost souls begin returning, they portend the town’s next horrific blizzard, and the icy horrors that will return with it. I love me a good scary story, especially one that takes place in a snowy world. If you’re a Stephen King fan, you’ll surely enjoy this book. Very King-like in its plot, setting, characters, and action. (****)

  • Joshilyn Jackson: The Almost Sisters: A Novel

    Joshilyn Jackson: The Almost Sisters: A Novel
    One tequila-soaked night at a comic-book convention, the Leia Birch Briggs is swept off her barstool by a charming and anonymous Batman. But the Caped Crusader leaves more than just a fond, fuzzy memory in his wake—Leia is pregnant. Before Leia can break the news of her impending single motherhood (and the fact that her baby is biracial) to her conventional lily-white Southern family, her perfect stepsister Rachel’s marriage implodes. Worse, she learns that her beloved grandmother, Birchie, has been hiding her rapidly progressing dementia. Heading seven hundred miles south, Leia plans both to aid her family and somehow break the news of her blessed event. But Birchie has been hiding a dangerous secret that threatens to change everything about how Leia sees herself and her sister, her unborn son and his absent father, and the world she thinks she knows.The author tackles the difficult and disturbing subject of white privilege in a thoughtful and often humorous way. (****)

  • Douwe Draaisma: Why Life Speeds Up As You Get Older: How Memory Shapes our Past (Canto Classics)

    Douwe Draaisma: Why Life Speeds Up As You Get Older: How Memory Shapes our Past (Canto Classics)
    This book, translated to English from Dutch, is very interesting. However, the title is misleading. There is one small section about the phenomenon of life seeming to speed up as we get older, but it is not the subject of the entire book. That subject is mostly memory. There is a very interesting section on deja vu and one on near death experiences. A good book, but I was disappointed with the information on the time phenomenon. (***)

  • Pam Jenoff: The Orphan's Tale: A Novel

    Pam Jenoff: The Orphan's Tale: A Novel
    A powerful novel of friendship set in a traveling circus during World War II, The Orphan's Tale introduces two extraordinary women and their harrowing stories of sacrifice and survival. Excellent book. (****)

  • Mike Love: Good Vibrations: My Life as a Beach Boy

    Mike Love: Good Vibrations: My Life as a Beach Boy
    Some people, I understand, don’t care for Mike Love, the Beach Boys’ front man. But he’s my favorite member of the 60s surfer band. Brian Wilson has always been known as the “genius” of the group, and I agree that Brian is an awesome talent. But so is Mike. Without Mike, most of the lyrics that we associate with Beach Boys’ music would not exist. Mike is very humble in this his self-penned telling of his years with the band. He gives credit to all the band members, and never slams any of them. I liked this book. I love Mike Love. (****)

  • Paulette Jiles: News of the World

    Paulette Jiles: News of the World
    In the wake of the Civil War, Captain Jefferson Kyle Kidd travels through northern Texas, giving live readings from newspapers to paying audiences hungry for news of the world. In Wichita Falls, he is offered a $50 gold piece to deliver a young orphan to her relatives in San Antonio. Four years earlier, Kiowa raiders killed Johanna’s family. Sparing the little girl, they raised her as their own. Recently rescued by the U.S. army, the ten-year-old has once again been torn away from the only home she knows.The 400-miles journey to return Johanna to a family she doesn’t know is fraught with danger and discomfort--but it also forges a strong bond between the the Captain and Johanna that won’t be broken. (****)

  • Sarah Lotz: Day Four: A Novel

    Sarah Lotz: Day Four: A Novel
    A cruise ship has engine problems and is stranded in the Gulf of Mexico without communication with the rest of the world. Among the more than 2,000 passengers, as part of the planned entertainment, is a psychic, her assistant, and a group of her followers. The fate of the ship's passengers and crew grow more and more bleak as plumbing and electricity fail and food grow scarce. And it appears that no one is searching for the crippled craft. Things really get bad when a tropical storm hits the area, and the ship is in danger of sinking. Most of the passengers abandoned ship in lifeboats. The storm finally subsides with a handful of survivors aboard. And just as all hope of rescue seems to be lost, they spot land, Miami. But it's certainly not the Miami they were familiar with. (***)

  • Dennis Lehane: Since We Fell: A Novel

    Dennis Lehane: Since We Fell: A Novel
    In my opinion, Dennis Lehane has written at least two of the best books in current fiction. This is not one of them. If you haven’t read any of Lehane’s books and want to get started, go for MYSTIC RIVER or SHUTTER ISLAND or even GONE BABY GONE. Lehane dropped the literary ball on SINCE WE FELL. First of all, it’s at least two stories. The first half of the book involves the main character’s search for her father. Lehane drops that plot line altogether once she finds her father and goes on to the thriller story, which is confusing and unbelievable, and boring. And there’s one scene, just a short paragraph, in which some people get brutally murdered, and in the very next paragraph those people are fine and dandy, not murdered at all. I wish I hadn’t read this book because it diminished my esteem for this writer. I think I need to go back and read one of his better efforts to get rid of the bad taste. (**)

  • Christopher Golden: Ararat: A Novel

    Christopher Golden: Ararat: A Novel
    I was really into the book, a fictional account of an ark discovery atop Mt. Ararat in Turkey. It had excitement, danger, mystery, and even a mean old demon--all the elements of intrigue and adventure. But then came the ending. I had to read the ending twice to make sure I had read correctly. I had. But I just didn't buy it. Didn't ring true and didn't fit the rest of the story--not to me anyway. Seemed like the author had suddenly veered off onto a story line used in a famous horror novel of the 60s. I won't say which one l'est I give away something. Most enjoyable book, but I sure didn't care for the ending. (***)

  • Sharon Guskin: The Forgetting Time: A Novel

    Sharon Guskin: The Forgetting Time: A Novel
    “What if what you did mattered more because life happened again and again, consequences unfolding across decades and continents? This question is at the heart of Sharon Guskin's luminous novel. The Forgetting Time is about memory and forgetting, grieving and letting go, and the lengths a mother will go to for her child. It is both a relentlessly paced page-turner and a profound meditation on the meaning of life.” ―Christina Baker Kline, author of The Orphan Train (****)

  • Graham Moore: The Last Days of Night: A Novel

    Graham Moore: The Last Days of Night: A Novel
    This is my book club’s reading selection for our June meeting. I didn’t expect to like it, dreaded trying to read it, thinking it would be some boring technical thing about invention and what not. Well, it is about invention, but far from boring. Based on actual invents and filled with real-life historical characters, A thrilling novel based on actual events, this novel is about the nature of genius, the cost of ambition, and the battle to electrify America. Very good book. (****)

  • Stephen King: Gwendy's Button Box

    Stephen King: Gwendy's Button Box
    The King of Horror takes us back to Castle Rock, Maine for this short novella about Gwendy, who is give a strange box by an even stranger man. The box can do good things, but it can do bad things too--oh such bad things. How Gwendy handles this awesome responsibility is the story. (***)

  • Shaun Considine: Bette & Joan: The Divine Feud

    Shaun Considine: Bette & Joan: The Divine Feud
    This book was very well written, but for some reason, I got bored with it before I was finished. I just got tired of hearing about who all Joan and Bette slept with, who all they married, what they wore, who they insulted and swore at, how many jewels they wore, what parts they fought over, and how much they hated each other. Maybe I should not have seen the mini-series first. (***)

  • Homer Hickam: Carrying Albert Home: The Somewhat True Story of a Man, His Wife, and Her Alligator

    Homer Hickam: Carrying Albert Home: The Somewhat True Story of a Man, His Wife, and Her Alligator
    I read very very few books to which I'm willing to give a five-star rating because I leave that rating for the likes of LONESOME DOVE, DAVID COPPERFIELD, and TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD. Here's another one to add to my very short five-star list. This is one of the most enjoyable, charming, and well written books ever. Based on stories the author's parents told him about their lives before they had children, when their only child was an alligator named Albert and an unexplainable rooster. Lots of laughter, some thrills and chills, and a few tears. I cannot recommend this book too strongly. I will probably it again eventually. (*****)

  • Caitlin R. Kiernan: Agents of Dreamland

    Caitlin R. Kiernan: Agents of Dreamland
    Definitely one for Mulder and Scully to investigate. A government special agent known only as the Signalman gets off a train on a hot morning in Winslow, Arizona. He meets a mysterious woman to exchange information about an event that haunts the Signalman. In a ranch house near the shore of the Salton Sea a cult leader gathers up the weak and susceptible and offers them something to believe in. The future is coming and they will help to usher it in. Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory abruptly loses contact with NASA's interplanetary probe. And a woman floating outside of time looks to the future and the past for answers to what can save humanity. (****)

  • Dave Eggers: The Circle

    Dave Eggers: The Circle
    Read this book and you might just rethink the amount of time you spend on Facebook, Twitter, etc. It’s frightening because it seems very realistic that we could all become controlled in this way. Doesn’t seem like fiction at all. (****)

  • David Grann: The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon

    David Grann: The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon
    This book is hard to rate. There are parts that are so boring they put me to sleep, and other parts that enthralled me and put me on the edge of my seat. I have been disappointed with both of the Lost City books I’ve read this year. I’m hoping the movie “Lost City of Z” will be better than the book. It has to be: Charlie Hunnam stars in it. (***)

  • B. A. Paris: Behind Closed Doors: A Novel

    B. A. Paris: Behind Closed Doors: A Novel
    Not since STEPFORD WIVES has a book made me as angry as this one did. At least until the end. This is truly a nerve-wracking, suspenseful read. I started it last night and finished it this morning. Couldn’t bring myself to let it go until I had found out how it ended. (****)

  • Celeste Fletcher McHale: The Secret to Hummingbird Cake

    Celeste Fletcher McHale: The Secret to Hummingbird Cake
    A story of friendship--the way only southern girls can do it. If you follow my books reviews, you know this is not the type of book I normal go for. But I’m sure glad I went for this one. It’s full, full I tell you, of love and humor and pathos and I just don’t know what all. I can’t say a lot without giving the story away--except if you love a good old story about southern girls and the men they love and who love them, you have to read this book. Keep of box of Kleenex handy though. I cried through the last two thirds of the book. (****)

  • Michel Faber: The Book of Strange New Things: A Novel

    Michel Faber: The Book of Strange New Things: A Novel
    Peter and Bea are a young devout Christian couple who live in England.The story begins as Peter is called to the mission of a lifetime that takes him galaxies away from Bea. Peter becomes immersed in the mysteries of an astonishing new environment, overseen by an enigmatic corporation known only as USIC. His work introduces him to the native population, small, strange creatures who are struggling with a dangerous illness and hungry for Peter’s teachings. His Bible is their “book of strange new things.” But Peter is rattled when Bea’s letters from home become increasingly desperate: typhoons, earthquakes, violence, shortages, and governments crumbling. Bea’s faith, once the guiding light of their lives, begins to falter. Should Peter leave his new flock who has come to depend on him (and he on them) and return to his wife while he can still can? (****)

  • Michel Faber: Under the Skin

    Michel Faber: Under the Skin
    A strange woman named Isserley roams the Scottish Highlands looking to pick up juicy, well-muscled hitchhikers in Faber's menacing debut novel. In the beginning, I thought I was going to be reading about a female serial killer, but this book turns out to be so much more--and less. Futuristic, unreal, fantastic, horrifying--it’s difficult to categorize this very strange tale. Reviewers have compared it to ANIMAL FARM and SOYLENT GREEN, but neither comparison does suits this book. Strange is the best word I can come up with to describe it. But I enjoyed reading it. (***)

  • Iain Reid: I'm Thinking of Ending Things: A Novel

    Iain Reid: I'm Thinking of Ending Things: A Novel
    This might be the strangest book I’ve ever read--and one of the best. From the first sentence through the unexpected (well, I didn’t expect it) and shocking ending, the tension and fear builds. I couldn’t put the darn thing down. And after I had finished it, I went back and read sections again to make sure I had read what I thought I had read. I had. (****)

  • Austin Wright: Tony and Susan

    Austin Wright: Tony and Susan
    A story of revenge within a story of revenge. Or are they just two different tellings of the same story? Who knows? I watched the movie, “Nocturnal Animals,” based on this book and needed clarification. The book broadened the story, pumped up the ending, and clarified things a little bit. I liked this book and also the movie. The book, however, might not be for everyone. The writing style is almost “stream of consciousness,” although not on the difficulty scale of someone like Joyce. Worth the time to read it if you like thrillers. (***)

  • Hallie Ephron: There Was an Old Woman: A Novel of Suspense

    Hallie Ephron: There Was an Old Woman: A Novel of Suspense
    This is a compelling novel of psychological suspense in which a young woman becomes entangled in a terrifying web of deception and madness involving an elderly neighbor. I’m reminded of the Nancy Drew mysteries that my friends and I read when we were young girls. It’s just that kind of structure and kind of plot, except for grownups. I truly enjoyed this book and will look for more of Ms. Ephron’s books. (***)

  • Henry Farrell: What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?

    Henry Farrell: What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
    Although I have seen the classic movie, starring Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, several times, I had never read this book until this week. The movie didn’t veer from the book at all, as far as I can tell. Same plot: two old has-been show-biz sisters live alone together in a shabby Hollywood mansion. One sister is an invalid, one is a maniac with a murderous hatred toward her sister. Good story. (****)

  • Cassie Dandridge Selleck: The Pecan Man

    Cassie Dandridge Selleck: The Pecan Man
    In the summer of 1976, recently widowed Ora Lee Beckworth hires a homeless old black man to mow her lawn. The neighborhood children call him the Pee-can Man. When he is arrested for murder, only Ora knows the truth about the man she calls Eddie. But truth is a fickle thing, and a lie is self-perpetuating. Ora and her maid Blanche soon find themselves in a web of lies that sends an innocent man to prison for the rest of his life. Twenty-five years later, Ora sets out to tell the truth about the Pecan Man. (****)

  • Isaac Marion: The Burning World: (The Warm Bodies Series)

    Isaac Marion: The Burning World: (The Warm Bodies Series)
    Being alive is hard. Being human is harder. But since his recent recovery from death, R is making progress. He’s learning how to read, how to speak, maybe even how to love, and the city’s undead population is showing signs of life. R can almost imagine a future with Julie, this girl who restarted his heart—building a new world from the ashes of the old one. And then the helicopters appear. I confess that I read this love/horror story out of curiosity. I usually don't go in for zombies. I heard Donald T. said this book was supposed to be about him, and I had to see for myself. Could be. (***)

  • Jeff Menapace: Vengeful Games (Bad Games 2)

    Jeff Menapace: Vengeful Games (Bad Games 2)
    The Lambert family has survived Book One of this trilogy of psychological terror and are back home in Valley Forge. Two more members of the evil Fannelli family, these possibly more evil than the two bothers, have joined the games. Will the Lamberts survive Book Two? Will the Fannellis? Will the games ever end? (***)

  • Jeff Menapace: Bad Games

    Jeff Menapace: Bad Games
    The Lambert family is heading to Crescent Lake, a rural cabin community in western Pennsylvania, for an idyllic weekend getaway. Some fishing, some barbecue, some games.The Fannelli brothers are heading to Crescent Lake too. Some stalking, some kidnapping, some murder, definitely some games...though not necessarily the type of games the Lamberts had in mind. This is the first book in Menapace's best-selling "Bad Games" trilogy. (***)

  • Andrew Michael Hurley: The Loney

    Andrew Michael Hurley: The Loney
    Thirty years earlier "Tonto" Smith's family and other church members undertake an Easter pilgrimage to an old shrine in order to heal his mute brother Hanny. Strange and disapproving locals, loud noises in the night, locked rooms, and "miracles" that may not have been God’s will at all combine to make this eerie first novel a compelling read. The tone and atmosphere reminded me of the 20th century stories of Daphne duMaurier and Shirley Jackson. (****)

  • Douglas Preston: The Lost City of the Monkey God: A True Story

    Douglas Preston: The Lost City of the Monkey God: A True Story
    I was looking forward to reading this book. Then after the first couple of chapters, the author got so descriptive and technical that I lost interest. But I persevered. And somewhere around the middle or a little further on, it got interesting again. It took me several days to read the first half, but only a couple of hours to read the last half. Don’t look for an Indiana Jones saga, but if you’re at all interested in the discovery of lost cities and ancient ruins (or the invasion of Europeans into the Americas) this might be the book for you. (***)

  • Fiona Barton: The Widow

    Fiona Barton: The Widow
    When a little girl disappears from her yard in suburban London, police and journalists quickly focus their investigations on Glen and his wife Jean. This book will keep you guessing. An intriguing thriller that reviewers are comparing to GONE GIRL. (****)

  • Fannie Flagg: The Whole Town's Talking: A Novel

    Fannie Flagg: The Whole Town's Talking: A Novel
    Elmwood Springs, Missouri, is a small town like any other, but something strange is happening at the cemetery. Still Meadows, as it’s called, is anything but still. The book tells the story of Lordor Nordstrom, his Swedish mail-order bride, Katrina, and their neighbors and descendants as they live, love, die, and carry on in mysterious and surprising ways. (***)

Books Read in 2016

  • Cormac McCarthy: Outer Dark

    Cormac McCarthy: Outer Dark
    Set is an unspecified place in Appalachia, sometime around the turn of the century, this is the story of a woman who bears her brother's child, a boy; he leaves the baby in the woods and tells her he died of natural causes. Discovering her brother's lie, she sets forth alone to find her son. Both brother and sister wander separately through a countryside being scourged by three terrifying and elusive strangers, headlong toward an eerie, apocalyptic resolution. (****)

  • Paul Tremblay: A Head Full of Ghosts: A Novel

    Paul Tremblay: A Head Full of Ghosts: A Novel
    Anytime Stephen King writes a blurb for a new book, it usually says something like “This book scared the hell out of me.” And I usually fall for it. That’s what happened with this book. Well, it was a pretty good book, but it scared nothing like the hell out of me. It’s sort of a knock-off of several other books and movies, including The Exorcist, Amityville Horror, and a bunch of others. A young girl is diagnosed by priest and psychiatrist as being possessed by an evil spirit. It’s up to the reader, I suppose, to decide what’s going on with he girl and why and who did what to whom. I enjoyed reading this book, really, but it was hardly a classic. (***)

  • Josh Malerman: Bird Box: A Novel

    Josh Malerman: Bird Box: A Novel
    This is one of those "it's the end of the world as we know it" books, and a very good one. I read it in one marathon reading session. In this one, there's something out there that must not be seen. Seeing these whatever-they-ares will fry one's mind and lead to suicide. Blindfolds become necessary survival gear. It's a very claustrophobic read. It made me walk around the house with my eyes closed a lot just to get the feel of what these people were going through. (****)

  • Jodi Picoult: Small Great Things: A Novel

    Jodi Picoult: Small Great Things: A Novel
    In which public defender Kennedy learns from her client Ruth, a neonatal nurse accused of murdering a baby in her charge, the true meaning of white privilege--and is much richer for having learned it. Every white person should read this book. (****)

  • Joe Hill: Horns: A Novel

    Joe Hill: Horns: A Novel
    Ignatius William Perrish wakes up bleary and confused after a night of drinking and "doing terrible things" to find he has grown horns. The horns give Ig the power to make people admit awful things they have done or want to do. This bizarre affliction is of particular use to Ig, who is still grieving over the murder of his childhood sweetheart (a grisly act the entire town, including his family, believes he committed). Horns showcases Hill's knack for creating alluring characters and a riveting plot. (****)

  • Lisa Jackson: Malice (A Bentz/Montoya Novel)

    Lisa Jackson: Malice (A Bentz/Montoya Novel)
    Since the accident that nearly claimed his life, New Orleans detective Rick Bentz has been on edge. That must explain why his mind is playing tricks, making him think he sees his first wife, Jennifer. His dead wife. He can't bring himself to tell his new wife, Olivia, about the sightings, or his fears that he's losing his sanity. To find answers, he has to return to Los Angeles, where Jennifer died. And it's there that the murders begin. (****)

  • John Hart: Redemption Road: A Novel

    John Hart: Redemption Road: A Novel
    After thirteen years in prison, a good cop walks free as deep in the forest, on the altar of an abandoned church, a body cools in pale linen. Brimming with tension, secrets, and betrayal, this book kept me up past my bedtime, trying to guess who the serial killer was. (****)

  • Ramey Channell: The Witches of Moonlight Ridge: A Novel (The Moonlight Ridge Series) (Volume 2)

    Ramey Channell: The Witches of Moonlight Ridge: A Novel (The Moonlight Ridge Series) (Volume 2)
    This is the long-awaited second book in Ramey Channell's Moonlight Ridge series. The author happens to be my sister and I know I'm biased, but I think her story-telling skills are some of the best in the literary world today. In this book, Lily Clare Nash and her cousin and best friend Willie T. Nock, return to solve the mystery of the the Three Wayward Sisters who live out on Moor's Gap Road. The language is lyrical and alive. The characters are compelling and oftentimes funny. I highly recommend this wonderful book. (*****)

  • Gilly Macmillan: What She Knew: A Novel

    Gilly Macmillan: What She Knew: A Novel
    Rachel Jenner is walking in a Bristol park with her eight-year-old son, Ben, when he asks if he can run ahead. It’s an ordinary request on an ordinary Sunday afternoon, and Rachel has no reason to worry—until Ben vanishes. Now police must determine who took Ben. Was his father, his father's new wife, the teaching assistant at Ben's school, or his mother herself? Is Ben dead? Is he still alive. Read the this book to find out the answers. It's an exciting and fast read. (***)

  • Ronald Malfi: Little Girls

    Ronald Malfi: Little Girls
    When Laurie was a little girl, she was forbidden to enter the room at the top of the stairs. It was one of many rules imposed by her cold, distant father. Now, in a final act of desperation, her father has exorcised his demons. But when Laurie returns to claim the estate with her husband and ten-year-old daughter, it’s as if the past refuses to die. (***)

  • Liz Moore: The Unseen World: A Novel

    Liz Moore: The Unseen World: A Novel
    Ada was born of a surrogate mother and raised by her brilliant mathematician father David. David schools Ada at home, in his own creative and unorthodox way. She has few friends and is a stranger to most of the outside world. When David falls ill, information slowly comes to light that Ada's father might not be the person she has always thought him to be. And so begins her journey to find out her father's secrets. This is a wonderful book filled with mystery, great characters, and a plot that will keep you reading. It's one of the best books I've read this year. Especially the last chapter. I highly recommend it. (****)

  • Jewell Parker Rhodes: Ninth Ward

    Jewell Parker Rhodes: Ninth Ward
    Twelve-year-old Lanesha lives in a tight-knit community in New Orleans' Ninth Ward. She doesn't have a fancy house like her uptown family or lots of friends like the other kids on her street. But what she does have is Mama Ya-Ya, her fiercely loving caretaker, wise in the ways of the world and able to predict the future. So when Mama Ya-Ya's visions show a powerful hurricane--Katrina--fast approaching, it's up to Lanesha to call upon the hope and strength Mama Ya-Ya has given her to help them both survive the storm. This is a book intended for middle school youngster, but I found it a very good read. (***)

  • Dennis Lehane: Shutter Island

    Dennis Lehane: Shutter Island
    I give very few books five stars. Very few. But this is one of those books that deserves all the stars I can give it. It is mesmerizing. Fantastically written and amazingly constructed, this mystery is full of clues that lead inexorably to its mind-blowing conclusion. Lehane's excellent skills for characterization, plotting, and setting are on display here. (*****)

  • Chris Bohjalian: The Light in the Ruins

    Chris Bohjalian: The Light in the Ruins
    "A mystery that reminds us of the harrowing choices World War II forced on so many. Beautifully structured, written with restrained intensity and suspenseful to the end, this is both a satisfying mystery and a gut-wrenching account of moral dilemma in a time of moral struggle." --People Magazine (****)

  • Blake Crouch: Snowbound

    Blake Crouch: Snowbound
    One night during an electrical storm on a lonely desert highway, Rachael Innis vanishes. Her husband Will is suspected of her death. Knowing his six-year-old daughter Devlin, who suffers an incurable illness, has no one now but her father to care for her, he takes his daughter and flees to avoid arrest. Will and Devlin carve out a new life for themselves under new names in a new town. When one night, a beautiful FBI agent appears on their doorstep, they fear the worst, but she hasn’t come to arrest Will. She tells Will she can help him prove his innocence. Desperate for answers, Will and Devlin embark on a terrifying journey that spans four thousand miles from the desert southwest to the wilds of Alaska. (***)

  • J. D. Vance: Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis

    J. D. Vance: Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis
    This is a passionate and personal analysis of a culture in crisis—that of poor, white Americans. The disintegration of this group, a process that has been slowly occurring now for over forty years, has been reported with growing frequency and alarm, but has never before been written about as searingly from the inside. In Hillbilly Elegy, J.D. Vance tells the true story of what a social, regional, and class decline feels like when you were born with it hanging around your neck. (***)

  • Chris Bohjalian: Midwives (Oprah's Book Club)

    Chris Bohjalian: Midwives (Oprah's Book Club)
    On a violent, stormy winter night, a home birth goes disastrously wrong. The phone lines are down, the roads slick with ice. The midwife, unable to get her patient to a hospital, works frantically to save both mother and child while her inexperienced assistant and the woman's terrified husband look on. The mother dies but the baby is saved thanks to an emergency C-section. And then the nightmare begins: the assistant suggests that maybe the woman wasn't really dead when the midwife operated. (****)

  • Brad Watson: Miss Jane: A Novel

    Brad Watson: Miss Jane: A Novel
    Drawing on the story of his own great-aunt, Brad Watson explores the life of Miss Jane Chisolm, born in rural, early twentieth-century Mississippi with a genital birth defect that would stand in the way of the central “uses” for a woman in that time and place – namely, sex and marriage. I love this book. The prose is mesmerizing and the story intrigues. (****)

  • Cormac McCarthy: Child of God

    Cormac McCarthy: Child of God
    In this taut, chilling novel, Lester Ballard--a violent, dispossessed man falsely accused of rape--haunts the hill country of East Tennessee when he is released from jail. While telling his story, Cormac McCarthy depicts the most sordid aspects of life with dignity, humor, and characteristic lyrical brilliance. (***)

  • E. M Forster: A Room with a View

    E. M Forster: A Room with a View
    A Room with a View is a 1908 novel by English writer E. M. Forster, about a young woman in the restrained culture of Edwardian era England. Set in Italy and England, the story is both a romance and a critique of English society at the beginning of the 20th century. I know this is a classic and many readers love it, but I found it a bit dry and boring. I watched the movie after reading the book, and enjoyed the movie much more. The characters had more dimension, and the story (what there was of it) progressed at a faster clip than in the book. (***)

  • Blake Crouch: Dark Matter: A Novel

    Blake Crouch: Dark Matter: A Novel
    By the author of the book series and miniseries, Whispering Pines, this was one of those book, which I rarely come across, that I almost literally could not put down until I finished. It's fiction but is set in a world where quantum physics and the multi-verse (parallel universes) have become more than merely scientific theories. When physics professor Jason Dessen is forced at gunpoint to travel into a world that he does not recognize as his own, the tension starts and lasts throughout Jason's battles to find his way back to his own world and his family. I loved this book. (****)

  • Ta-Nehisi Coates: Between the World and Me

    Ta-Nehisi Coates: Between the World and Me
    We know that America hasn't often been the land of the free and the home of unlimited opportunity for African Americans. And in today's culture, it can be downright dangerous, especially for African American men. This book is a letter to Coates young son, full of advice and hope, but also peppered with the fear, frustration, and despair that has been a large part of the author's life. Every white person in American should read this book. (****)

  • Peter Ross Range: 1924: The Year That Made Hitler

    Peter Ross Range: 1924: The Year That Made Hitler
    Scarier than any horror novel or ghost story I've ever read, this nonfiction account of Adolph Hitler's rise to power in Nazi Germany instantly grabbed my attention. I had to keep reminding myself I wasn't reading about Donald Trump in 2016 America. (****)

  • Joe Hill: The Fireman: A Novel

    Joe Hill: The Fireman: A Novel
    I forget what a good storyteller Joe Hill is until I read one of his books. This apocalyptic tale reminds me that he's every bit as good as his dad Stephen King. In this story, set in the near future, a spore dubbed Dragonscale infects people, draws patterns on their skin, and eventually makes them spontaneously combust. Good characters and edge-of-your-seat action. (****)

  • Stephen King: End of Watch: A Novel (The Bill Hodges Trilogy)

    Stephen King: End of Watch: A Novel (The Bill Hodges Trilogy)
    The finale to Stephen King's trilogy that began with Mr. Mercedes (winner of the Edgar Award) and Finders Keepers. In this third and final book of the series, the diabolical “Mercedes Killer” drives his enemies to suicide, and if Bill Hodges and Holly Gibney don’t figure out a way to stop him, they’ll be victims themselves. (****)

  • M. R. Carey: The Girl With All the Gifts

    M. R. Carey: The Girl With All the Gifts
    Every morning, Melanie waits in her cell to be collected for class. When they come for her, Sergeant keeps his gun pointing at her while two of his people strap her into the wheelchair. She thinks they don't like her. She jokes that she won't bite, but they don't laugh. This is an apocalyptic thriller that kept me turning pages (figuratively, since I read with a Kindle app) until the end. (***)

  • David Benioff: City of Thieves: A Novel

    David Benioff: City of Thieves: A Novel
    During the Nazis’ brutal siege of Leningrad, Lev Beniov is arrested for looting and thrown into the same cell as a handsome deserter named Kolya. Instead of being executed, Lev and Kolya are given a shot at saving their own lives by complying with an outrageous directive: secure a dozen eggs for a powerful Soviet colonel to use in his daughter’s wedding cake. In a city cut off from all supplies and suffering unbelievable deprivation, Lev and Kolya embark on a hunt through the dire lawlessness of Leningrad and behind enemy lines to find the impossible. An awesome good book. (****)

  • Christopher Moore: Coyote Blue: A Novel

    Christopher Moore: Coyote Blue: A Novel
    As a boy, he was Samson Hunts Alone—until a deadly misunderstanding with the law forced him to flee the Crow reservation at age fifteen. Today he is Samuel Hunter, a successful Santa Barbara insurance salesman. Then one day, destiny offers him the dangerous gift of love—in the exquisite form of Calliope Kincaid—and a curse in the unheralded appearance of an ancient god by the name of Coyote. Coyote, the trickster, has arrived to reawaken the mystical storyteller within Sam...and to seriously screw up his existence in the process. Excellent writing. (****)

  • T.K. Thorne: Angels at the Gate

    T.K. Thorne: Angels at the Gate
    A fictional retelling of the story of Lot's wife from The Old Testament. I loved this book by Birmingham, Alabama, writer Teresa K. Thorne (NOAH'S WIFE). But if anything other than a strict literal interpretation of anything biblical offends you, this book is not for you. Not that it's profane or sacrilegious or anything like that, but Thorne does take poetic license with the story. But then, if she hadn't, it would have been a very short story indeed. (***)

  • Judith Richards: Summer Lightning

    Judith Richards: Summer Lightning
    I loved this book, the story of a six-year-old out-of-control cigarette-smoking, redheaded truant named Terry and called Little Hawk by his friend, Old McCree. Together they prowl the Everglades in search of rattlesnakes, pine cones, air plants, and adventure, until the law and society change their lives forever. Reportedly based on the true childhood of the author's husband, I still have a bit of trouble believing that parents would allow their 6-year-old (much less their 4-year-old, the age at which the child begins his independent swamp ramblings) this much freedom without seeking help earlier. The toddler LuBelle, who has never worn a stitch of clothes in her life, also stretches the willing suspension of disbelief. But, in spite of these problems, I would still recommend this story. (***)

  • Chris Bohjalian: The Guest Room: A Novel

    Chris Bohjalian: The Guest Room: A Novel
    A page turner about a man who opens his house up to a bachelor party for his immature and irresponsible kid brother and lives to regret the decision. Murder and sex slavery. (***)

  • Patrick Logan: Skin (Insatiable Series) (Volume 1)

    Patrick Logan: Skin (Insatiable Series) (Volume 1)
    There are many compelling reasons for Cody wanting to keep his skin, but as much as it means to him, something else has another use for it. And as determined as Cody is to keep it, the evil in the driving snow is equally determined to peel it off. What can I say? The book was a Kindle freebie, and really pretty good. And I love stories that take place in blizzards. But this one is not for this squeamish. (**)

  • Robert Inman: Old Dogs and Children

    Robert Inman: Old Dogs and Children
    This is the story of Bright Bascomb Birdsong and her family – a family that has been in the forefront of social and political change through much of the 20th century. The story takes place in a small southern town, built by Bright's father. Bright is a 68-year-old widow whose quiet life is suddenly interrupted by a series events. Her son Little Fitz, the Governor, is suddenly embroiled in scandal. Bright's 10-year-old grandson comes to visit. And then there is a windfall of $50,000 in a supermarket giveaway. Flavo Richardson, the town’s black leader and Bright’s lifelong friend, demands she take on a new challenge. In the end, the book is about choices and the consequences thereof. I loved this book. (****)

  • Jeffrey Toobin: The Run of His Life: The People v. O. J. Simpson

    Jeffrey Toobin: The Run of His Life: The People v. O. J. Simpson
    If the prosecution in the O.J. trial had done half as organized and thorough job of their prosecuting as Jeffrey Toobin did in the writing of this book, things might have turned out differently. Still, even with Toobin's excellent writing, I got bored with the book before I was finished. Not even he could make this old story new again. But it does emphasize just what a ridiculous fiasco the trial was, from both sides. (***)

  • E. P. O'Donnell: The Great Big Doorstep: A Novel

    E. P. O'Donnell: The Great Big Doorstep: A Novel
    The Crochet family lives on a tiny peninsula called Grass Margin that juts out into the Gulf of Mexico at the tip end of Louisiana, an impoverished community of which the Crochets seem to be the poorest. The rickety shack in which they live threatens to collapse with each heavy step or light gust of wind. The only thing of material value in their lives is the set of doorsteps tht the Crochets pulled from the river and placed at their front door. This story, in turns humorous and tragic, tells of the Crochets' efforts to acquire $60, which will allow them to move themselves and their doorsteps to a better house. Written in 1941, this book is rife with racist terminology that is a little hard to take for anyone with 21st century sensibilities. But it's a good story. (***)

  • Matt Marinovich: The Winter Girl: A Novel

    Matt Marinovich: The Winter Girl: A Novel
    Good beginning and good ending, but not enough middle. It was an exciting read, but the ending came on like the writer just got tired of writing. Too many questions left unanswered. Too many plot elements underdeveloped. (***)

  • Paula Hawkins: The Girl on the Train

    Paula Hawkins: The Girl on the Train
    I'm rarely any good at figuring out the identity of the unsub when reading a mystery. But once the killer is revealed, I can always look back and say, "Oh yeah, I can see that. I should have figured that out." Not with this book. Any one of the characters, up to and including the uncooperative police detective, could have turned out to be the doer, as far as I can see. There were no clues that pointed to the solution. At least none that I can remember. Anyway, it was an entertaining read, a great beach book, or something to keep you occupied if you're sick in bed. (**)

  • Michael Punke: The Revenant: A Novel of Revenge

    Michael Punke: The Revenant: A Novel of Revenge
    Based on a true incident in the history of the American West, this novel is a painfully gripping drama. Frontiersman Hugh Glass goes to sea at age 16 and enjoys a charmed life, including several years under the flag of the pirate Jean Lafitte and almost a year as a prisoner of the Loup Pawnee Indians. In 1822, Glass escapes, finds his way to St. Louis and enters the employ of Capt. Andrew Henry as a trapper. After surviving months of hardship and Indian attack, he falls victim to a grizzly bear. His throat nearly ripped out, scalp hanging loose and deep slashing wounds to his body, Glass appears to be dying. Capt. Henry leaves two men, a fugitive mercenary, John Fitzgerald, and young Jim Bridger, to stay with Glass until he dies and bury him. After several days, Fitzgerald sights hostile Indians. Taking Glass's rifle and knife, Fitzgerald and Bridger flee, leaving Glass to fend for himself. Glass survives against all odds and embarks on a 3,000-mile-long pursuit of his betrayers. This is a very good book, but not for the faint of heart nor weak of stomach. Some scenes were hard to read. (****)

Books Read in 2015

  • Adam Croft: Her Last Tomorrow

    Adam Croft: Her Last Tomorrow
    When his five-year-old daughter, Ellie, is kidnapped, Nick's life is thrown into a tailspin. In exchange for his daughter's safe return, Nick will have to do the unthinkable: he must murder his wife. (**)

  • Kitty Kelley: His Way: The Unauthorized Biography of Frank Sinatra

    Kitty Kelley: His Way: The Unauthorized Biography of Frank Sinatra
    Here's another book I sort of wish I had never read. Sinatra has always been a bit of an idol of mine, based on his music, his voice, and his cool. But if Kitty Kelley's book contains even a modicum of truth, I'm afraid Frank has taken a nosedive from his pedestal. While this author never disses the man's music nor even his voice very much as he aged, she paints a picture of one of the most hateful, psychotic, violent, disgusting, dishonest, egotistical, and despicable humans on earth. The way he treated friends, strangers, business associates, and especially his numerous women will turn your stomach. And he got away with the most horrendous acts, some of them downright criminal. People appeared to fear him for some reason. I guess because he made them lots of money. I think my Frank Sinatra CD collection in going in the thrift store donations. (Note: Kelley's writing is good, even though her subject matter is detestable. The 3-star rating is for the book, not the man.) (***)

  • Jeanne Bastardi: The Taconic Tragedy: A Son's Search for the Truth

    Jeanne Bastardi: The Taconic Tragedy: A Son's Search for the Truth
    Truth, my royal rear end! This book contains very little of that. If you expect this to be an evidence-based account of the 2009 car crash in upstate New York that took the lives of eight people, including four children, you'd be wrong. The family of the woman who wrote this book lost a father and a brother in the wreck. Anyone would expect them to be traumatized and grief stricken. But what I didn't expect was the mean-spirited, vicious, atack on the Hance family, who lost their three little girls (their only children) and Daniel Schultz, the husband of the woman who caused the horrible event by driving the wrong way on the highway and crashing into another vehicle. Daniel Schultz lost his wife and a young daughter, and his young son was severely injured. Using sarcasm, innuendo, implication, speculation, and outright lies, and absolutely no evidence, Jeanne Bastardi lays the blame for the deaths of her father-in-law and brother-in-law on these grieving parents, who were not in either car and nowhere near the accident. I wish I had never read this book. No stars.

  • Jackie Hance: I'll See You Again

    Jackie Hance: I'll See You Again
    On July 26, 2009, Jackie and Warren Hance's idyllic suburban Long Island life became an unimaginable nightmare. On that day, their three young daughters were returning with their aunt, Diane Schuler, from a weekend camping trip in upstate New York when a crash on the Taconic Parkway took the lives of the three Hance children, Diane's Schuler's young daughter, Diane herself, and three men in the car Diane hit as she drove in the wrong direction on the parkway. Although an autopsy showed Diane to be heavily intoxicated at the time of the crash, no one among her friends and family knew her to be a drinker nor had ever seen her drunk. This book is Jackie Hance's memoir of unbearable loss, darkest despair, and—slowly and painfully—her cautious return to hope and love. (***)

  • Stephen King: The Bazaar of Bad Dreams: Stories

    Stephen King: The Bazaar of Bad Dreams: Stories
    A new collection of short stories by my favorite boogie man and storyteller, Stephen King. Amazon writes of the collection, "magnificent, eerie, utterly compelling, these stories comprise one of King’s finest gifts to his constant reader." “I made them especially for you,” says King. “Feel free to examine them, but please be careful. The best of them have teeth.” (****)

  • Stacy Schiff: The Witches: Salem, 1692

    Stacy Schiff: The Witches: Salem, 1692
    It seems that anytime religion joins forces with government to control a people, horrible things happen. Case in point, the Salem, Massachusetts witch hunt of the late 17th century legalized purgery and theft, imprisoned innocent men, women, infants, and children in chains and uber-squalid conditions, took innocent lives, ruined lives and careers and fortunes, left children orphaned, left many in dire poverty, and gave Puritanism (and to a somewhat lesser degree, Christianity) an intensely black eye. In an atmosphere painted by such fire-and-brimstone sermonists as Cotton Mather and his father Increase Mather, a few mischievous and/or hysterical adolescent girls began an epidemic of witch accusations and subsequent trials where no evidence was presented except "spectral," even less substantial and reliable than today's circumstantial evidence. In fact, people were arrested, imprisoned, tried, tortured, and executed on the strength of accusations alone. When these New Englanders finally began to come to their senses and put an end to these atrocities, 14 women and five men had been hanged. One man was crushed to death under rocks piled upon him to try and illicit a confession from him. If at any time you begin to think that perhaps the Constitution of the United States should not include safeguards against the interference of any religion in our government proceedings (separation of church and state) as some inside and out of our governing bodies insist, just read this book or any other published telling a of the happenings in Salem in 1692, and you should change your mind. (***)

  • Lee Child: Make Me: A Jack Reacher Novel

    Lee Child: Make Me: A Jack Reacher Novel
    Lee Childs' latest (no. 20) in his Jack Reacher series, but my first. Reacher gets off a train in the middle of seemingly endless wheat acreage at a little wide spot in the road called Mother's Rest. He meets Michelle Chang, who is there trying to find her private detective partner, Keever, who has gone missing. The two team up to find Keever and get involved in a dark, dark mystery. Good thriller. I'm sure I'll read more Reacher adventures. (***)

  • John Brady: Frank & Ava: In Love and War

    John Brady: Frank & Ava: In Love and War
    I had been looking forward to the publication of this book since reading about it last spring. But after reading it, I have to say I'm extremely disappointed. It is one of the most poorly written books I've read. It reads more like a list of events than the story of a passionate love affair. Syntax is often awkward and confusing. For instance, consider my favorite: "The cake was delivered upon Bacall's departure from New York in a large white box." Must have been a VERY large white box to get Lauren Bacall into it. But my most serious complaint of all is that this is more a book about Frank and about Ava than it is about Frank and Ava. We very rarely see them together. Didn't like it; can't recommend it. (*)

  • Robert McCammon: Stinger

    Robert McCammon: Stinger
    Good and scary. Got monsters and everything--just right for reading during October--but not if scary books are not your cup of tea. This book is also about space aliens (good ones and bad ones). It takes place in tiny Texas border town. The characters are well presented and believable. No all-good or all-bad buys (except some of the space creatures). I enjoyed reading this throwback from the 80s. (***)

  • Ruth Ware: In a Dark, Dark Wood

    Ruth Ware: In a Dark, Dark Wood
    The impending marriage of Nora's best childhood friend brings her to a glass-walled cabin deep in the woods, for a hen party (the U.K. equivalent of a bachelorette weekend). But why is she there when the two haven't spoken since Nora fled their college town ten years ago? As the party gets underway things start to take a dark turn that builds with each passing moment. Good book. Goooood book. (***)

  • James Patterson and David Ellis: The Murder House

    James Patterson and David Ellis: The Murder House
    It has an ocean-front view, a private beach--and a deadly secret that won't stay buried. Full of the twists and turns that have made James Patterson the world's #1 bestselling writer, THE MURDER HOUSE is a chilling, page-turning story of murder, money, and revenge. (***)

  • Inger Ash Wolfe: The Calling

    Inger Ash Wolfe: The Calling
    Detective Inspector Hazel Micallef has lived all her days in the small town of Port Dundas and is now making her way toward retirement. Hobbled by a bad back and a dependence on painkillers, and feeling blindsided by divorce after nearly four decades of marriage, 61-year-old Hazel has only the constructive criticism of her old goat of a mother and her own sharp tongue to buoy her. But when a terminally ill Port Dundas woman is gruesomely murdered in her own home, Hazel and her understaffed department must spring to life. And as one terminally ill victim after another is found, Hazel finds herself tracking a truly terrifying serial killer across the Canada while everything she was barely holding together begins to spin out of control. (***)

  • Caitlin R. Kiernan: The Red Tree

    Caitlin R. Kiernan: The Red Tree
    My favorite of all Cait's books. I have read it several times. This time was no less intriguing. Plot: Sarah Crowe left Atlanta to live alone in an old house in rural Rhode Island. Within its walls she discovers an unfinished manuscript written by the house's former tenant-an anthropologist obsessed with the ancient oak growing on the property. And as the gnarled tree takes root in her imagination, Sarah risks everything to unearth a revelation planted centuries ago. WARNING: Graphic sex and some violence. (****)

  • Robert Marasco: Burnt Offerings (Valancourt 20th Century Classics)

    Robert Marasco: Burnt Offerings (Valancourt 20th Century Classics)
    One of the best haunted house books ever, in my opinion. Right up there with THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE and THE SHINING. Young family leaves heat and noise of city to spend the summer in an isolated and dilapidated mansion in the New York countryside. The house is starving, and the family provides it with sustenance. (****)

  • Ted Kosmatka: The Flicker Men: A Novel

    Ted Kosmatka: The Flicker Men: A Novel
    "If Stephen Hawking and Stephen King wrote a novel together, you'd get The Flicker Men. Brilliant, disturbing, and beautifully told." -Hugh Howey, New York Times bestselling author of the Wool series A quantum physicist shocks the world with a startling experiment, igniting a struggle between science and theology, free will and fate, and antagonizing forces not known to exist. I loved this book. Anything that deals with quantum physics and quantum mechanics fascinates me. Add some suspense, and I'm in. (****)

  • Carsten Stroud: The Homecoming: Book 2 of the Niceville Trilogy

    Carsten Stroud: The Homecoming: Book 2 of the Niceville Trilogy
    When two plane crashes set off a spellbinding chain reaction of murder and mayhem, Niceville detective Nick Kavanaugh has to investigate. He and his wife, family lawyer Kate, have also just taken in brutally orphaned Rainey Teague. Meanwhile, people are disappearing in Niceville. Kate and Nick start to unearth Niceville’s blood stained history, but something (or is it Nothing?) stands in their way. (****)

  • Carsten Stroud: Niceville: Book 1 of the Niceville Trilogy

    Carsten Stroud: Niceville: Book 1 of the Niceville Trilogy
    For lovers of crime, mystery, and the supernatural, this book has it all--almost too much in fact. In this first book of the trilogy, the author introduces so many characters that it's often difficult to keep up. but there's lots of action and suspense, beginning with the disappearance of 9-year-old Rainey, seemingly into mid-air, from Niceville's Main Street. A bank robbery follows; four cops are gunned down; a TV news helicopter is shot and spins out of the sky, triggering a disastrous cascade of events that ricochet across twenty different lives over the course of just thirty-six hours. Something is very wrong in Niceville. In spite of the preponderance of characters and the fast succession of events, this book was worth the read, and necessary to the understanding of the next book in the series. This trilogy reads more like one novel as the story picks up in each book just where it left off in the last. (***)

  • Kristin Hannah: The Nightingale

    Kristin Hannah: The Nightingale
    There are very few books to which I give five stars. This is one of them. Definitely one of the best books I have read in many years, it tells the story of two French sisters – one in Paris, one in the countryside – during WWII. Each is crippled by the death of their beloved mother and cavalier abandonment of their father. Each plays a part in the French underground. In a way, the War is also a main character in this book, a cruel, horrible character. Hannah has said her inspiration for Isabelle, the sister in Paris, was the real life story of a woman who led downed Allied soldiers on foot over the Pyrenees. This book was a page-turner for me, and I had a hard time leaving it when I had to do other things. The very end came as a surprise to me. Maybe it will for you too. (*****)

  • Erik Larson: Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania

    Erik Larson: Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania
    I had a dickens of a time getting into this book, and it took me almost all summer to finally finish it. The problem for me is the tons of detail and description. For instance, I was not all interested in the history of submarines. And the author's habit of describing every piece of clothing that every passenger of the ship was wearing at any given time almost gave me hives. However, about three-quarters way through, things speeded up and I found the end of the book interesting and heartbreaking. I'm sure there are those who would be enthralled by the entire book. I'm just not one of them. (***)

  • Sharon Honeycutt: The Dragon's Daughter

    Sharon Honeycutt: The Dragon's Daughter
    I didn't realize until I was well into it, that this book is YA, written for teenagers. Still it's a good, quick read. It is written from the perspective of the children of a KKK grand dragon and his underboss. There is blatant cruelty and racism, so caution regarding recommending this young children. There is also some profanity. I enjoyed the book though. It gives a look at racism from a perspective that one might not normally consider, that is what it does to children who are born innocent and must either learn to hate or fight their upbringing. In a way, the book is heartbreaking. (***)

  • Sharyn McCrumb: The Ballad of Tom Dooley: A Ballad Novel

    Sharyn McCrumb: The Ballad of Tom Dooley: A Ballad Novel
    According to Sharyn McCrumb's blog, "What began as a fictional re-telling of the historical account became an astonishing revelation of the real motives and the real culprit in the murder of Laura Foster. With the help of Wilkes County historians, lawyers, and researchers, Sharyn McCrumb visited the actual sites, studied the legal evidence, and uncovered a missing piece of the story that will shock those who think they already know what happened." The result is a riveting novel dealing with the events in 1866 Appalachia that led to the hanging of Tom Dula (Dooley). McCrumb's best book so far, in my opinion. (****)

  • Caitlín R. Kiernan: The Ape's Wife and Other Stories

    Caitlín R. Kiernan: The Ape's Wife and Other Stories
    Caitlín R. Kiernan (my oldest daughter) has been described as one of “the most original and audacious weird writers of her generation,” (The Weird) “one of our essential writers of dark fiction” (New York Times), and S. T. Joshi has proclaimed, “hers is now the voice of weird fiction.” In The Ape's Wife and Other Stories—Kiernan’s twelfth collection of short fiction since 2001—she displays the impressive range that characterizes her work. With her usual disregard for genre boundaries, she masterfully navigates the territories that have traditionally been labeled dark fantasy, sword and sorcery, science fiction, steampunk, and neo-noir. From the subtle horror of “One Tree Hill (The World as Cataclysm)” and “Tall Bodies” to a demon-haunted, alternate reality Manhattan, from Mars to a near-future Philadelphia, and from ghoulish urban legends of New England to a feminist-queer retelling of Beowulf, these thirteen stories keep reader always on their toes, ever uncertain of the next twist or turn. My favorite story in this collection is the title story "The Ape's Wife." While Fay Wray's character of Ann Darrow in the 1933 movie "King Kong" is memorable for not much else except her ear-splitting screams, Kiernan gives us a three-dimensional (or maybe even four) flesh-and-blood woman. For those of you who enjoy weird fiction, this book will be a treasure. (****)

  • Laura Lane McNeal: Dollbaby: A Novel

    Laura Lane McNeal: Dollbaby: A Novel
    Set in New Orleans during the civil rights era of the 60s, this sweet story tackles the subject of racism in an almost childlike and naive fashion. Although bad things happen, somehow the women in this family are able to put it all behind them and dance in the rain. The story is full of mystery and family secrets, many of which aren't revealed until the very end. This coming-of-age tale is a testament to the resilience of human nature and the strength of familial love. (****)

  • Blake Crouch: The Last Town (Book 3 of The Wayward Pines Trilogy)

    Blake Crouch: The Last Town (Book 3 of The Wayward Pines Trilogy)
    Ethan Burke has discovered the astonishing secret of what lies beyond the electrified fence that surrounds Wayward Pines and protects it from the terrifying world beyond. It is a secret that has the entire population completely under the control of a madman and his army of followers, a secret that is about to come storming through the fence to wipe out this last, fragile remnant of humanity. This final installment of the Wayward Pines trilogy will have you guessing right up until the last sentence--and thereafter. Let's hope that Crouch has a Book 4 in the works. (***)

  • Blake Crouch: Wayward (Book 2 of the Wayward Pines trilogy))

    Blake Crouch: Wayward (Book 2 of the Wayward Pines trilogy))
    Welcome to Wayward Pines, population 461. Nestled amid picture-perfect mountains, the idyllic town is a modern-day Eden…except for the electrified fence and razor wire, snipers scoping everything 24/7, and the relentless surveillance tracking each word and gesture. None of the residents know how they got here. They are told where to work, how to live, and who to marry. Ethan Burke has seen the world beyond. He’s sheriff now, and one of the few who know the truth—Wayward Pines isn’t just a town. And what lies on the other side of the fence is a nightmare beyond anyone’s imagining. (***)

  • Blake Crouch: Pines (Book 1 of The Wayward Pines Series)

    Blake Crouch: Pines (Book 1 of The Wayward Pines Series)
    Secret service agent Ethan Burke arrives in Wayward Pines, Idaho, with a clear mission: locate and recover two federal agents who went missing in the bucolic town one month earlier. But within minutes of his arrival, Ethan is involved in a violent accident. He comes to in a hospital, with no ID, no cell phone, and no briefcase. The medical staff seems friendly enough, but something feels…off. As the days pass, Ethan’s investigation into the disappearance of his colleagues turns up more questions than answers. Why can’t he get any phone calls through to his wife and son in the outside world? Why doesn’t anyone believe he is who he says he is? And what is the purpose of the electrified fences surrounding the town? Are they meant to keep the residents in? Or something else out? Each step closer to the truth takes Ethan further from the world he thought he knew, from the man he thought he was, until he must face a horrifying fact—he may never get out of Wayward Pines alive. (****)

  • Stephen King: Finders Keepers: A Novel

    Stephen King: Finders Keepers: A Novel
    As with his classic MISERY, the King of Horror again explores the theme of a novelist and his deranged number-one fan. This book is dubbed a sequel to King's MR. MERCEDES, with the return of some of that book's main characters. But it is not necessary that one has read MM in order to enjoy FK. All you need is an appreciation for a good thriller written in classic, page-turner Stephen King style. (***)

  • Flannery O'Connor: "A Good Man is Hard to Find": Flannery O'Connor (Women Writers: Texts and Contexts)

    Flannery O'Connor: "A Good Man is Hard to Find": Flannery O'Connor (Women Writers: Texts and Contexts)
    I was first introduced to Flannery O'Connor and this disturbing story as a sophomore in college. It's a tale of an irritating family (the grandmother being the most irritating of all) who sets out for a vacation, but decides to take a side trip down a dirt road (at the grandmother's insistence). Because of an unfortunate occurrence with the cat that the grandmother has stowed away in her bag, there is an auto accident. When the dust clears, everyone is relatively safe, for the time being. This classic short story is not for the faint of heart, but if you enjoy a good read about the darker side of human nature, you should like this. If you can imagine a story about the Griswolds (of National Lampoon fame) meeting up with some bad guys from an episode of "Criminal Minds," then you'll have some idea of the gist of "A Good Man...." (****)

  • Cheryl Strayed: Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail

    Cheryl Strayed: Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail
    I had seen the movie about the young woman who hiked 1,000 miles of the Pacific Crest Trail all by herself and liked it so much that I had to read the book. I found the movie to be much more entertaining and interesting. For one thing, except for her spunk, there was little to like or admire about the main character. Maybe Reese Witherspoon added depth and personality to Cheryl Strayed's character that didn't come through in the book. I don't know. I only know I had to force myself to finish the book. (**)

  • Donald Spoto: Marilyn Monroe: The Biography

    Donald Spoto: Marilyn Monroe: The Biography
    This book will not endear you to either Norma Jeane Baker nor to her creation, Marilyn Monroe. Norma Jeane thought the rules didn't apply to her and neither did Marilyn. Chronically late for everything, both in her professional and private lives, her regard for others' time was nonexistent. She never met a man she wouldn't sleep with if sleeping ywith him would further her career. Three failed marriages, said failure at least partially Marilyn's fault, added to the picture that she had invented of a tragic life. She faked emotions both onscreen and off, she faked the events and conditions of her childhood. One wonders how the people around her knew what was acting and what was not. The platinum blonde hair and surgically created facial features were not the only lies in MM's life, including the extent of her relationship with JFK. And although she frequently claimed that she wanted people to like her, that desire was not evident in her actions toward people. Indeed her life was tragic, but she made it so. As for the book, it's too long with too much repetition and too many words I had to look up. (**)

  • Lisa Genova: Still Alice

    Lisa Genova: Still Alice
    Alice Howland is proud of the life she worked so hard to build. At fifty years old, she’s a cognitive psychology professor at Harvard and a world-renowned expert in linguistics with a successful husband and three grown children. When she becomes increasingly disoriented and forgetful, a tragic diagnosis of early-onset Alzheimer's disease changes her life—and her relationship with her family and the world—forever. An excellent read. (****)

  • Ambrose Bierce: The Damned Thing

    Ambrose Bierce: The Damned Thing
    "There are colors that we can not see. And God help me, The Damned Thing is of such a color." This short but very scary story, written in 1898 by Ambrose Bierce, is the narration of a witness at the inquest of a friend, who has been horribly killed by an unseen and unseeable entity. (****)

  • Jeff Gunhus: Night Chill

    Jeff Gunhus: Night Chill
    This book proves my contention that there are oodles of excellent writers out there who never reach the well-known status. I discovered this book in an email ad about Kindle bargains. Mr. Gunhus is a fine writer of suspense and scary stuff. The horror of this story lies deep within the earth underneath the state of Maryland and is based on Gunhus's imagined Native American lore. Coupled with a group of unscrupulous men who will do anything for the sake of longevity, the "Source," as it is known, threatens not only our main character and his family but perhaps the entire world if it is able to escape it's subterranean prison. (***)

  • George V. Higgins: The Friends of Eddie Coyle: A Novel

    George V. Higgins: The Friends of Eddie Coyle: A Novel
    While watching the "Justified" series finale the other night, my attention was caught by Marshal Raylan Givens pulling a battered copy of this book out of his desk drawer and tossing it to his partner. I got curious and looked the book up on Amazon. It seems that this little tome is what Elmore Leonard, the crime novelist and creator of Raylan and all the Harlan folks, called the best crime novel he had ever read. Hmmmm. Not only did Leonard himself produce better books than this one, many other authors have produced much better crime novels than either Higgins or Leonard. (THE GODFATHER and MYSTIC RIVER are two that come to mind right off the top of my head.) The best I can say about this little novel noir is that it was mildly entertaining and contains some really good dialog--not enough, however, to rate it more than two stars. It was gravely lacking in story. (**)

  • Laura Hillenbrand: Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption

    Laura Hillenbrand: Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption
    From delinquent youth to thief to Olympic runner, to WWII airman to castaway to Japanese POW to--well, I won't spoil the ending--Louis Zamparini's life was anything but dull. This is a wonderful book that shows just how strong the human sprit can be. Louie endures horrors that would make a Stephen King novel seem wimpy, first as a castaway after his bomber crashes in the Pacific.. But then, when you think things can't possibly get worse for him, he and his fellow castaway are captured and interned in a succession of Japanese prison camps under the command of what must have been one of the most evil men to ever live, the Bird. Don't even try to read this book if you can't deal with human horror because there's plenty of it. (****)

  • Harlan Coben: The Stranger

    Harlan Coben: The Stranger
    Engrossing page-turner of a thriller, and the first of Coben's books that I have read. Adam Price has a lot to lose: a comfortable marriage to a beautiful woman, two wonderful sons, and all the trappings of the American Dream: a big house, a good job, a seemingly perfect life. Then he runs into the Stranger. When he learns a devastating secret about his wife, Corinne, he confronts her, and the mirage of perfection disappears as if it never existed at all. Soon Adam finds himself tangled in something far darker than even Corinne’s deception, and realizes that if he doesn’t make exactly the right moves, the conspiracy he’s stumbled into will not only ruin lives—it will end them. (****)

  • Lilly Ledbetter: Grace and Grit: My Fight for Equal Pay and Fairness at Goodyear and Beyond

    Lilly Ledbetter: Grace and Grit: My Fight for Equal Pay and Fairness at Goodyear and Beyond
    The courageous story of the woman at the center of the historic discrimination case that inspired the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Restoration Act--her fight for equal rights in the workplace, and how her determination became a victory for the nation. Lilly Ledbetter was born in a house with no running water or electricity in the small town of Possum Trot, Alabama. She knew that she was destined for something more, and in 1979, Lilly applied for her dream job at the Goodyear tire factory. She got the job—one of the first women hired at the management level. Though Lilly faced daily discrimination and sexual harassment, she pressed on, believing that eventually things would change. Until, nineteen years later, Lilly received an anonymous note revealing that she was making thousands less per year than the men in her position. Devastated, she filed a sex discrimination case against Goodyear, which she won—and then heartbreakingly lost on appeal. Over the next eight years, her case made it all the way to the Supreme Court, where she lost again: the court ruled that she should have filed suit within 180 days of her first unequal paycheck--despite the fact that she had no way of knowing that she was being paid unfairly all those years. In a dramatic moment, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg read her dissent from the bench, urging Lilly to fight back. And fight Lilly did, becoming the namesake of President Barack Obama's first official piece of legislation. (****)

  • Rick Mofina: Cold Fear

    Rick Mofina: Cold Fear
    A very tense and exciting read. In the remote, rugged corner of Montana’s Glacier National Park known as the Devil’s Grasp, little Paige Baker of San Francisco disappears with her dog, Kobee, while on a camping trip with her family; or so her mother and father have told authorities. A multi-agency task force launches a massive search as Paige fights to survive in the wilderness. Time hammers against her and soon the nation is gripped by the life-and-death drama.The FBI grows suspicious of Paige’s parents.Their recent history and disturbing evidence links them to a horrible secret from the past. This book is somewhat similar to Stephen King's THE GIRL WHO LOVED TOM GORDON, in that it's a story about a little girl lost in the wilderness and her struggle to survive. However, only a small part of the story is written from the little girl's point of view, unlike King's book. Most of it is about the parents and the search to find Paige and to find out if there has been foul play. (***)

  • Patrick O'Brian: Master and Commander

    Patrick O'Brian: Master and Commander
    This, the first in the series of Jack Aubrey novels, establishes the friendship between Captain Aubrey and Stephen Maturin, ship's surgeon and intelligence agent, against a backdrop of the Napoleonic wars, filled with details of a life aboard a man-of-war in Nelson's navy. I confess that I had to force myself to read this book because it's the April selection for the book club of which I'm a member. It is so filled with nautical and period terms and jargon that sometimes it's seems that one is reading another language. I will say that my sister Joanne says it is the best book she has ever read, so perhaps it's simply a matter of taste. But I struggle to give it two stars. (**)

  • Michael Malone: Handling Sin

    Michael Malone: Handling Sin
    On the Ides of March, our hero, Raleigh Whittier Hayes (forgetful husband, baffled father, prosperous insurance agent, and leading citizen of Thermopylae, North Carolina), learns that his father has discharged himself from the hospital, taken all his money out of the bank and, with a young black female mental patient, vanished in a yellow Cadillac convertible. Left behind is a mysterious list of seven outrageous tasks that Raleigh must perform in order to rescue his father and his inheritance. And so Raleigh and fat Mingo Sheffield (his irrepressibly loyal friend) set off on an uproarious contemporary odyssey/treasure hunt through a landscape of unforgettable characters, falling into adventures worthy of Tom Jones and Huck Finn. A moving parable of human love and redemption, HANDLING SIN is a comic masterpiece, the funniest book I've read since Larry McMurtry's TEXASVILLE. (****)

  • Carlos Ruiz Zafón: The Shadow of the Wind

    Carlos Ruiz Zafón: The Shadow of the Wind
    Barcelona, 1945: A city slowly heals in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War, and Daniel, an antiquarian book dealer’s son who mourns the loss of his mother, finds solace in a mysterious book entitled The Shadow of the Wind, by one Julián Carax. But when he sets out to find the author’s other works, he makes a shocking discovery: someone has been systematically destroying every copy of every book Carax has written. In fact, Daniel may have the last of Carax’s books in existence. Soon Daniel’s seemingly innocent quest opens a door into one of Barcelona’s darkest secrets--an epic story of murder, madness, and doomed love. This book has many twists and turns, if you like that kind of thing. I do, but in my opinion, the author could have tightened this story up a bit and been done with it a bit sooner. (***)

  • Rick Bragg: Jerry Lee Lewis: His Own Story

    Rick Bragg: Jerry Lee Lewis: His Own Story
    This book relating the life and times of rock-and-roll legend Jerry Lee Lewis is the first book of Rick Bragg's that I have read. I was a little disappointed. His writing does not measure up to my expectations. To me, he seems to be more enthralled with his own prose than with the story of Jerry Lee. I would like to have seen more narrative and less "poetic resonance." It seems that the author did very little research into the facts about The Killer's life but instead relied on Jerry Lee's own "storytelling." Others (especially lovers of Bragg's poetic resonance) will likely disagree with my opinion of this book. But I found it a a bit short of the deeply research biography I was expecting. (***)

  • Lionel Shriver: We Need to Talk About Kevin

    Lionel Shriver: We Need to Talk About Kevin
    Two years before the opening of the novel, the narrator Eva's son, Kevin, murdered seven of his fellow high school students, a cafeteria worker, and the much-beloved teacher who had tried to befriend him. Because his sixteenth birthday arrived two days after the killings, he received a lenient sentence and is currently in a prison for young offenders in upstate New York. Eva relates this chilling story of the murders and the years leading up to the event in a series of letters to her husband. It appears apparent moments after Kevin's birth that something is wrong with this child's emotions and outlook on life. And the problems only get worse as the story unfolds. In the inevitable nature/nurture question, one must consider Kevin's parents. The mother was never cut out for motherhood and the father prefers to turn a blind eye to his son's very serious problems and paint Kevin as a gifted but misunderstood "little boy" The ending will come as a shocking surprise for some. I had already seen the movie, so I saw it coming. (****)

Books Read in 2014

  • Jeffrey Lent: In the Fall: A Novel

    Jeffrey Lent: In the Fall: A Novel
    When 17-year-old Norman Pelham departs his father's Vermont farm to join the Union army, he can little anticipate the incredulity and scorn that his return--accompanied by his former-slave bride--will elicit. The newlyweds make a go of country life, Leah's industry wins the locals' begrudging respect, and the two transact a fidelity that only rarely acknowledges their racial dissimilarities. Leah, however, who fled her native North Carolina after lashing out violently against a lifetime of abuse, believes an inescapable retribution stalks her. And so, beset with guilt and anxious to confront her own past, she briefly leaves Norman and their three children, throwing all five lives into disarray. Her desperation eventually reemerges in her youngest child, the volatile Jamie, who abandons farm life for bootlegging and rash romance. When his own ruthlessness undoes him, it falls to his son, Foster, to uncover the lingering mystery of Leah's life and death, as well as the obstinate racism that has stalked the Pelhams. (***)

  • Stephen King: Secret Window, Secret Garden

    Stephen King: Secret Window, Secret Garden
    One evening last week, I caught a showing of "Secret Window" on tv and immediately commenced to reread the novella from which it was taken. Written by Stephen King, this is an engrossing story of a writer whose marriage has hit the rocks. In the aftermath of his divorce, more trouble comes to Mort Rainey in the form of one very strange stranger, John Shooter from Miss'ssippi, who insists that Mort stole his story. Shooter wants things put right. During Mort's steep plunge into madness, Shooter is always there with threats and challenges. Read the story or see the movie to find out which of these men wins the battle. (****)

  • Stephen King: Revival: A Novel

    Stephen King: Revival: A Novel
    A study in lost faith, drug addiction, obsession, rock music, and one possible afterlife. Six-year-old Jamie Morton meets Reverend Charles Jacobs when the reverend comes to the small New England town to pastor Jamie's family's church. Rev. Jacobs becomes a fixture (his "Fifth Business," as Jamie puts it) throughout Jamie's life, and ultimately, not for the good. What at first appear to be miracle healings (for Jamie, his brother, his friend, and hundreds of strangers) performed by Jacobs (using his "special electricity") have some pretty terrifying side effects. This is the best book Mr. King has written in several years, I believe. And Charlie Jacobs is one of his most interesting characters. (****)

  • Robert Nathan: Portrait of Jennie

    Robert Nathan: Portrait of Jennie
    Starving artist Eben Adams meets a little girl skating in the park, and the two form an immediate bond. The girl Jennie returns to Eben every now and then, always a little older, until she is finally old enough that the two can declare their love for each other, a love that goes beyond time and space. Eben and Jennie were meant to be together, and neither death nor an ocean can keep them apart. "Where I come from nobody knows and where I am going everything goes. The wind blows, the sea flows, nobody knows. And where I am going, nobody knows." --Jennie Everyone should experience this wonderful book. (*****)

  • Carroll Dale Short: The Shining Shining Path

    Carroll Dale Short: The Shining Shining Path
    Turner, a rock promoter and Vietnam vet, is improbably chosen by a sect of Buddhist monks as the "Hope" -- a spiritual warrior picked to battle the forces of darkness and evil in times of millenial world crisis. And the conflagration will come in his native Alabama. The skeptical Turner is sent home with six monks whose special talents he will need. While waiting for the Armageddon, he sets off on a new concert tour, the monks performing traditional Buddhist music and dance in colleges and community centers across the South. This odyssey is hilarious, heartbreaking, and fraught with perils. A triumphant blend of magical realism and spiritual adventure, The Shining Shining Path examines the power of love, forgiveness, and redemption. (Amazon) (****)

  • John Searles: Help for the Haunted: A Novel (P.S.)

    John Searles: Help for the Haunted: A Novel (P.S.)
    A interesting story of a most unusual family, their deep secrets, their harrowing tragedy, and ultimately, a daughter’s discovery of a dark and unexpected mystery. Sylvie Mason’s parents have an unusual occupation—helping “haunted souls” find peace. After receiving a strange phone call one winter’s night, they leave the house and are later murdered in an old church in a horrifying act of violence. A year later, Sylvie is living in the care of her older sister, who may be to blame for what happened to their parents. Now, the inquisitive teenager pursues the mystery, moving closer to the knowledge of what occurred that night—and to the truth about her family’s past and the secrets that have haunted them for years. (Amazon review) (***)

  • Stephen King: Full Dark, No Stars (Second reading)

    Stephen King: Full Dark, No Stars (Second reading)
    Some of King's best (and darkest) storytelling, this book contains four novellas, including BIG DRIVER, from which the new movie derives. There's also a story about a serial killer who closely resembles BDK (but this one is more about his wife than himself); one about the complete destruction of a depression-era farm family; and one about a very unconventional cancer cure. These stories aren't for anyone who has a weak stomach or constitution. I'm not exaggerating when I say they are not just merely dark but really quite sincerely dark. (****)

  • James Hilton: Random Harvest

    James Hilton: Random Harvest
    I really enjoyed reading this novel, published in 1941, by the author of one of my all-time favorite books, LOST HORIZONS. But I have to admit I'm a bit puzzled by what the ending means. Here's a description from Amazon: "The story is a romance, a mystery, a critque on England's class structure, and a parable. Hilton uses the lost years of Charles Rainier as a methaphor for the lost years of the 1920/1930's when England failed to prepare for the next war. Told in flashbacks and bookended by World War I and World War II, the resolution is only revealed in its final sentence that will shock you and change everything that you have just read & thought you understood. You will go back and re-read the book as your perception of all the characters are altered by the surprise ending." But the book is really better than that description implies. I think I will have to read it again. (****)

  • Ivan Doig: The Bartender's Tale (2nd reading)

    Ivan Doig: The Bartender's Tale (2nd reading)
    Everyone has that one memorable summer of youth, that time when childhood begins to take a back seat to long awaited adulthood. For 12-year-old Rusty Harry, it is the summer of 1960 in a small town in Montana where Rusty's dad tends bar and does the job of a single parent as best he can, which turns out to be pretty darn good. The bar, the town, and the people who make up Rusty's compact life are the players in this magical story that's right up there with TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD for being one of the best coming-of-age stories you'll ever read. (****)

  • Michael McDowell: The Elementals

    Michael McDowell: The Elementals
    Hill House, the Marsten house, Amityville, Hell House, the Overlook--now I can add Beldame to the scariest fictional haunted house books. Located on the Alabama Gulf Coast on a spit of land between Mobile Bay and the Gulf of Mexico, Beldame is a compound of three identical Victorian houses, used by the McCray and Savage families for decades as summer homes. Something horrible (and very sandy) lives in "the third house," which, due to the encroachment of a very large dune, has not been inhabited by mortals for as long as anyone can remember. Now these unexplainable horrors have become interested in taking over the other two houses, and those who dare to sleep there. Ooooooooooo. (****)

  • Michael McDowell: Blackwater VI: Rain

    Michael McDowell: Blackwater VI: Rain
    The town of Perdido, Alabama comes full circle in this final, and shortest, book of Michael McDowell's Blackwater series. The books of the Caskey saga are some of the best I've ever read. Taken together, they are a classic, I believe, of American literature. The marriage of southern gothic and horror makes for some great storytelling. I am so very glad that I discovered this author and will be seeking out other works by him, in limited supply since he died in 1999. The Blackwater books are out of print. I found them on Kindle, and my sister has been able to borrow them from the library. In my opinion, it's high time for a reprint. (****)

  • Michael McDowell: Michael McDowell's Blackwater V: The Fortune

    Michael McDowell: Michael McDowell's Blackwater V: The Fortune
    As if the lumber mill and other enterprises had not made the Caskeys enough money, they now find oil under their land. Money flows in more swiftly than the red waters of the Perdido flow into "the junction." Elinor's youngest daughter Frances discovers she's pregnant and gives birth to twin girls. The daughters must be separated at birth for reasons that will become clear. (****)

  • Michael McDowell: Blackwater IV: The War

    Michael McDowell: Blackwater IV: The War
    War (WWII) intrudes on the lives of Perdido, Alabama in Book 4 of the Blackwater series, not with entirely negative consequences. Elinor's youngest daughter Frances shows that she is her mother's true daughter. (****)

  • Michael McDowell: Blackwater III: The House

    Michael McDowell: Blackwater III: The House
    The Caskey Saga continues in Book 3, as new characters are introduced. Elinor has given birth to two daughters who are very different from each other. Elinor's big house, which her mother-in-law Mary-Love built for her and her husband and for which Elinor must pay a terrible price to be allowed to occupy, becomes a mystery itself. (****)

  • Michael McDowell: Michael McDowell's Blackwater II: The Levee

    Michael McDowell: Michael McDowell's Blackwater II: The Levee
    In Book 2 of the Blackwater series,Elinor has become thoroughly integrated into the lives of the people of Perdido, and especially of the Caskey family. Townsfolk decide to build a levee around the waters of their twin rivers to avoid another devastating flood. Elinor does not approve. (****)

  • Michael McDowell: Blackwater I: The Flood

    Michael McDowell: Blackwater I: The Flood
    Fanny Flagg meets Stephen King: That's what comes to mind when I think of the writing style of this author, whom Stephen King himself has called “the finest writer of paperback originals in America.” Michael McDowell peoples this work with eccentric and colorful southern characters set among scenes of strangeness, spookiness, and violence. The mysterious saga of the Caskey family begins in this first of a series of six novels, set in Perdido in South Alabama during the early 20th century. A devastating flood brings a strange and beautiful visitor to the small, sleepy lumber town. Elinor Dammert's arrival will forever change the town and the wealthy and powerful Caskey family. I'm hooked. I have now moved on to Book 2, THE LEVEE. (****)

  • Sue Monk Kidd: The Invention of Wings: A Novel

    Sue Monk Kidd: The Invention of Wings: A Novel
    In the early 1830s, Sarah Grimké and her younger sister, Angelina, were the most infamous women in America. They had rebelled so vocally against their family, society, and their religion that they were reviled, pursued, and exiled from their home city of Charleston, South Carolina, under threat of death. Their crime was speaking out in favor of liberty and equality and for African American slaves and women, arguments too radically humanist even for the abolitionists of their time. Sue Monk Kidd has turned the lives of these two freedom pioneers into a most enjoyable and inspiring novel. I recommend it highly. (****)

  • Diana Gabaldon: Outlander

    Diana Gabaldon: Outlander
    In 1945, Claire Randall and her husband are just back from their service in WWII. Having been apart for five years, they are spending their second honeymoon in Scotland, getting reacquainted. At a visit to an ancient stone monument where she has gone to pick wildflowers, Claire is suddenly hurled back in time to the 18th century Scottish highlands. She is captured by warriors the McKenzie clan, who believe her to be an English spy. Eventually she is forced to marry Jamie Fraser, a chivalrous and romantic young Scottish warrior. Their relationship soon becomes passionate, and Claire's heart is torn between two vastly different men in two irreconcilable lives. WARNING: Numerous scenes of explicit sex. (***)

  • Paul Boone: Blackbeard: To Live by the Drink, To Die by the Sword

    Paul Boone: Blackbeard: To Live by the Drink, To Die by the Sword
    Having enjoyed the recent tv series, "Blackbeard," I wanted to know more about the famous pirate, so I went searching for a book. I finally settled on this one. It's a fast read and sticks far more closely to what is known of the facts of the life and death of Edward Teach (Blackbeard) than did the tv series. I had some problems with the author's somewhat amateurish writing style, and a good copy editor would have helped, but as a source of a quick look at the reign of one of our most famous and feared pirates, it suffices. Language and violence, however, make it unsuitable for children. (**)

  • Dan Brown: Deception Point

    Dan Brown: Deception Point
    Very fast paced and exciting read. When NASA scientists discover a 300-year-old meteor buried in ice in the Arctic, it seems that not only the flagging space agency will get a new breath of life but also the presidency of the current administration, which has been a strong NASA supporter. Imbedded in the meteor are the fossilized remains of a giant insect. NASA has discovered extraterrestrial life. But of course things aren't always what they seem, or are they? This book will keep you guessing right into the final pages. (***)

  • Shelley Stewart: The Road South: A Memoir

    Shelley Stewart: The Road South: A Memoir
    Growing up near Birmingham, Alabama in the early 60s, I knew Shelley "the Playboy" Stewart as a rocking cool DJ who spun platters on local WENN. Most of us white kids had to sneak off to our rooms or to the family car to listen to this African American radio personality, it being mid-century Alabama. Little did we know of the horrors Shelley had experienced during his childhood. As a small child, Shelley and his family suffered a violent, abusive, alcoholic father who killed his mother then forced Shelley and his brothers to live on the back porch, sleep on a filthy mattress and eat fried rats. An aunt with whom he lived for a time beat and sexually abused him. By age six, he had run away and was on his on. Shelley survived the horrors of his childhood and the injustices and cruelty of racial bigotry to become a well known, well respected, and successful business man. But his quest for family love and closeness has alluded him, causing his lifelong battle with depression. (***)

  • Andy Weir: The Martian: A Novel

    Andy Weir: The Martian: A Novel
    This is the most exciting book I've read in a long time, if ever. Mark Watney, part of a manned mission to Mars, is left for dead on the hostile environment of the Red Planet by the rest of the crew after a monster sandstorm threatens the lives of all. They abandon the mission and settle in for their two-year flight back to Earth, never suspecting that they have also abandoned their friend and fellow astronaut, who is very much alive. Thus begins Watney's year-and-a-half-long struggle to survive until rescue comes. His steady nerves, genius problem-solving, and witty outlook endears the reader to Watney keeps you cheering him on. It's an impossible spot he finds himself in, and logic says there's no way out; but the reader keeps hoping against hope, even when more things go wrong than right. I was unable to put the book down for the last half. There's a lot of technical stuff, but strangely, it does not slow the story. In fact, Watney's descriptions of the working of various parts of the equipment, vehicles, and habitant that he uses to prolong his life on Mars serve to move the story along, build tension, and add dimension to this book's main character. (****)

  • Anthony Doerr: All the Light We Cannot See: A Novel

    Anthony Doerr: All the Light We Cannot See: A Novel
    This beautifully written story takes place in occupied France during World War II. The main characters are a young blind Paris girl, Marie-Laure, and an orphaned German boy, Werner. Just as the war leaves Much of Europe in tatters, so it does with the lives of these young people and their families. But for one brief moment, the war brings Marie-Laure and Werner together and leaves them both with a memory that will last throughout their lives. This is one of the best books I've read in years. (****)

  • Stephen King: Mr. Mercedes: A Novel

    Stephen King: Mr. Mercedes: A Novel
    No ghosts, no vampires, no supernatural stuff at all. Just plenty of Stephen King gore and excitement. This is the story of a would-be mass serial killer whose first massacre occurs when he plows a stolen Mercedes into a group of unemployed people waiting to get into a job fair. A retired cop, a teenage boy, and a woman with flaws of her own team up to try and stop this killer before he can perpetrate an even more horrific slaughter. A good read, but not particularly memorable. (***)

  • Larry McMurtry: The Last Kind Words Saloon: A Novel

    Larry McMurtry: The Last Kind Words Saloon: A Novel
    This was a good book--as far as it went. It just didn't go far enough. 167 pages are just not enough for multiple character development (if I weren't already familiar with most of these characters, they'd be blank slates) and plot development (what plot?). Granted, the dialog was the usual McMurtry masterpiece, but that's the best I can say for this little book. I was excited to know that this author, one of my favorites, had written a novel about some of my favorite old west character (Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday, Charlie Goodnight, etc.). When I saw the page count, I was skeptical; when I read the last sentence, I was disappointed. (**)

  • Nicholas Pileggi: Wiseguy

    Nicholas Pileggi: Wiseguy
    If you've seen "Goodfellas," (and I have, about a hundred time), then there's no need to read this book strictly for information. I have rarely seen a movie that sticks so closely to the book from which it was made. The great dialog in "Goodfellas" was, for the most part, taken straight from the mouths of the real-life characters it depicts. As with the movie, WISEGUY begins in 1955 when Henry Hill becomes, at 11 years old, connected with the Mob. It ends, as does the movie also, when Henry and Karen are forced to cooperate with the FBI, join the witness protection program, and help the government take down a bunch of Henry's coworkers--after which, as Henry said, he got to live the rest of his life as as shnook. (***)

  • Karen Novak: Five Mile House: A Novel

    Karen Novak: Five Mile House: A Novel
    Legend has it that in 1889, Eleanor Bly flung herself from the tower of Five Mile House after murdering her seven children. More than a hundred years later, her ghost reaches out to Leslie Stone, a New York cop who has killed a child murderer and is haunted by her actions. New to the town of Wellington-famous for its coven of witches-Leslie becomes obsessed with Eleanor's story, suspecting that the truth may be quite different from local legend. As she digs deeper, uncovering dangerous town secrets, her life and the lives of her children are put into peril. I love stories in which a haunted house serves as the main character: e.g., The Haunting of Hill House, The Haunted, Hell House, etc. This haunted house story contains ghosts, witches, ancient secrets, and a fascinating premise based on the supposedly infinite number pi and what will happen if its end could ever be reached. A good book for sure--but not quite on a par with The Haunting of Hill House. But then, what is? (***)

  • Larry McMurtry: Crazy Horse: A Life

    Larry McMurtry: Crazy Horse: A Life
    Not much is known about this famous Sioux warrior, therefore McMurtry's book is brief and to the point. Even so, the reader gets a pretty clear picture of the man's bravery, integrity, and generosity. As with many of our native people, he died much too young. (***)

  • Louis Bayard: Roosevelt's Beast: A Novel

    Louis Bayard: Roosevelt's Beast: A Novel
    In 1914, Teddy Roosevelt and his son, Kermit, set off to map Brazil’s Rio da Duvida (River of Doubt). What was supposed to be a lark for the “Colonel” and his son ended up almost killing both of them. Indeed, the former president never completely recovered. Bayard has taken three days out of this time period to write a fictional thriller that kept me turning pages. The Colonel (Teddy) and Kermit kidnapped are by the Cinta Larga natives The tribe is being ravaged by a “beast” that kills its prey, guts it, drinks its blood, and then leaves nothing but a husk. The beast leaves no footprints, and no one has actually seen it. The chief will release Kermit and his father if they kill the beast. The Colonel sees it as just another hunting expedition, but Kermit (the Roosevelt in the title) sees it as something much more, something that will haunt him the rest of his life. I enjoyed this book very much. (***)

  • Ransom Riggs: Hollow City (Miss Peregrine's Peculiar Children)

    Ransom Riggs: Hollow City (Miss Peregrine's Peculiar Children)
    So Miss Peregrine is stuck in bird form, all the loops have been corrupted by murderous wights and hollowgasts, and Miss P. and her peculiar children must go on a long and dangerous trek to find an intact ymbryne to help put things to right. A whole new set of peculiar vintage photos helps the author spin his latest tale of mystery, suspense, and fantasy. Unfortunately, I think I had had enough of these characters with the first book. This one didn't hold my attention nearly as well. But there's another one coming. So if you are an avid fan, you won't have to wait long for the story to continue. (***)

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