Saturday, November 24, 2012

The predator (2006) by Patricia Cornwall



"Scarpetta, now freelancing with the National Forensic Academy in Florida, digs into a case more bizarre than any she has ever faced, one that has produced not only unusual physical evidence, but also tantalizing clues about the inner workings of an extremely cunning and criminal mind.


She and her team --- Pete Marino, Benton Wesley, and her niece, Lucy --- track the odd connections between several horrific crimes and the people who are the likely suspects. As one psychopath, safely behind bars and the subject of a classified scientific study at a Harvard-affiliated psychiatric hospital, teases Scarpetta with tips that could be fact --- or fantasy --- the number of killers on the loose seems to multiply. Are these events related or merely random? And what can the study of one man's brain tell them about the methods of a psychopath still lurking in the shadows." 
Copied from Goodreads, Nov 24, 2012

PS  Incredible conflict within the team.  Marino stops taking his antidepressant and becomes very difficult.  Lucy has to reveal that she has a tumor and needs medication and surgery. A doctor on a fellowship is hacking into confidenrial files and listening in on phone calls, to no good end.



Say when (2003) by Elizabeth Berg



When is a marriage worth saving and when is it best to let go? When do half-truths turn into full-blown lies? When does betrayal end and passion begin?

Say When is a compelling, complex novel that takes readers into the heart of a modern marriage where companionship and intimacy, and denial and pain, so often collide. "Of course he knew she was seeing someone," begins the s...more When is a marriage worth saving and when is it best to let go? When do half-truths turn into full-blown lies? When does betrayal end and passion begin?

Say When is a compelling, complex novel that takes readers into the heart of a modern marriage where companionship and intimacy, and denial and pain, so often collide. "Of course he knew she was seeing someone," begins the story of Frank Griffin, a man who's willing to overlook his wife's infidelity -- he would let her have this, this thrilling little romance -- for the sake of keeping his family intact. But when the forty-year-old Ellen requests a divorce on the basis that she has finally found true, romantic love, Griffin must decide whether to fight or flee...or search elsewhere for the kind of life he always dreamed of.

With Elizabeth Berg's trademark blend of rare insight, raw emotion, and hard-won wisdom, Say When is a work of startling revelation that no reader will soon forget.

Copied from Goodreads, Nov 24, 2012



Sunday, November 18, 2012

The Distant Hours (2010) by Kate Morton



A long lost letter arrives in the post and Edie Burchill finds herself on a journey to Milderhurst Castle, a great but moldering old house, where the Blythe spinsters live and where her mother was billeted 50 years before as a 13 year old child during WWII. The elder Blythe sisters are twins and have spent most of their lives looking after the third and youngest sister, Juniper, who hasn’t been the same since her fiance jilted her in 1941.


Inside the decaying castle, Edie begins to unravel her mother’s past. But there are other secrets hidden in the stones of Milderhurst, and Edie is about to learn more than she expected. The truth of what happened in ‘the distant hours’ of the past has been waiting a long time for someone to find it.

Morton once again enthralls readers with an atmospheric story featuring unforgettable characters beset by love and circumstance and haunted by memory, that reminds us of the rich power of storytelling.

Review by Goodreads Nov 18/12

Bring Up the Bodies (2012) by Hilary Mantel




Though he battled for seven years to marry her, Henry is disenchanted with Anne Boleyn. She has failed to give him a son and her sharp intelligence and audacious will alienate his old friends and the noble families of England. When the discarded Katherine dies in exile from the court, Anne stands starkly exposed, the focus of gossip and malice.
At a word from Henry, Thomas Cromwell is ready to bring her down. Over three terrifying weeks, Anne is ensnared in a web of conspiracy, while the demure Jane Seymour stands waiting her turn for the poisoned wedding ring. But Anne and her powerful family will not yield without a ferocious struggle. Hilary Mantel's Bring Up the Bodies follows the dramatic trial of the queen and her suitors for adultery and treason. To defeat the Boleyns, Cromwell must ally with his natural enemies, the papist aristocracy. What price will he pay for Anne's head?

The sequel to Hilary Mantel's 2009 Man Booker Prize winner and New York Times bestseller, Wolf Hall delves into the heart of Tudor history with the downfall of Anne Boleyn.  Review by Goodreads Nov 18/12

Never See Them Again (2012) by M.William Phelps


(reviewed on December 1, 2011)
Thorough account of a quadruple murder in a Houston suburb in 2003.


Veteran true-crime author Phelps (Kill for Me, 2010, etc.) chronicles the story of the killing, which took place inside a home on a usually peaceful street, of best friends Tiffany Rowell and Rachael Koloroutis, both 18; Tiffany's boyfriend Marcus Precella, 19; and Marcus' cousin Adelbert Nicholas Sánchez, 21. For more than two years, Houston police and related law-enforcement agencies seemed stumped by the crime, and it took three years from the day of the slaughter to publicly identify two suspects. Two Houston homicide detectives provide the focal point for Phelps, with numerous other law-enforcement officers entering and leaving the narrative. The author is respectful of the police, never suggesting they are incompetent, but he points out shortcomings of the investigation with admirable detail. The book is primarily a police procedural, but it is also a tribute to the four murder victims. Readers completely unaware of the case will begin to suspect the identity of the murderers, despite numerous other persons of interest as the police pursue a theory of a drug deal gone bad. Illegal drugs were important in the case but not the key to finding the perpetrators. Phelps explains how police, despite their diligence and compassion, might never have found the murderers without guidance from calls to a crime-solving hotline. After police began seeking one suspect, he committed suicide before apprehension. The other one faced trial, which Phelps reports in unimaginative, sometimes overwhelming detail. A jury found her guilty quickly, and she received a life sentence with the possibility of parole.

A thoroughly reported procedural too much repetition and heavy-handed foreshadowing.



Fear no Evil (2007) by Allison Brennan


 (No Evil Trilogy, #3) Goodreads
Instead of preparing for her high school graduation, Lucy Kincaid is facing a vicious execution. Lured by an online predator, she’s destined to die horribly–live on the Internet–while hundreds of heartless viewers watch and vote on the method of her slaughter. Her family’s only hope rests with Kate Donovan, an FBI agent who took on...more In cyberspace, no one can hear you scream.

Instead of preparing for her high school graduation, Lucy Kincaid is facing a vicious execution. Lured by an online predator, she’s destined to die horribly–live on the Internet–while hundreds of heartless viewers watch and vote on the method of her slaughter. Her family’s only hope rests with Kate Donovan, an FBI agent who took on the same sadistic killer once before . . . and lost. Blamed for another girl’s gruesome murder, Kate’s been fighting to clear her name. But she agrees to join the hunt for Lucy–and reluctantly steps back into her worst nightmare.

With time running out before the bloody webcast airs, Kate teams up with forensic psychiatrist Dillon Kincaid to get inside the head of her twisted quarry, zero in on his chamber of horrors, and reach Lucy before grim history repeats itself and another innocent’s brutal death goes hideously live.

Face the fear. Speak its name. See its face.





Wicked Lies by Lisa Jackson



Pulp fiction - murder mystery.  Passes the time.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Trick of the Dark (2010) by Val McDermid


"Barred from practice, disgraced psychiatrist Charlie Flint receives a mysterious summons to Oxford from an old professor who wants her to look into the death of her daughter's husband. But as Charlie delves deeper into the case and steps back into the arcane world of Oxford colleges, she realizes that there is much more to this crime than meets the eye."  Review by Goodreads.com
 
McDermid writes with confidence as sheincludes both homosexuals and herterosexuals in her novels as main characters.  She reflects life as it is.  I applaud her for this.  Her women characters are  independent and confident, having professional careers in their own right.

Down the Darkest Road (2012) by Tami Hoag

Down the Darkest Road (Oak Knoll, #3)

Once upon a time I had the perfect family. I had the perfect husband. I had the perfect children. I had the perfect life in the perfect home. And then, as in all fairy tales, evil came into our lives and destroyed us.

Four years after the unsolved disappearance of her sixteen-year-old daughter, Lauren Lawton is the only one still chasing the ghosts of her perfect Santa Barbara life. The world has given her daughter up for dead. Her husband ended his own life in the aftermath. Even Lauren's younger daughter is desperate to find what's left of the childhood she hasn't been allowed to have.

Lauren knows exactly who took her oldest child, but there is not a shred of evidence against the man. Even as he stalks her family, Lauren is powerless to stop him. The Santa Barbara police are handcuffed by the very laws they are sworn to uphold. Looking for a fresh start in a town with no memories, Lauren and her younger daughter, Leah, move to idyllic Oak Knoll. But when Lauren's suspect turns up in the same city, it feels to all the world that history is about to repeat itself. Leah Lawton will soon turn sixteen, and Oak Knoll has a cunning predator on the hunt.

Sheriff's detective Tony Mendez and his team begin to close in on the suspected killer, desperate to keep the young women of their picturesque town safe. But as the investigators sift through the murky circumstances of an increasingly disturbing case, a stunning question changes everything they thought they knew.
 Review by Goodreads, Internet, Oct 29, 2012

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Fever of the bone (2009) by Val McDermid


 Fever of the Bone is the sixth novel featuring profiler Tony Hill and DCI Carol Jordan, this time on the trail of a serial killer who is targeting apparently unconnected young people. McDermid's skill is such that Hill, who must surely win the prize for most dysfunctional maverick investigator, engages without ever annoying, even when he is going into the mind of the monster. This is very much a story about parents and children, and both Hill's own family crises and his "will they, won't they" relationship with Jordan are expertly dovetailed into a wonderfully complex plot. McDermid is especially good at serving up a mix of hi-tech and old-fashioned coppering, as well as showing how proximity to extreme brutality can take its toll on even the toughest police officer. 

Review by Laura Wilson, The Guardian, Saturday 12 September 2009



Tuesday, October 9, 2012

The Retribution (2011) by Val McDermid


"Clinical psychologist Tony Hill has had a good run. He and police detective Carol Jordan have put away scores of dangerous criminals and have a clearance rate that colleagues envy or resent. But there is one serial killer who has shaped and defined their careers, a person whose evil surpasses all others: Jacko Vance, an ex-celebrity and sociopath whose brilliance and utter lack of remorse have never left Tony’s mind in the ten years Vance has been locked up. Now Jacko has broken out of prison and, with a mind even more twisted and cunning than before, he is focused on wreaking revenge on Tony and Carol for the years he has spent in prison. They don’t know when Jacko will strike, or where. All they know is that he will cause them to feel fear like they’ve never known."

Review by Goodreads Copied Oct 9, 2012

Bone Island Trilogy (2010) by Heather Graham


You don't have to be a beleiver in ghosts or the paranormal to enjoy these mysteries.  They are a little romance, a little 'bad guy', a little humour, and a lot easy to read.  They are great books to read when you don't want anything too serious.  I especially enjoy the Florida history and setting.  The author does a great job with describing the architecture and the geography - azure ocean waves and magenta sunsets.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins


Couldn't put this book down!  The themes and characters were thought provoking, disturbing, and likeable.

In a not-too-distant future, the United States of America has collapsed, weakened by drought, fire, famine, and war, to be replaced by Panem, a country divided into the Capitol and 12 districts. Each year, two young representatives from each district are selected by lottery to participate in The Hunger Games. Part entertainment, part brutal intimidation of the subjugated districts, the televised games are broadcasted throughout Panem as the 24 participants are forced to eliminate their competitors, literally, with all citizens required to watch. When 16-year-old Katniss's young sister, Prim, is selected as the mining district's female representative, Katniss volunteers to take her place. She and her male counterpart, Peeta, the son of the town baker who seems to have all the fighting skills of a lump of bread dough, will be pitted against bigger, stronger representatives who have trained for this their whole lives. Collins's characters are completely realistic and sympathetic as they form alliances and friendships in the face of overwhelming odds; the plot is tense, dramatic, and engrossing. This book will definitely resonate with the generation raised on reality shows like 'Survivor' and 'American Gladiator.' Book one of a planned trilogy.

Review by Jane Henriksen Baird, Anchorage Public Library, AK. From School Library Journal

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.





Jerricho Point by Meg Gardiner


 

"Excellent mystery story! Evan's identity is stolen and planted on the body of a dead girl. Jesse's family is a main part of the story since his brother P.J. witnessed the murder and played a role in the identity theft. The book rockets from the opening to the end battle with lots of scrapes in between when some loan sharks try to make Evan pay up. There's plenty of twists and turns and Evan is a smart, resourcedul herione and even Jesse, her wheelchair-bound boyfriend manages to help save the da...more Excellent mystery story! Evan's identity is stolen and planted on the body of a dead girl. Jesse's family is a main part of the story since his brother P.J. witnessed the murder and played a role in the identity theft. The book rockets from the opening to the end battle with lots of scrapes in between when some loan sharks try to make Evan pay up. There's plenty of twists and turns and Evan is a smart, resourcedul herione and even Jesse, her wheelchair-bound boyfriend manages to help save the day during a daring water rescue."

Review by Goodreads submission.Aug 5, 2011 C. Teresin

All Mortal Flesh by Julia Spencer-Fleming


Somehow, Revenend Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne have come to mean more to one another than just their weekly luncheon date.  Gossip surrounds their friendship, but neither will give it up. A tragic and brutal killing takes place in Police Cheif Van Alstyne' kitchen, placing him as one of the suspects.  As both he and Claire try to solve the murder of his wife, they are brought even closer together with a disturbing conclusion to the murder and to their relationship.

The Memory Collector by Meg Gardiner



China Lake by Meg Gardiner



Saturday, August 4, 2012

The Sculptress (1995) by Minette Walters


Walters follows her dark debut, The Ice House (1992), with the even more striking tale of enormous, unloved Olive Martin, serving a life sentence after confessing to killing and dismembering her mother and sister. Rosalind Leigh, dispatched to interview Olive in prison preparatory to writing a book about the case, finds her unnervingly unrepentant, but finds as well suspicious discrepancies between her confession and the evidence of the crime scene and other witnesses. More and more convinced of Olive's innocence, Roz joins forces with Hal Hawksley--the retired arresting officer whose restaurant has come in for some mysteriously hard times--to dig up whomever Olive's been covering up for. The search will bring Roz up against some singularly nasty neighbors, a brace of spineless lovers, a supremely dysfunctional family--and a denouement whose horrors are touched with unexpected compassion. Walters brings a shivery mastery to the old-fashioned British whodunit, with plotting as twisted as the characters' secrets.

Started Early, Took my Dog (2010) by Kate Atkinson

As the novel opens, Jackson is searching not only for the "lost pastoral England that was lodged in his head and his heart", but for the "fake wife" who absconded with his fortune and the real parents of his current client, adoptee Hope McMaster, who appears to have sprung from nowhere. This quest leads him on a pleasurable travelogue around Yorkshire's ruined abbeys and genteel tea shops, and thence to Leeds. There the lonely, retired police officer Tracy Waterhouse encounters a screaming child being dragged around a shopping centre by a "prostitute, druggie, thief, all round pikey" named Kelly Cross and in a moment of highly unbelievable madness buys the girl for ready cash.

As Tracy goes on the run with little Courtney, Jackson's investigations – and other investigations he doesn't know about yet – disturb a long-buried crime from the 1970s: a murdered prostitute, a missing child, a police cover-up. Also in Jackson and Tracy's orbit is ageing actress Tilly, who with her slipping wig and handbag full of knives and forks is beginning to lose herself to dementia and, worst of all, to lose language ("all her words turning into mush . . ."). The book's scheme folds past and present together with Atkinson's customary flair, while in Tilly's mind the two coalesce, her memories running into the present like ink. Senility is a remembering as well as a forgetting – a career's worth of lines, fragments of poetry and prose, rising unbidden in her brain.
Tilly is not the only one feeling her age: this is a book about the bruising passage of time, and whether we grow hardened to the world or become raw with rubbing against it. "It's your age," says Jackson's most significant ex, Julia, explaining his new weakness for sublime landscapes and Emily Dickinson poetry; he in turn finds her a paler version of herself now she's mellowed by time and motherhood. Tracy, meanwhile, "had retired with a shell so thick that there was hardly any room left inside". The past is a "lost continent" for everyone, the whole book a wondering comparison of the good – or bad – old days with the strange new present ("Men weren't what they used to be. If they ever had been"). Characters ask themselves when men stopped wearing hats, when women started behaving like men. Atkinson's portrait of 1970s Leeds, in the shadow of the Ripper, carries echoes of David Peace's Red Riding trilogy – "the past was a dark place, a man's world" – but of course the sexism and corruption live on into the present day.
It's not lost on Tracy that in her desire to mother Courtney – to make up for all the others by saving one lost girl, "one fallen fledgling popped back into the nest" – she is dragging the child through danger and confusion. Courtney is the mystery at the heart of the book, an unreadable presence in a tattered fairy outfit, unavoidably reminiscent of this era's most famous lost girl, Madeleine McCann. But Tracy's awkward transformation into would-be parent is wryly moving, and Atkinson swerves the obvious sentimentality by channelling it all into Tilly, who has her own pity-soaked memories of maternal heartbreak. Tracy's new role is also mirrored by Jackson's adoption of a particularly winning dog, also rescued from an abusive supposed-carer (the difference between mistreating a child and a dog in public being that passers-by are much more willing to intervene on the dog's behalf).
So much of the narrative is retrospective or interior that there's not much urgency to unfolding events, however highly coloured. And there's a rhetorical whimsy reminiscent of some of Atkinson's earlier books, a devil-may-care gesturing at the novel's own fictionality, which can leave the characters threatening to float free of our trust in them. But we follow their digressive, meandering voices avidly as they circle around their own particular loves and losses, all knitted together with Atkinson's extraordinary combination of wit, plain-speaking, tenderness and control. She's an old hand at paradox now: "All roads lead home," says Julia. "All roads lead away from home," Jackson replies.


Tuesday, July 17, 2012

The Narrows (2004) by Michael Connelly


The Narrows by Michael Connelly


This instalment of the Harry Bosch series kind of threw me off on my Connelly reading. It doesn't feature journalist Jack McAvoy, but it focuses on the case he covered in Connelly's novel, The Poet. The Narrows takes place years after LAPD claimed the Poet had been shot and killed. But FBI Agent Rachel Walling knows that he's still out there. She receives the call that he has resurfaced. Coincidentally, a case investigated by Bosch as a faked suicide brings the two together to finally bring the Poet to justice. I like the books that reference cases from other books, and bring characters together. It's like finding old friends in a new situation (the general reason people like to read books in series, I suppose). The Narrows was more suspenseful than most in this series, and I did find myself glued to it late in the night. It did include the typical Bosch frustrations of jumping to the wrong conclusions and trusting and mistrusting the wrong people, but in the end all the ends ties up tightly and I was excited to move on to the next mystery.  (Review  thanks to Anne for Goodreads)

Twist of Fate (2007 ) by Jayne Anne Krentz


Front Cover
Cloistered as a faculty member at a small college, beautiful Hannah Jessett can almost forget her family heritage. Few know she's the niece of Elizabeth Nord, the legendary anthropologist who stunned the world with her revolutionary work--until her aunt dies, leaving Hannah in sole possession of her priceless unpublished journals. But Hannah has other matters to contend with. Her brother's company is about to be destroyed by Gideon Cage, a wealthy entrepreneur with a notorious reputation in the boardroom... and the bedroom. When she confronts Gideon, all she sees is a powerful man with a fast smile and soft eyes. Yet before she can catch her breath and really understand this puzzle of a man, her whole world is suddenly threatened: her brother, her aunt's legacy, her heart--and her life! (Google review)

Lost Light (2003 ) by Michael Connelly



Editorial Review - Reed Business Information (c) 2003
Adult/High School-After more than 25 years with the L.A. Police Department, recently retired Harry Bosch decides to finish the murder investigation of Angella Benton, a case he had been quickly pulled off more than four years earlier. Gaining additional background information from a former colleague, now a quadriplegic as a result of having been shot during the investigation, Harry begins contacting any and all of the people who could have facts pertaining to the crime. He believes that the murder is tied to a film scene and $2 million in cash, and that the entire caper was ingeniously set up well in advance. With dogged determination, he risks his life more than once to prove his theory correct. Connelly expertly weaves the many complex story parts together, resulting in an action-packed ending. As in real life, all aspects of the case must be researched thoroughly, and the bulk of the novel involves the time-consuming, labor-intensive effort that goes into finding answers. Several subplots-including ones involving jazz, Harry's ex-wife, and another murder-help to round out characters, inject other interests, and relieve the intensity of solving the murder. Young adults who read true crime and forensics, or who are interested in police procedures, will surely pick this one up.-Pam Johnson, Fairfax County Public Library, VA 

Fortress America (1999) by Edward J Blakely & Mary Gail Snyder

Front Cover



Gated communities are a new "hot button" in many North American cities. From Boston to Los Angeles and from Miami to Toronto citizens are taking sides in the debate over whether any neighborhood should be walled and gated, preventing intrusion or inspection by outsiders. This debate has intensified since the hard cover edition of this book was published in 1997. Since then the number of gated communities has risen dramatically. In fact, new homes in over 40 percent of planned developments are gated n the West, the South, and southeastern parts of the United States.Opposition to this phenomenon is growing too. In the small and relatively homogenous town of Worcester, Massachusetts, a band of college students from Brown University and the University of Chicago picketed the Wexford Village in November of 1998 waving placards that read "Gates Divide." These students are symbolic of a much larger wave of citizens asking questions about the need for and the social values of gates that divide one portion of a community from another.


Kill Switch by Neal Baer and Johnathan Green (2012)


KILL SWITCH 
Cover art for KILL SWITCH
The authors are qualified to write thrillers, but this milquetoast “homage” to Silence of the Lambs and other more venerable entertainments doesn’t even hold up as an airplane book. Baer and Greene’s careers as former producers of series like Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and A Gifted Man should give readers a sense of what they’re getting into. After a very slight prologue in which a girl is abducted in 1989, the novel opens on forensic psychiatrist Claire Waters’ first day working among the inmates of Riker’s Island. She’s been invited into this rare research fellowship by Dr. Paul Curtin, a severe taskmaster with his own agenda. “I want to fix them, or at least understand them,” Claire philosophizes about her chosen path. In the most simplistic psycho-speak, Claire believes that childhood is the key to understanding all deviants, not least her first patient Todd Quimby, due for parole soon. Quimby is a hard case with a history of drug and sexual abuse hurtling toward even worse crimes who fixates on his new doctor. Meanwhile, a Manhattan homicide detective named Nick Lawler is recovering from the death of his wife, looking after two young children, and is suddenly called back to homicide after a long exile in a dead-end assignment. Lawler runs across Claire while investigating the murders of young blonde women, with all evidence pointing towards Quimby. Claire is even more horrified when the next victim has been altered to look more like her. The investigative narrative is workmanlike but tolerable, much like the rerun of a TV serial. It’s toward the end, as Claire confronts the killer who abducted her childhood friend and the primary plot becomes a Fugitive-style medical mystery, that this novel starts to lose its edge.

The Harry Bosch Novels Volume One by Michael Connelly (2008)




The Black Echo: A body found in a tunnel off Mulholland Drive looks like a routine drugs overdose case, but one new puncture wound amidst the scars of old tracks leaves LAPD detective Harry Bosch unconvinced. To make matters worse, Bosch recognises the victim: Billy Meadows was a fellow 'tunnel rat' in Vietnam. Bosch believes he let down Billy once before, so now he is determined to bring the killer to justice.

The Black Ice: When the body of a missing LAPD narcotics officer is found, rumours soon emerge that he had been selling a new drug called Black Ice from Mexico. The LAPD are quick to declare the death as a suicide, but Bosch is not so sure. Fighting an attraction to the cop's widow, Bosch starts his own maverick investigation, which soon leads him over the borders, and into a dangerous world of shifting identities and deadly corruption.

The Concrete Blonde: When Bosch shot and killed Norman Church, he was convinced it marked the end of the search for one of the city's most bizarre serial killers. But four years later, Church's widow is taking Bosch to court, accusing him of killing the wrong man. To make matters worse, Bosch has just received a note, eerily reminiscent of the ones the killer used to taunt him with. As he battles to clear his name in court, Bosch faces a desperate race against time to find the killer...

Monday, May 21, 2012

A complicated kindness (2004) by Miriam Toews


A Complicated Kindness.jpg
"The novel is told in the style of a memoir and is not fully chronological; therefore there is no classical plot line. The most present-day events detail the involvement of the main character, Nomi, with Travis, whereas she also explores her past and how her family came to be so fragmented.
It is revealed that Nomi's sister, Tash, was excommunicated and left town during her late teens, with her boyfriend, Ian. Tash had become an atheist and her rebellious spirit was not satisfied with the limits of the  Mennonite community. Seven weeks later, Trudie, Nomi and Tash's mother, is also excommunicated and leaves town to spare Ray, her husband and the girl's father, the agony of choosing between her and the church. Nomi speculates that Trudie left her with Ray because Ray needs Nomi more than Trudie does. She also speculates that Trudie knew Ray would not be able to choose between her (Trudie) and the church and therefore she left to make it simpler for him.
With Travis, Nomi becomes more rebellious; she spends most of her time trying to get high and eventually begins to take oral contraceptives and loses her virginity. She stops going to school and church. At the end of the novel, Nomi is excommunicated for setting a fire, and Ray leaves town because he realizes that Nomi wouldn't have the heart to leave him, and therefore must leave so that Nomi would be free to do the same. It can also be interpreted as a suicide on the part of Ray."
Wikipedia, Mar 6, 2012 19:45

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Run (2007) by Ann Patcette



Family, Everything Is Political  by  Janet Maslin   Sep 20, 2007   New York Times 

"To appreciate the silken agility with which Ann Patchett constructs her fiction, consider the way the opening sequence in her new novel, “Run,” invokes the Virgin Mary. On the book’s first page Ms. Patchett reveals that one of her story’s central characters, Bernadette Doyle, died two weeks earlier. Now Bernadette’s sisters have arrived to grapple with a family tradition.


A statue of the Virgin, adorned in blue robe and halo, portable enough to be placed on a bedroom dresser, has been passed down from generation to generation in this family. It has an unusual history. The Italian sculptor who created it used the delicate beauty of Bernadette’s great-grandmother as part of his inspiration. Through the generations there has been an enduring resemblance between the iconic, red-haired image and the family’s real women.
Tradition dictates that the statue be handed down to a worthy relative. But Bernadette spoiled the pattern. She had no daughters, only sons. The oldest, Sullivan, has the statue’s hair color but none of its virtue, as he is the family ne’er-do-well. The younger two boys look even less like the statue, because they are black. But Bernard Doyle, Bernadette’s husband, overrules his sisters-in-law by insisting that his younger sons are entitled to the precious family artifact, appearances notwithstanding.
One thing that makes this political maneuvering so intriguing is that it is political. (Bernard Doyle is a former mayor of Boston, well-schooled in the art of bending others to his will.) Another is the lovely ease with which Ms. Patchett shifts her characters through time.
In the first few pages of “Run,” without apparent effort, she glides through time. She glimpses Bernadette as a bride, telling her husband the history of the statue, and then Bernadette as a mother who eagerly adopts two more sons when Sullivan is 12. A visit to the pediatrician, who notices a lump on Bernadette’s neck, swirls the chapter back to its starting point. She is gone, survived by one holy statue and a household full of men, as united by nurture as they are different in nature.
No stranger could glance at the Doyles and figure out what they have to do with one another. This author specializes in delving beneath the surface of such incongruity. As she did in the beautiful “Bel Canto,” Ms. Patchett once again thrives on juxtaposing wildly different characters and creating volatile chemistry among them. (Nothing so exotic is liable to happen in the workaday fiction of Ann Packer, with whom Ann Patchett should not be confused.) At the same time she creates an entirely credible set of dynamics for the Doyle family.
Then, long after Bernadette’s death, the Doyle men are quite literally shaken by a new arrival. In the midst of a Massachusetts snowstorm, a Chevy Tahoe plows into Tip, the more scholarly and coldblooded of the adopted brothers. He might have been killed without the intervention of a black woman, an apparent stranger named Tennessee Moser, who shoves him out of harm’s way and is then badly hurt herself.
The woman is hospitalized, and that leaves her 11-year-old daughter, Kenya, with nowhere to go. When the Doyles take charge of the girl , they begin to suspect that Kenya was secretly part of their family all along.
In place of the shock and sibling rivalries that might be expected in such a story, Ms. Patchett provides room for contemplation. She dispenses with her material’s least interesting prospects by making the Doyles deeply devoted to one another in ways that make racial divisions meaningless, and by making Kenya, Tip and Tip’s genetic brother, Teddy, exemplary and accomplished people. Although Bernard Doyle was accused of political opportunism at the time he adopted Tip and Teddy, he has proven to be the most devoted of fathers, despite the usual pangs of fatherly frustration.
As their names indicate, Tip and Teddy were raised to be Massachusetts politicians and fulfill their father’s dreams. But Tip is an aloof Harvard ichthyologist, “the kind of kid who could hang from your neck and still maintain a critical distance,” and he is impatient with the family ambitions. Teddy contemplates becoming a priest like his 88-year-old Uncle Sullivan, who is said to be a miraculous healer.
The other Sullivan, Tip and Teddy’s older brother, is the son who destroyed his father’s career. He has spent years lying low in Africa but reappears suddenly on the night of the accident to somehow, uncannily, become the Doyle who understands Kenya and her mother best.
“Run,” with a title that suggests many things (including Kenya’s athletic prowess and Doyle’s political drive), and with a watery looking cover that reflects the whole book’s aura of a human aquarium, becomes an elegant mélange of family ties. Ms. Patchett gives her readers much to contemplate when genetics, privilege, opportunity and nurture come into play. And to her credit she is neither vague nor reductive about any of these things; she creates a genuinely rich landscape of human possibility. If she does not wildly exploit the drama of colliding fates on a snowy night and subsequent life-or-death medical crisis, there are plenty of other writers who tell such stories.
“Run” is muted only insofar as its characters are all so accomplished, their natures so decent and their barbs so civilized. It’s as if the story’s racial nuances, which are rendered almost nonexistent, are still present enough to preclude any rough edges.
Ms. Patchett showed no such restraint in “Bel Canto,” a more astonishing book and a less inhibited one. But “Run” still shimmers with its author’s rarefied eloquence, and with the deep resonance of her insights. When Kenya arrives at the Doyle home, a place she has looked at with longing all her life, and is given one of the boys’ white T-shirts to sleep in, Ms. Patchett invokes the image of a ship’s sail. That’s an exquisitely simple image of how much Kenya’s life has changed overnight."

Brass Verdict (2008) by Michael Connelly



"Things are finally looking up for defence attorney Mickey Haller. After two years of wrong turns, Haller is back in the courtroom. When Hollywood lawyer Jerry Vincent is murdered, Haller inherits his biggest case yet: the defense of Walter Elliott, a prominent studio executive accused of murdering his wife and her lover. But as Haller prepares for the case that could launch him into the big time, he learns that Vincent's killer may be coming for him next.

Enter Harry Bosch. Determined to find Vincent's killer, he is not opposed to using Haller as bait. But as danger mounts and the stakes rise, these two loners realize their only choice is to work together.

Bringing together Michael Connelly's two most popular characters, The Brass Verdict is sure to be his biggest book yet."



Copied from Goodreads, Internet, May 19, 2012

Ex Libris Confessions of a Common Reader (1998) by Anne Fadiman


A delightful book of a collection of 18 essays about the author's love affair with books.  The prose is intelligent, as are the stories, which are autobiographical in content.  The author affirms the value of books and reading in our lives.  Whether it is a messy bookcase or a musty book store, all books receive attention for the meaning they bring to Anne Fadiman and her equally hooked-on-books husband.  A fun read!

Thursday, May 17, 2012

One Was A Soldier (2011) by Julia Spencer-Fleming


On a warm September evening in the Millers Kill community center, five veterans sit down in rickety chairs to try to make sense of their experiences in Iraq.  What they will find is murder, conspiracy, and the unbreakable ties that bind them to one another and their small Adirondack town.

The Rev. Clare Fergusson wants to forget the things she saw as a combat helicopter pilot and concentrate on her relationship with Chief of Police Russ Van Alstyne. MP Eric McCrea needs to control the explosive anger threatening his job as a police officer. Will Ellis, high school track star, faces the reality of life as a double amputee. Orthopedist Trip Stillman is denying the extent of  his traumatic brain injury. And bookkeeper Tally McNabb wrestles with guilt over the in-country affair that may derail her marriage. But coming home is harder than it looks. One vet will struggle with drugs and alcohol. One will lose his family and friends. One will die.
Since their first meeting, Russ and Clare’s bond has been tried, torn, and forged by adversity. But when he rules the veteran’s death a suicide, she violently rejects his verdict, drawing the surviving vets into an unorthodox investigation that threatens jobs, relationships, and her own future with Russ. As the days cool and the nights grow longer, they will uncover a trail of deceit that runs from their tiny town to the upper ranks of the U.S. Army, and from the waters of the Millers Kill to the unforgiving streets of Baghdad.


Review copied from Goodreads May 2012

Sense of an Ending (2011) by Julian Barnes


Winner of the Man Booker Prize.  I did not think that this novel was a Booker winner, however, that decision was not mine.  It was an interesting look at a man  examining his past and how he may have impacted the lives of others.  In reality his role was quite small and could be limited to a mean-spirited letter he had written to a school mate who was dating his former girlfriend.  There was a lot of naval gazing and pretentiousness in the characters.  The ending, which revealed Adrian's suicide and explained Veronica's relationships with her mother and  mentally handicapped brother, was illuminating, but did not redeem anyone.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Flash and Bones (2011) by Kathy Reichs

"Either the formula is wearing thin or I'm tiring a bit of the formula but I didn't love this latest installment in Kathy Reich's long-running series about a forensic anthropologist. This episode takes place in her home town of Charlotte, home to NASCAR, and has tie-ins to the race business. It also links to American extremists, and several missing people
I'm not going to give away plot points here. My main problem with the story and its telling was the telling: too many repeated comments about her cat, too juvenile a response to a new male character, occasional choppy writing, repeated descriptions of FBI operatives, etc. I don't recall being struck by these elements in the past. Has Reichs changed or have I?

All that being said, it was a quick read and I did want to know who did it (though I knew before Tempe).''

I couldn't agree more!
Review copied from Goodreads, Interenet, May 6, 2012

Blind Assassin ( 2000) by Margaret Atwood


Though this book won The Booker, I really did not enjoy it.  The separate stories into space and with the lovers caused me to feel disjointed in my reading. The story of the sisters was interesting enough, however. The last few books by Atwood e.g. Onyx and Crank are also an example of her taking her writing in another direction.  However, I do not want to travel that direction of her.  This may be a case of The  Emperors New Clothes. I used to love Margaret Atwood, but some love affairs come to an end.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

9 Dragons (2009) by Michael Connelly


                                                                                      
Yes, I've been on a bit of a Michael Connelly spree.  But after trying to get through Margaret Atwood's 'Blind Assassin' I needed some thing superficial.  The 9 Dragons is one of my least favourite MC novels.  It seems unrealistic.  Harry's daughter getting kidnapped in Hong Kong because of a case he was working in LA.  His trip to Hong Kong was also fantastic as he had to join forces with his ex-wife's Chinese boyfriend (security at the casino where his wife worked playing cards). As the two men tried to chase down the clues with the 'ex' in tow, she gets killed by bullets intended for Harry.  But, Harry and the boyfriend leave her body behind and continue on with the mission.  Once the daughter is freed and details come forward, Harry whisks her via air to LA.  Only then does it seem she feel bad about her mother, but is ready and pleased to attend a new school immediately.
Mom's body will be shipped home for a funeral.  Why is it that  Harry's female love interests seem to get killed or injured or transfered? I guess it keeps him free for a new adventure.