Monday, September 30, 2024

Djinn Patrol On The Purple Line by Deepa Anappara

 

Jai and his friends Pari and Faiz live in a crowded basti or neighborhood.  His family consists of his sister, mother and father.  His father works construction and his mother works in a high rise for a rich woman, spending her days cleaning and cooking for others in a location Jai can only imagine.  What he knows are the crowded streets, the market redolent of spices and butchers and dirt.  Jai's sister is the track champion of their school but Jai isn't interested in school  He lives for his television shows, especially the police ones and imagines that he is a crime fighter as well.

Then a classmate goes missing.  Jai is sure he can find him with his friends' help.  They go around asking questions.  Faiz is sure that a djinn has taken the boy.  The boy's family go to the police but they are only interested in cases where they can get a bribe and brush the family off, saying the boy obviously ran away.  Then a second boy goes missing, then a teenage girl.  The basti, mainly Hindu, insists this must be the work of Muslims.  When Muslim children are also taken, the mystery deepens.  Can Jai and his friends find the truth?

This is a debut novel from an Indian author with a journalist background.  It explores the disparity of how crimes are investigated depending on the victim's background.  I thought about the Atlanta child murders while reading this book, how the police were slow to realize a serial killer was working the streets of Atlanta just as the police in this case were slow to investigate missing children from a basti.  Anappara uses the naivete of a child to explore how justice is often uneven depending on social class and how crime is the same in its effect no matter who it targets.  This book won the Edgar Award the year it was released and was a Woman's Fiction longlist choice.  This book is recommended for those readers interested in other cultures, mystery and literary fiction.   

Saturday, September 28, 2024

The Skill Of Our Hands by Steven Brust and Skyler White

 


The Incrementalists are a group of people whose goal is to make the world better, bit by bit.  The people in the group are immortal.  When they die, their memories and personalities are gathered into what is called a stub and a volunteer new person who wants to join the group receives the stub and becomes the person who died.  

Phil, married to Ren, has just been shot so a new second for him has to be found.  The entire group gathers from all over the world both looking for the new person to receive Phil's stub and to investigate his murder and find out who shot him.  Each person in the group seems to have their own candidate and the clues to Phil's murder are slowly uncovered.  Can the group get back to normal?

The authors are both highly regarded in the science fiction genre.  Brust is the son of Hungarian labor organizers and White is the daughter of two college professors.  Both have other interests; Brust as a musician and White as a dancer.  This is the second novel in the Incrementalist series and the first in the series was a Best Book in several science fiction awards.  The world building is interesting as well as how new individuals are chosen, having to meld well with those who come before them.  This book is recommended for science fiction readers.   

Friday, September 27, 2024

The Good People by Hannah Kent

 

The setting is the rural Irish countryside in the early nineteenth century.  Life is hard for the farmers and tradesmen of the valley and everyone is dependent on the crops and the milk and eggs and meat of their livestock.  The inhabitants are superstitious and whenever anything goes wrong, they look to the folklore they were raised with to find who is responsible.  A new priest has come to the valley and he insists they must put aside their old beliefs as the Church is against reminders of paganism.

Nora is having an especially hard time.  Her husband recently dropped dead unexpectedly.  She is left to raise her grandson by herself and it is more than she can handle.  Micheal was brought to her after the death of her daughter by her son-in-law.  Although he was a normal child at two, toddling and talking, now at four he cannot walk or talk or even relate to anyone.  Nora hires Mary at a hiring fair as her maid and to help her with Micheal.  Over the months that follow, as the other inhabitants of the valley come to hear about Micheal, they call him a changeling and start to blame him for the poor crops and weakened milk and egg production they are experiencing.  Nora starts to believe that her real grandson has been taken by the fairies or Good People as they are called and that this changeling has been left in his place.

Nance is the herbalist who treats the people of the valley.   The priest is determined to drive her out and preaches against her and using her from the pulpit.  Nance is scared and ups her efforts to help those around her so she won't be driven away.  She tells Nora that she can restore her real grandson to her.  When the treatments go awry, the three women are arrested and charged with murder.

Hannah Kent is an Australian author who is interested in history and what went on in those places which were not yet part of the modern world.  The reader will be transported into this rural countryside and the difficult lives of its people .  Everyone knows everyone and secrets are not allowed.  It is a claustrophobic environment and one that lives by its own rules and laws.  The book is based on a true case and Kent has done a superb job of taking the reader to this place and time.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Thursday, September 26, 2024

The Last Days Of The Dinosaurs by Riley Black

 

Everyone has a picture in their mind of what the world looked like when the dinosaurs were the kings of the world.  Most of those pictures are based on movies such as Jurassic Park which may mix and match dinosaurs who didn't live in the same environment or at the same time.  Regardless an event happened that annihilated all the dinosaurs simultaneously.

Most people believe this was a meteorite.  Black shows evidence of one that hit that was seven miles wide which is hard to even imagine.  A blow of that sort created intense fires and then with all the particulates resulting from that, a blocking of the sunlight and dark days with frigid temperatures.  The dinosaurs could not hide nor find food and they died.  Some living creatures survived, such as those small mammals or amphibians that could shelter under water or in dens far below.  They would reinhabit the world along with plants that were again different from what existed before.  

Riley Black is a paleontologist who has written books and magazine articles about the dinosaurs and their demise.  Her work has been featured in publications such as National Geographic, Nature and Sierra.  In this history, she explains what happened immediately after the meteorite hit, then what was the state of the world a year out, ten years, a hundred, a thousand.  In each of those chapters, she discusses what organisms were alive, how they survived and what they are.  She also states that some scientists believe that the widespread demise came from other sources but her belief is the meteorite was the culprit.  This book is recommended for nonfiction readers interested in dinosaurs and how the world changed since then.  

The Devil's Punchbowl by Greg Iles

 


Penn Cage is now mayor of his hometown of Natchez, Mississippi.  In the past, he has been a prosecutor in Texas and a successful author, but when he moved home after the death of his wife, he saw a need for reform and his friends convinced him that he would be the perfect man to take on that task.  He had hoped to land a car factory to bring in jobs but when that failed, he agreed and helped to bring riverboat gambling to town.

When a childhood friend asks to meet with him in secret, Penn reluctantly agrees.  The man is working on the largest riverboat and he tells Penn that the owners have brought a series of crimes to Natchez.  They are involved in money laundering, dogfighting, prostitution, and other crimes.  His friend is scared but wants to help Penn bring them to justice.  Penn agrees but his friend is killed before he can give him the evidence.

A crew of Irish men run the riverboat.  They are rough men, men that would kill at a moment's glance and have.  As Penn and his friends attempt to bring them down, more murders occur and Penn's love, Caitlin, is kidnapped.  But Penn has resources also.  There is a former Texas ranger and an elite commando who returns from Afghanistan to help.  There is a former army sniper who is now a deputy sheriff and Penn's own family and his friends.  Will they be enough to bring down this evil?

This is the third book in the Penn Cage series.  Penn is what used to be considered a Southern gentleman, a man with honor but who will do almost anything to protect those he loves.  Greg Iles is a master of the suspense genre and he has lived in Natchez most of his life so his depiction of the area and the people are written from that knowledge.  This book is recommended for suspense readers.  

Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Booksie's Shelves, September 25, 2024

 


It's the end of September and officially fall although North Carolina rarely feels much cooler in September.  To date, I've read 207 books this year and hope to reach three hundred.  But reading always slows down this time of year as NFL football returns along with new television shows.  Many of today's books come from Blackwell's in England or they are books on either the Booker, Women's Prize or International Booker lists.  Here's what's come through the door:

  1. Count My Lies, Sophie Stava, mystery, sent by publisher
  2. Scrap, Calla Henkel, mystery, sent by publisher
  3. The Discomfort Of Evening, Marieke Lucas, Rineveld, literary fiction, purchased
  4. Sleeping On Jupiter, Anuradha Roy, literary fiction, purchased
  5. Angelology, Danielle Trussoni, literary fiction, purchased
  6. Curdle Creek, Yvonne Battle-Felton, horror, sent by publisher
  7. The Garden Of Evening Mists, Tan Twan Eng, literary fiction, purchased
  8. Ordinary Wolves, Seth Kantner, literary fiction, purchased
  9. High Time, Hannah Rothschild, literary fiction, purchased
  10. The Puppet Master, Sam Holland, mystery, purchased
  11. Mercia's Take, Daniel Wiles, historical fiction, purchased
  12. A Terrible Kindness, Jo Browning Wroe, historical fiction, purchased
  13. The End Of Nightwork, Aidan Cottrell-Boyce, literary fiction, purchased
  14. Bad Man, Dathan Auerbach, horror, purchased
Here are the ebooks I've purchased:
  1. Like It Never Happened, Jeff Hoffman, thriller
  2. Better The Devil, Wes Markin, mystery
  3. DCI Yorke Boxset, Books 1-3, Wes Markin, mystery
  4. Terror Town, John Ferak, true crime
  5. Riding The Rails With Paul Theroux, Paul Theroux, travel
  6. Confessions Of A Sociopath, M.E. Thomas, autobiography
  7. Violet Is Nowhere, Faith Gardner, thriller
  8. The Babysitter, Liza Rodman, true crime
  9. Fatal Intrusion, Jeffery Deaver, Isabella Maldonado, mystery
  10. Devil's Chew Toy, Rob Osler, mystery
  11. Kingdom Quarterback, Mark Todd/Rustin Dodd, biography
  12. Crucible Of Chaos, Sebastian de Castell, fantasy
  13. Nocturnes, John Connelly, mystery
  14. Dancer, Colum McCann, literary fiction
  15. The Pleasure Of Eliza Lynch, Ann Enright, literary fiction
  16. By A Spider's Thread, Laura Lippman, mystery
  17. The Last Remains, Elly Griffiths, mystery
  18. Long Past Dues, James J. Butcher, fantasy
  19. The Coworker, Freida McFadden, mystery
  20. Wonder Valley, Ivy Pochoda, mystery
  21. It All Falls Down, Sheena Kamal, mystery
  22. Devices And Desires, P.D. James, mystery
  23. LAPD '53, James Ellroy, mystery
  24. Dark Restraint, Katee Roberts, fantasy
  25. Ha'penny, Jo Walton, fantasy
  26. Three Times A Killer, Gerald Hansen, mystery
  27. Another Thing To Fall, Laura Lippman, mystery
  28. In Big Trouble, Laura Lippman, mystery
  29. Night, Sleep, Death, The Stars, Joyce Carol Oates, literary fiction
  30. Afterparty, Daryl Gregory, fantasy
  31. The Animal Hour, Andrew Klavan, thriller
  32. An Inquiry Into Love And Death, Simone St. James, mystery
  33. The Better Angels Of Our Nature, Stephen Pinker, nonfiction
  34. The North Water, Ian McGuire, literary fiction
  35. The River At The Center Of The World, Simon Winchester, travel
  36. The Moor's Last Sigh, Salman Rushdie, literary fiction
  37. Awe, Dacher Keltner, nonfiction
  38. The Diabolic, S.J. Kincaid, fantasy
  39. The Empress, S.J. Kincaid, fantasy
  40. The Nemesis, S.J. Kincaid, fantasy
  41. Sociopath, Patric Gagne, nonfiction
  42. Mirrored Heavens, Rebecca Roanhorse, fantasy
  43. Denon Rider, Dave Duncan, fantasy
  44. Slanted, Sheryl Attkisson, nonfiction
  45. It Looked Different On The Model, Laurie Notaro, humor
  46. The King's Beast, Elliott Patterson, mystery
  47. The Winslow Incident, Elizabeth Voss, horror
  48. Dead Man Walking, Sharon Bolton, mystery
  49. Blue Sunrise, Gregg Overman, science fiction
  50. The Arctic Fury, Greer McAllister, mystery
  51. The Last Tale Of The Flower Bride, Roshani Shokski, literary fiction
  52. Children Of Paradise, Camilla Grudova, literary fiction
  53. Wasp Nest, Inger Wolf, mystery
  54. The Highway, C.J. Box, mystery
  55. Far To Go, Alison Box, historical fiction
  56. Sin Killer, Larry McMurtry, historical fiction
  57. The Blue Divide, Johnny Moore/Art Chansky/Jay Bilas, nonfiction
  58. Author Unknown, Don Foster, nonfiction
  59. Never Name The Dead, D.M. Rowell, mystery
  60. Sins Of The Son, Carlton Stowers, true crime
  61. Appointment With Yesterday, Celia Fremlin, mystery
  62. 2666, Roberto Bolano, literary fiction
  63. The Professor, Robert Bailey, mystery
  64. The Dare, Natasha Preston, mystery
  65. The DI Skelgill Boxset, Books 1-4, Bruce Beckham, mystery
  66. The Price Of Butcher's Meat, Reginald Hill, mystery
  67. The Ministry Of Pain, Dubravka Ugresic, literary fiction
  68. Shantaram, Gregory David Roberts, historical fiction
  69. Nothing Else, Louise Beech, literary fiction
  70. The Master Butchers' Singing Club, Louise Erdrich, literary fiction
  71. The Man Who Smiled, Henning Mankell, mystery
  72. The Atlas Complex, Olivie Blake, fantasy
  73. Last Night At Villa Lucia, Simon McCleave, mystery
  74. Edgar & Lucy, Victor Lodato, literary fiction
  75. Shadowkiller, Wendy Corsi Staub, mystery
  76. Bad Country, CB McKensie, mystery
  77. Brown's Requiem, James Ellroy, historical fiction
  78. Fury, Charlotte McConaghy, fantasy
  79. Melancholy, Charlotte McConaghy, fantasy
  80. The Bookseller Of Inverness, S.G. McLean, historical fiction
  81. A Mind To Murder, P.D. James, mystery
  82. The Mercy Chair, M.W. Craven, mystery
  83. Now We Shall Be Entirely Free, Andrew Miller, literary fiction
  84. The Seminarian, Hart Hansen, mystery
  85. The Non-Magical Declan Moore, Nathan Taylor, fantasy
  86. By Gaslight, Steven Price, mystery
  87. The Curse Workers, Holly Black, fantasy
  88. Waiting To Be Arrested At Night, Tahir Hamut Izgil, nonfiction
  89. Final Look, Dianne Scott, mystery
  90. The Lookback Window, Kyle Hertz, mystery
  91. Always The Sun, Neil Cross, thriller
  92. The Great Alta Saga, Jane Yolen, fantasy
  93. Trust, Hernan Diaz, literary fiction
  94. The Western Star, Craig Johnson, mystery
  95. Ashton Hall, Lauren Belfer, mystery
  96. Black Water, Louise Doughty, mystery
  97. The Keeper, Luke Delaney, mystery
  98. Trailerpark, Russell Baker, literary fiction
  99. After Shock, CJ Lyons, mystery
  100. Bad Break, CJ Lyons, mystery
  101. Murder, Sarah Pinborough, mystery
  102. A Bad Day For Pretty, Sophie Littlefield, mystery
  103. When We Were Orphans, Kazuo Ishiguro, literary fiction
  104. Forest Trap, Sigrid Holmes, mystery
  105. A Trace Of Hares, Sarah Lovett, mystery
  106. Ormeshadow, Priya Sharma, fantasy
  107. Britt-Marie Was Here, Fredrik Bachman, literary fiction
  108. When The Saints, Dave Duncan, fantasy
  109. The Usual Silence, Jenny Milchman, mystery
  110. Cleopatra Dismounts, Carmen Boullosa, historical fiction
  111. The Iron Dragon's Mother, Michael Swanwick, fantasy
  112. The Golden Wolf, Linnea Hartsuyker, historical fiction
  113. Shadowlands, Matthew Green, nonfiction
  114. Conversations With Friends, Sally Rooney, literary fiction
  115. Clean Cut, Lynda La Plante, mystery
  116. Leave The Grave Green, Deborah Crombie, mystery
  117. The Wild Shore, Kim Stanley Robinson, fantasy
  118. Night Angel Nemesis, Brent Weeks, fantasy
  119. Lamentation, C.J. Samson, mystery
  120. Gone, Randy Wayne White, mystery
  121. Zorrie, Laird Hunt, literary fiction
  122. Black Butterflies, Priscilla Morris, literary fiction
  123. In Defense Of The Act, Effie Black, literary fiction
  124. The Festival, Louise Mumford, mystery
  125. Like, Ali Smith, literary fiction
  126. Shadowmarch, Tad Williams, fantasy
  127. Libra, Don Delillo, literary fiction
  128. Innocence, Penelope Fitzgerald, literary fiction
  129. The Pariah, Anthony Ryan, fantasy
  130. All The Windwracked Stars, Elizabeth Bear, fantasy
  131. Reckoning Of Fallen Gods, R.A. Salvatore, fantasy
  132. Masters Of Death, Olivie Blake, fantasy
  133. The Last Time I Saw Him, Rachel Abbott, thriller
  134. The Absolution, Jonathan Holt, thriller
  135. The Means Of Escape, Penelope Fitzgerald, anthology
  136. Murder Undeniable, Anita Waller, mystery
  137. The Drop, Dennis Lehane, mystery
  138. A Killer Of Influence, JD Kirk, mystery
  139. Half Way Home, Hugh Howley, science fiction
  140. The Philosopher's Pupil, Iris Murdoch, literary fiction
  141. Saint Maybe, Anne Tyler, literary fiction
  142. Her Last Whisper, Jennifer Chase, mystery
  143. King Rat, China Mievielle, fantasy
  144. The One I Left Behind, Jennifer McMahon, thriller
  145. Evocation, S.T. Gibson, fantasy
  146. The Exiled Heir, Jonathan French, fantasy
  147. Choke, Chuck Palahniuk, literary fiction
  148. Going Back, Peter Robinson, mystery
  149. Red Mars, Kim Stanley Robinson, science fiction
  150. The Return, Hisham Matar, literary fiction
  151. The Best Of Me, David Sedaris, anthology
  152. This Is My Daughter, Roxanne Robinson, literary fiction
  153. The Art Of Detection, Laurie King, mystery
  154. The Hanging Judge, Michael Ponser, mystery
  155. Night Of The Mannequins, Stephen Graham Jones, horror
  156. Camouflage, Joe Halderman, science fiction
  157. A Prayer For Travelers, Ruchika Tomar, literary fiction
  158. What Lies Between Us, John Marrs, mystery
  159. The Thackery Lambshead Cabinet Of Curiosities, Jeff/Ann Vandermeer, fantasy
  160. A Fatal Blow, Janet Neel, mystery
  161. Snow Creek, Gregg Olsen, mystery
  162. Til Death Do Us, Patrick Gallagher, true crime
  163. The War At The End Of The World, Mario Vargas Llosa, literary fiction
  164. The Gathering, Anne Enright, literary fiction
  165. Goodbye, Columbus, Philip Roth, literary fiction
  166. Worlds, Joe Halderman, science fiction
  167. Worlds Enough And Time, Joe Halderman, science fiction
  168. You Are Here, David Nicholls, literary fiction
  169. The Girl Who Takes An Eye For An Eye, David Lagercrantz, mystery
  170. The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest, David Lagercrantz, mystery
  171. My Murder, Katie Williams, mystery
  172. Lost Hills, Lee Goldberg, mystery
  173. The Third To Die, Allison Brennan, mystery
  174. The Lager Queen Of Minnesota, J. Ryan Stradal, literary fiction
  175. The Loom Of Time, Robert Kaplan, nonfiction
  176. The Wrong Victim, Allison Brennan, mystery
  177. Welcome Home, Stranger, Kate Christensen, literary fiction
  178. Kitchens Of The Great Midwest, J. Ryan Stradal, literary fiction
  179. Dictation, Cynthia Ozick, literary fiction
  180. The Foreign Student, Susan Choi, literary fiction
  181. Falconer, John Cheever, literary fiction
  182. The Library Of The Unwritten, A.J. Hackworth, horror
  183. Household Saints, Francine Prose, literary fiction
  184. Over The Woodward Wall, A. Deborah Baker, fantasy
  185. Signals Of Distress, Jim Crace, literary fiction
  186. Illumination Night, Alice Hoffman, literary fiction
  187. All Her Little Secrets, Alice Morris, mystery
  188. The Stone Gods, Jeanette Winterson, literary fiction
  189. The Last Gentleman, Walker Percy, literary fiction
  190. I'm Not Scared, Niccolo Ammaniti, literary fiction
  191. Worlds Apart, Joe Halderman, science fiction
  192. Under The Influence, Joyce Maynard, literary fiction
  193. American Mother, Colum McCann/Diane Foley, literary fiction
  194. The Dakota Winters, Tom Barbash, literary fiction
  195. The Ballad Of Trenchmouth Taggart, Glenn Taylor, historical fiction
  196. Ghostheart, R.J. Ellory, horror
  197. My Seditious Heart, Arundhati Roy, nonfiction
  198. The Night She Dies, Sarah Clark, mystery
  199. Closed Casket, Sophie Hannah, mystery
  200. Death Of A Dishonorable Gentleman, Tessa Arlan, mystery
  201. Detective Sophie Allen Box Set, Michael Hambling, mystery
  202. A Son Of The Circus, John Irving, literary fiction
  203. His Bloody Project, Graeme MaCrae Burnet, literary fiction
  204. By The Light Of The Moon, Dean Kootz, mystery
  205. Come Closer, Sara Gran, horror
  206. The Night Raven, Sarah Painter, mystery
  207. Victim, Casey Hill, mystery
  208. Playground, Richard Powers, literary fiction
  209. The Empusium, Olga Tokarczuk, literary fiction
  210. The Alter Girls, Patricia Gibney, mystery
Here's What I'm Reading:
  1. The Devil's Punchbowl, Greg Iles, paperback, mystery
  2. In A Place Of Darkness, Stuart Macbride, hardback, mystery
  3. The Skill Of Our Hands, Steven Brust and Skylar, White, hardback, fantasy
  4. Djinn Patrol On The Purple Line, Deepa Anappara, kindle, literary fiction
  5. The Editor, Steven Rowley, Kindle, literary fiction
  6. The Last Dinosaurs, Riley Black, audiobook, nonfiction
  7. Local Woman Missing, Mary Kubica, mystery
  8. The Good People, Hannah Kent, Kindle, literary fiction
  9. Gideon The Ninth, Tasmyn Muir, fantasy
Happy Reading!

Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Wonder Women by Sam Maggs

 

In this book written to encourage young women to consider STEM careers, twenty-five women who had careers no one could have expected are highlighted.  These are not necessarily the famous women everyone has heard of like Amelia Earhart or Sacagawea, Maggs has chosen to highlight women whose stories are not familiar and women of color.

The book is divided into five main sections; science, medicine, espionage, innovation and adventure.  Each section highlights four or five women with a several page explanation of their life and what makes them noteworthy.  Following this is a section of shorter bios a few paragraphs long of other noteworthy women and this is where the most familiar names will be found.  Finally, at the end of each section is an interview with a present day woman living the career highlighted in the section with questions about how they got started and their advice for other women interested in the area.

This book was written for young adults and Maggs has chosen a breezy writing style.  This sometimes grates but overall is appropriate for the audience.  I like the fact that Maggs has chosen less familiar women and that he focuses on women of color whose accomplishments are heightened by the prejudice they had to fight to get a chance to contribute.  This is a book that should be in every school library or a great gift to give a young adult or teenage girl.  

Monday, September 23, 2024

Dykette by Jenny Fran Davis

 

Sasha and Jesse are in a relationship.  They are in their twenties and not working as they figure out what to do in life.  The couple has been invited by an older professional female couple Jules and Miranda to spend the Christmas holidays with them at their country house and they agree.  Another couple, Lou and Darcy also come.  It's unclear if the older couple just want to get to know everyone better or if more will happen.

Sasha is very insecure.  She longs to be the center of attention at all times and dresses in various outfits throughout the day.  She is suspicious of Darcy who is planning a video shoot with Jesse's help.  Sasha wonders if Darcy is more attractive than her and if everyone else thinks so.

I'm not sure what to say about this book.  I'm not the target audience and I've seen reviews that thought the book was funny and insightful but I didn't find it so.  If I was gay I would be insulted that the characters were portrayed as so shallow and self-centered.  But again, I know I'm not the author's audience and I know little about her world.  I would recommend this to those who are a better match as a reader.  

Sunday, September 22, 2024

Careless Love by Peter Robinson

 


In this novel, both DCS Alan Banks and DCI Annie Cabbot have strange cases to solve.  A wreck occurred on a remote mountain road and one of the cars had to be left to be retrieved later.  When that occurred, the body of a young woman was found that definitely hadn't been there the night of the wreck.  Who was she and why did someone put her body in the car?  In the other case, a wealthy man was found on the moors down an embankment with his neck broken.  Had he fallen?  But why would he go out to such a remote place in bad weather dressed in a suit and dress shoes?

As the cases are worked, they seem to be connecting.  When a third death, that of another young woman who was murdered and left in a shelter occurs, she turns out to have a connection with the first woman.  They both had a mysterious friend named Mia who had been best friends with them for a while then disappeared.  Both also had an unexplained source of money.  

This is the twenty-fifth Alan Banks novel in the series.  I set a goal of reading all twenty-eight this year and I'm reluctant to read the last three because then this marvelous mystery series will be over.  The detectives are all old friends by this point and new characters are being introduced.  Annie's father has a new woman in his life and she thinks she recognizes the man who fooled Annie into a relationship and then disappeared after trying to kill Banks one night.  That story is yet to be revealed but will tie up a loose end that has been hanging for quite a while.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Saturday, September 21, 2024

Masquerade by O. O. Sangoyomi

 

Ododo is born in Timbukto in the fifteenth century.  She is born a blacksmith as all blacksmiths are women.  But they are not revered.  Instead they are made up of widows and women who couldn't find a man to support them and are considered low caste and witches.  One day Ododo is selling some flowers she made in the market when a man flirts with her and she gives him one of her flowers to remember her by.

Then disaster.  Ododo is kidnapped and taken across the Sahara to the capital city.  It turns out that the man in the market had been the ruler of all the land and he has decided that Ododo will be his wife.  Aremo is a warrior king; he has conquered many lands and is at the peak of his strength and power.  To be chosen as his wife is hard for Ododo to understand and she asks that her mother be brought to the capital for the wedding.  Aremo agrees but the mother has disappeared, giving Ododo time to start to adjust to her new life.  

As a member of the court and the prospective new queen, every word and action she makes is scrutinized.  She tries to make friends but is betrayed several times by those who would have her disappear or be taken down in Aremo's regard.  Each section of the country is headed up by a general and several of these men are determined to take Ododo down.  Her prospective mother-in-law seems to hate her and her teacher thinks she is dull and uneducated.  But Aremo thinks she is wonderful and that is the opinion that counts.  He starts to train her to be a warrior in secret and she ends up going into battle with him.  That battle almost leads to her death but she survives and comes back to even more power.  

The author is Nigerian American and this tale is based on Nigerian folklore.  It is full of descriptions that will transport the reader to Africa, markets and wealth beyond belief, court politics and battles for supremacy.  Ododo's motives and actions are not always easy to understand but as she becomes adjusted to her new life she learns to not trust so quickly and to make her own plans.  This book is recommended for readers of multicultural, historical and fantasy fiction.  

Friday, September 20, 2024

Finders Keepers by Stephen King

 

This is the second in the Bill Hodges trilogy.  In this novel, Bill has formed a partnership with Holly, the woman related to his love he lost and has a detective agency.  Bill is a retired policeman and Holly is great on organization and computer work so they are a good match.  

Thirty years ago, a famous author was killed in his home.  He had written a famous trilogy then basically retired from public view.  The killers stole the cash he was famous for keeping at home and the notebooks, several hundred of those, where his writing for years had been done.  Morris Bellemy, the leader of the group, killed his accomplices and then buried all the money and the notebooks in a trunk near his home.  Before he could cash in on the work, Morris was arrested for another crime and put in prison. 

Enter Pete Saubers.  His family had moved to Morris' old house.  While out on day, he found the trunk and thought he could help his family.  His father had been one of the victims in the first book in the trilogy and was left with a long recuperation without a job.  Pete started sending five hundred dollars a month anonymously to his family and it provided the cushion they needed until they could get back on their feet.

Now Bellemy has been released and he wants his money and the notebooks back.  Bill and his crew are brought in once Pete realizes he is over his head, but will they be in time?

I loved this one and can't wait to read the third in the trilogy.  I love Bill and his gruff way of protecting all those around him and the character of Holly, who was repressed for all her life and is finally coming into her own.  The plotting is pure King and the pace is fast as many thrillers are.  I like these books where King has less supernatural material and more of a mystery thriller vibe.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Thursday, September 19, 2024

One Day I Shall Astonish The World by Nina Stibbe

 


This is the story of life of an ordinary English woman from her life in the 1990's to the present.  Susan is in university, studying English with plans to maybe teach.  She works part time in a sewing shop to make ends meet and there she meets Norma who will become her best and longest friend.  Susan's plans are put on hold when she meets Roy Warren and soon is pregnant.  Instead of returning to her studies, she marries Roy and has her daughter Honey.

When the shop closes as women's lives change and sewing becomes less popular, Susan works a number of jobs.  She ends up working at the local university, starting as a part timer and working her way up until she becomes the personal assistant to the Chancellor.  Along the way, she keeps up her friendship with Norma who gets her degree in English and has much more career success.  The book ends with the coming of the covid pandemic and how that affects the life of Susan and the university.

This was my first Nina Stibbe book and I listened to this novel.  It had no real passion or threats, just the everyday life of a woman with its ups and downs.  Susan is a survivor who takes what life gives her and looks for the best in everyone and every situation.  Norma is a stranger character who often backstabs Susan or goes out of her way to be secretive with her.  But the friendship endures and when Susan needs her, Norma usually eventually comes through.  This book is recommended for women's and literary fiction readers.  

Wednesday, September 18, 2024

The Weekend by Charlotte Wood

 

Sylvie has died and her three friends are headed to her beach cottage over the Christmas break to clear it out so it can be sold.  Wendy is a professor whose books are on every college syllabus and a widow but she has Finn, the dog that Sylvie gave her.  Jude is a former restaurant owner who has carried on a forty year affair with a man who is married and can only give her a week once a year.  Adele was a famous stage actress but after a fall, hasn't worked for at least a year.  Now all in their seventies, they are all fighting off old age, some more successfully than others.

As they come together, they aren't sure how they fit without Sylvie, who had been the facilitator of the friendships.  Jude starts off furious because Wendy has brought seventeen year old Finn, who Jude thinks Wendy should have put down.  She believes that Finn will only make messes and insists that he stay outside on the deck.  Adele has just picked up the clues that tell her that her lover will be asking her to move out when she returns home after this trip.  Wendy isn't sure if she has any intellectual curiosity left, although it has been what has sustained her these many years.  

The three fuss and fight yet come together whenever anyone tries to make fun of one of them or do anything that will make the others uncomfortable or in need of help.  They are there for each other and will remain so as long as they all survive.

I picked up this book because Charlotte Wood is a Booker nominee this year.  It hits home as I'm around the same age as these women and in the past year we are starting to see our own friends sicken and deal with old age maladies.  One can't help but think of what is ahead when you start seeing disease and frailness around you.  But these women pull together and the book ends on a hopeful note.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Swimsuit by James Patterson

 

A model, in Hawaii for a swimsuit shoot, has gone missing.  Her parents drop everything and come to the island to help look for her.  But they won't find her as there is a serial killer on the loose.  Before he leaves, there will be three girls killed as well as the first girl's parents.  

Ben Hawkins used to be a policeman.  After he left the force, he became a journalist covering the crime beat.  His editor sends him to Hawaii and he meets and befriends the model's parents.  He is appalled at what is happening and vows to find the killer.  But the killer is also looking for him.  Henri kills for an audience; a group of rich individuals around the world who pay to view the killings he does.  

Henri has decided he wants to come clean and document all of his killings.  He picks Ben but tells him he will give him and his girlfriend if Ben doesn't write his story.  He kidnaps Ben and takes him to a remote national park where he chains him in a trailer while he tells his story.  Ben agrees to write his story but is in reality determined to put an end to Henri before he kills again.  Will he succeed?

James Patterson is known for his mysteries, usually these days written with another author.  Here his cowriter is Maxine Paetro.  This is a typical Patterson mystery, short chapters, choppy that move quickly.  The characters are shallow and the plot is not believable but the reader is drawn along by the structure and the desire to see how everything turns out.  This book is recommended for mystery fans who are Patterson fans.  

Monday, September 16, 2024

All These Things I've Done by Gabrielle Zevin

 


The year is 2083, the place New York City.  Chocolate and caffeine are outlawed and teenagers have a curfew imposed by the government.  Yet, teenage life goes on.  Anya Balanchine's life, however, isn't the typical teenage one.  She is the daughter of the former head of the organized crime family that rules NYC.  Her father is dead, shot in his office at home, and her mother was killed in a car accident that left her big brother, Leo, damaged for life.  She also has a little sister and they all live with her grandmother who is dying of old age.

Still, life goes on.  Anya goes to school and has the typical teenage dramas with friends and boys.  She has recently broken up with a boyfriend and isn't looking to replace him.  But then there is the new boy in school, Win.  He is the son of the assistant district attorney and should be avoided like poison ivy.  But he is determined to ask Anya out and she can't resist.  Soon they are in a relationship although his father forbids it.  

This is a young adult book and not really my normal reading preference but I did enjoy it.  It was fairly predictable but Leo gets into trouble and it's interesting to see how Anya protects everyone and interacts with the other crime lords.  She is an interesting character and the reader cannot help but be on her side as she sacrifices for others and protects them.  This book is recommended for young adults.  

Sunday, September 15, 2024

Lum by Libby Ware

 

Lum isn't like the others in her mountain town in Virginia.  She was born with a different body, one that could be male or female.  Her mother told her she could never marry and the boys who knew bullied and teased her.  As she grew up, she became the one in the family who cooked and cleaned.  Now in her thirties, she spends her time moving from one relative's house to another, no place to call her own and always at someone else's beck and call.

But changes are about to come to the small town.  The President is planning a scenic mountain route, the Blue Ridge Parkway.  It will bring tourists with their money to the area and new jobs for the tourist trade.  But to make the road, the government needs to buy land and it's coming through Lum and her brothers' family farm.  The town splits into those supporting the plan and those opposing.  Soon there is violence in the air and neighbor is set against neighbor.

Changes are coming to Lum as well.  She is offered a job after spending time taking care of the town's banker when he is home sick for an extended time.  That leads to him offering her a job in the tourist trade that would give her a home of her own and money she can count on.  Can she leave the life she has always known for one with more freedom?

I loved this book.  I grew up near the Blue Ridge Parkway and my family was one of the tourists who went there on Sunday drives for picnics and to see the leaves turn and the stunning mountain views.  There were curvy mountain roads where you couldn't go over twenty or thirty and Mabry Mill with its buckwheat pancakes and chocolate milk.  Ware has captured that mountain magic and created a character in Lum that the reader will fall in love with.  This book is recommended for women's fiction readers.  

Saturday, September 14, 2024

Leave The World Behind by Rumaan Alam

 

Amanda and Clay are a married couple who want to take a week's vacation out on Long Island.  Their son, Archie, is already a teenager and their daughter, Rose, is about to be.  This could be one of the last vacations they can take together.  They rent a house on Long Island, not on the water but a few miles back in the country which has a pool.  Everything is lovely.  They swim, lounge around and read, do puzzles and just relax.  

Then the television and the phones stop working.  They had heard a booming noise so their guess was that a substation had gone out although they still had lights.  A few hours later, after dark, a knock comes at the door and an African American couple are standing there.  They are G.H. and Ruth Washington and they own the house.  They told Amanda and Clay that the electricity was out in New York City and elsewhere and they had already been out of the city attending an event so decided to come to their house.  They ask if they can stay in the downstairs suite and offered to reimburse the family half their rent for the week.

Everyone tries to reassure everyone else that this is just something normal, but the fear is seeping in.  Rose sees hundreds of deer one morning on the move further north.  The adults see a flock of flamingos that night where flamingos should never be.  Amanda insists that they fill the bathtubs in case the water supply goes out and then Archie gets sick.  More loud noises occur, so loud they crack the windows in the house.  Is this the beginning or war?  A natural disaster?

This book got a lot of buzz when it was released.  It was a Best Book of the Year choice by multiple publications and a finalist for the National Book Award.  A movie has been made and is available to view.  Alam is a writer who lives in New York.  This book allows the reader to think about what they and their family would do in the event of a national emergency and how they would react to others.  Would they think only of their own family's safety?  How prepared would they be?  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Thursday, September 12, 2024

The Last Devil To Die by Richard Osman

 


Things are about the same as always in the senior home that houses the Thursday Murder Club.  Elizabeth is mysterious as ever but her time is taken more and more taking care of her husband, Stephen, who is slipping into dementia.  Ron has a girlfriend but is on the outs with her after an argument on when presents should be opened on Christmas.  Joyce is between boyfriends while Ibrahim is alone except for his friends and a few patients he still sees.

Then something shocking happens.  An antique dealer who is a friend of theirs is found murdered.  Who would want to hurt such a harmless man?  As the Thursday Murder Club starts their investigation, they are soon up to their necks in a drug deal gone wrong.  They meet the head of the drug trade in their area who warns them they are putting themselves in danger.  Another hard man, a Canadian who is married to an art forger, is also in the picture.  As the bodies start to pile up can the Club solve the case of the missing drugs that are causing all the mayhem?

This delightful series is now on its fourth book and the characters are as fascinating and humorous as ever.  Richard Osman is an author, television producer and presenter in England.  His writing style is slyly funny while pointing out the issues faced by those getting older and there are many twists as the story progresses.  This book is recommended for mystery fans.  

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Two Nights In Lisbon by Chris Pavone


 Ariel Pryce hasn't been married long, so when her husband suggests that she accompany him on a business trip to Lisbon, she agrees.  It is to be somewhat of a honeymoon and the first night lives up to that promise.  A great meal, a lovely hotel and a night of passion.  But when Ariel wakes up the next morning, her husband isn't in the room.  At first she thinks he must be walking or eating breakfast but when he doesn't return and she notices belongings he should have with him still in the room, she starts to worry.

She goes to the police but they think she is an overanxious wife.  She tries the American Embassy but the same thing happens.  Unsure where to turn, she is given a cell phone on the street by a stranger and then it rings.  John has been kidnapped and the ransom is three million in cash within two days.

Ariel doesn't know what to do.  She and John are middle class and don't have anything like that kind of money.  She calls her first husband who is wealthy but he isn't willing to help.  Finally, she is forced to make a call she hoped she would never have to make to the man with whom she shares a dark secret but who is the only person she knows who has that kind of money.

Chris Pavone is a thriller writer whose work has been awarded most of the awards in this genre.  In this clever mystery, each chapter starts with the time and the day which increases the tension as Ariel's deadline to pay the ransom inches closer and closer.  There are many twists and turns which I didn't see coming and a very satisfactory ending.  This book is recommended for mystery and thriller fans.

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Falling by T.J. Newman

 

Bill Hoffman is a pilot at the top of his game.  He has been a pilot for many years now and except for his wife, son and baby daughter, he loves his job more than anything in his life.  Today's journey should be easy.  He is flying from Los Angeles to New York and his favorite flight attendant is working the flight.  He doesn't know his co-pilot Ben very well but he has liked what he's seen.

But today's flight will be different.  Bill finds out his family has been kidnapped.  The kidnapper gives him a choice:  Bill can crash the plane with all its passengers or they will give his family.  He must make the decision.  Readers may well have to put the book down occasionally as the tenseness of the situation is almost more than one can handle.

T.J. Newman is a former flight attendant and it's obvious she knows about flights and the relationship between a pilot and his crew after they have flown together numerous times.  The tension in this one starts out right at the beginning and is ratcheted up again and again until the reader's pulse is racing.  The book debuted at number two on the New York Times bestselling list and her subsequent novels are doing as well.  This novel has already been commissioned to become a television series in the near future and is recommended for thriller readers.   

Monday, September 9, 2024

The Impossible Fortress by Jason Rekulak

 


Billy Martin is a fourteen year old, just starting high school where he didn't make any of the cliques.  He doesn't care about sports, he is too shy to be popular with the girls and he isn't one of the brains.  He's just an average kid making it through with two best friends, Alf and Chase.  If anything sets Billy apart, it's his new found hobby, a Commodore-64 he and his mother won in a contest.  He loves reading about programming, he loves putting in the programs and getting them to run and he even has been programming his own ideas.  

Everything changes when Playboy features Vanna White in its monthly edition.  She is every teenage boy's dream woman and Billy and his buddies know that they have to get their hands on a copy.  They make impossible plans but the magazine remains out of reach.  The only place to get it is Zelinsky's Newstand and Mr. Zelinsky isn't about to sell an adult magazine to teenagers.  As they plot schemes, Alf decides it would be a great opportunity to make money.  Soon he is taking orders for copies of Vann's pictures to guys in school and the pressure is on.

When Billy goes to the store to scope things out, he meets Mary Zelinsky, the owner's daughter, his age.  She is in the back where they kept the computers and as he talks with her, he realizes she shares his interest in programming and probably is even better than him.  Billy starts going to the store every day making friends with Mary so the boys can get the security code.  But something happens along the way; he starts having feelings for Mary.  This is his first crush and he doesn't know if she shares it but she is the most optimistic person he's ever met and she seems to believe in his ability to create the best game ever.  

This is a new author for me and a charming book.  The author is an Edgar nominated writer who is also an editor at Quirk books.  The book brings back memories of growing up, that first love and all the anxieties of high school.  Since I was in the IT field, it also brings back memories of those early days of computing.  It's a sentimental look back and an exploration of friendship, growing up and how easily things can go awry.  This book is recommended for those interested in looking back and remembering their younger days.  

Saturday, September 7, 2024

Apples Never Fall by Liane Moriarty

 

The Delaneys are known in Australia as a tennis family.   Joy and Stan ran a tennis school for decades, coaching the next generation of tennis players after Stan's knee was injured ending his own career.  He had one player who made it to and won Wimbledon.  Now they are retired and not exactly sure what to do with themselves.

Their children are grown and have varying success.  Amy is the oldest and still searching.  She has always had issues fitting into the world and shares a house with flatmates, working various part time jobs.  Logan is a teacher at the local community college but his long time girlfriend has just left him.  Troy has made it big, trading commodities.  He is wealthy but lonely, having no one to share his success with.   Brooke has open a physical therapy business but the hours she is pouring into making it a success are affecting her marriage.

One night the doorbell rings at Stan and Joy's house after dark.  On the porch stands a young girl, barefoot in the winter cold and bleeding on her face.  She asks to come in for a minute stating that she is fleeing from an abusive boyfriend.  The couple let her in and before they know it, have fed her, drawn her a bath and offered her a place for the night.  Savannah slowly inserts herself into the household, doing all the cooking and cleaning and going on shopping trips with Joy.  The children are all alarmed.  Who is this girl?  What does she want?

Then the worst occurs.  Joy disappears.  At first everyone thinks she has gone away for a few days after a fight with Stan.  But there are scratches on Stan's face and Joy's phone is found under her bed.  No money is being taken from the couple's accounts or credit cards used.  As the days stretch on, the police extend the search but everyone suspects Stan may have done something although beforehand, everyone would have said their marriage was strong.  

Liane Moriarty is an Australian author whose books have soared to the top of the thriller genre although the author doesn't consider herself a thriller writer.  Her interest is in her characters, how they relate to each other and how they grow and change over the course of a novel.  This book shows the truth of parenthood; you are never done and worry about your children even when they are grown.  It also shows the varying nature of a long term marriage, how the partners grow together and apart, how small resentments can build to large ones but how almost losing someone reminds you how much you love them.  This book is recommended for women's and suspense readers.  

Friday, September 6, 2024

Fragile Things by Neil Gaiman

 


This anthology is a compilation of several kinds of pieces.  There are poems, twenty or so short stories and a novella written in the world after the time of American Gods featuring Shadow, the hero of that book.  My favorite story was Closing Time where a man in a bar tells his personal ghost story, of an abandoned house with a little playhouse in the woods and what happened the day he and three other boys went there to dare each other to be brave.

But the gem is The Monarch Of The Glen.  Shadow has been traveling the world and finds himself in Scotland.  He is offered an enormous amount of money to be security at a large party at a former estate, a party held once a year for those who are so rich that they constantly seek novelty and excitement.  What happens at that party and what happens when things don't go as planned is the mystery that unfolds around Shadow.

Neil Gaiman is a prodigiously talented author.  His novels, stories and essays form a large body of work and he is considered one of the masters of the genre.  Gaiman fans will enjoy this book especially the novella.  I became a fan after reading American Gods which I still think is one of the masterpieces of fantasy.  This book is recommended for fantasy readers.  

Thursday, September 5, 2024

Sleeping In The Ground by Peter Robinson

 


This is a crime that Yorkshire doesn't have.  A large group is celebrating a local couple's wedding.  The bride is a former successful model; the groom a war hero.  But as they are leaving the church, shots ring out.  The bride is shot first, then the groom, then the maid of honor.  By the time the carnage is done, five are dead and several more wounded.  Who would do such a thing and why?

Banks and his team rush to the site and the investigation is made top priority.  Soon suspicion falls on one man and when they go to his home, he is found dead apparently by suicide.  Things are resolved or are they?  Banks and the medical examiner are not sure.  Although the crime is almost perfect to prove the man's guilt, there are a few things that don't fit.  Soon Banks and his team start to wonder if this crime is tied to another murder fifty years ago.

This is the twenty-fourth of twenty-eight books in the Inspector Banks series.  Robinson has chosen to age his characters along with the series so Banks is now in his fifties and thinking about retirement.  A woman he was formerly attracted to has moved back to town and perhaps things will start up again with her.  Annie Cabbott's father is moving to the area to be closer to his daughter as he ages while much of the investigation now is done by younger members of the team such as Gerry a young detective who can be headstrong in her pursuit of justice.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Valentine by Elizabeth Wetmore

 

Odessa, Texas, is a hot, rural poor town in the 1970's.  About the only thing going are some farming and the oil fields.  One morning, Mary Rose Whitehead hears knocking on her family's farmhouse door.  She opens the door to find Glory, beaten to a pulp and desperate for help.  Mary Rose brings her inside and calls the police and an ambulance.

This act of brutality has far-reaching effects.  Glory is only fourteen and took the offer of a ride from a rich boy in town when she shouldn't have.  He is arrested and charged with rape and assault.  Mary Rose takes her family except for her husband and moves into town, frightened now at how remote the farm is.  There she meets Corrine, a recent widow who is adjusting to life without her husband.  Debra Ann is the neighborhood child who never seems supervised as her mother walked away and no one knows where she is or if she will return. 

The novel centers around the crime and the subsequent trial.  It also explores the relationship between the various women and how the support they give each other is what makes life possible for them in such a desolate place.  Karla is a young waitress who is a recent single mother and who finds her support in the diner where she is a waitress and where the older women take her under their wings.  Glory was born in the United States but is of Mexican heritage and the prejudice against Hispanics and the differing justice accorded to them is highlighted.  

This is Elizabeth Wetmore's debut novel.  She was born and raised in Odessa which she left at age eighteen.  She experienced firsthand the changes oil brought to the area and the casual racism that is the hardest to eradicate.  We learn about the town through the stories and viewpoints of the various women who live there and how they experience life.  This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.

Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Strange Sally Diamond by Liz Nugent

 

Sally's dad always said, 'When I die, just put me out with the trash'.  So that's what Sally did, incinerating him in the burn barrel in the barn.  But it turns out, that's not what one does when your parent dies.  The police are called and Sally is in the news.  Everyone wonders about her anyway as she lives out in the country and doesn't socialize with anyone in town.  She has lived there for years with her father.

As things emerge, Sally learns the truth about her life.  She was the daughter of a man who kidnapped her mother at age eleven and kept her imprisoned for fourteen years.  When they were rescued, Sally was five and while her mother never recovered, Sally was adopted by the doctors who were given her care in the hospital.  They kept her apart and never really socialized her into the village life.  

But things are changing.  Sally slowly starts to make friends.  She enters psychiatric counseling and she slowly starts to integrate into society.  She also makes other discoveries.  She has relatives she has never met.  One is her uncle Mark who becomes a friend and someone to guide her along with the village doctor and her counselor  But Sally worries that the man who kidnapped her mother might still be alive and now might know where she is.  

Liz Nugent is an Irish writer whose work falls into the crime genre although her work is not the typical murder mystery.  Readers will be interested in Sally and her attempts to integrate into society after a life that was stunted for three decades, first by her captor and then by her family.  There is tension as the story of the man who is her birth father is revealed and what his life was like after Sally and her mother were discovered.  This book is recommended for crime and literary fiction readers.  

Monday, September 2, 2024

Dreadful by Caitlin Rozakis

 


Gav wakes up with his memories gone and his eyebrows burned off.  He appears to be in a wizard's workshop.  As he tries to determine what is going on, he slowly realizes that he is the wizard and apparently one who is known for cruelty and intimidation of those around him.  His castle is staffed by goblins and his village is known for growing garlic. 

Gav doesn't want to be an evil wizard.  He is appalled when he realizes that he apparently has kidnapped a princess and is holding her prisoner.  It is even worse when he realizes that she is to be a sacrifice when three other dark wizards show up in a few days and try to call another being from another world to rule this one.  

This is Caitlin Rozakis debut novel and it is a light fantasy that will delight the ruler.  Gav goes on a journey to change himself from an evil wizard to a guy anyone could like, maybe even a certain princess?  The tone is light as Gav goes on his journey and he discovers that those around him are more than he had ever imagined them to be.  This book is recommended for fantasy readers.  

Sunday, September 1, 2024

My Name Is Red by Orhan Pamuk

 

'Black' Effendi has returned to Istanbul after a twelve year absence.  His uncle had sent him away because Black fell in love with his daughter Shekure.  Enishte Effendi runs a studio of miniaturists and illustrators.  He has traveled extensively and now the Sultan has given him a dangerous assignment.  He is to create a new book honoring the Sultan but it is to be illustrated in the Western style.  This directly contradicts the religious ban on what can and cannot be included in illustrations.  

Shekure is now a young widow with two sons.  Black still loves her and hatches a plan to marry her now that she needs protection.  In the midst of his courtship, one of Effendi's illustrators is murdered.  Before the murderer can be caught, Enishte is also murdered.  Who would do such a thing?  The Sultan insists that Black and Enishte's rival find the murderer.

Orhan Pamuk is a Turkish novelist, his country's most successful one.  He has been honored with the Novel Prize for Literature for his body of work.  In this novel, multiple points of view are used with each chapter being written by a different character, many of whom are unreliable narrators.  It is at once a murder mystery, a love story and an exploration of the Turkish culture and the relationship between men and art.  Readers will be interested to read about the dichotomy between Eastern and Western art and the strictures of the culture in terms of how religion guides every facet of life there in this time period.  This book is recommended for readers of literary and historical fiction.