Monday, November 4, 2024

The Stark Beauty Of Last Things by Celine Keating

 

When Clancy agreed to go to a party out on Montauk Island, he never expected that the decision would change his life.  Once he gets there, he realizes that this is where Otto, his Big Brother, would take him fishing as a child.  Clancy lost his parents when he was young and with no other family, grew up in foster homes and institutions.  He meets Julianne, a local innkeeper at the party and she tells him Otto is still alive and still living there.

Clancy goes the next day to look up Otto.  Otto is overjoyed to see Clancy but tells him that he is dying.  He asks Clancy if he would meet with his daughter, Therese, and see if Clancy can bring about a reconciliation.  Otto and Therese have been estranged since Otto's second marriage and not speaking.  Clancy tries but to no avail.

Clancy has come to Montauk at a critical time.  The island is changing from a blue collar fishing harbor to a rich person's playground and local residents are being priced out of the housing market.  Climate change and overbuilding is ruining the environment and for every environmentalist, there is another person who wants to cash in on their home and move elsewhere.  When Otto dies, he leaves Clancy as his executor of his estate and one of the biggest decisions is what to do with a several acre parcel of land Otto has held for decades with some other local families.  Some of them want to leave it as a natural area, others want to sell it to the highest offer.  What would Otto want?

This novel hits several themes.  It highlights the inevitability of change as new people discover undeveloped areas and want some of the untouched beauty for themselves.  It discusses the lives of the existing residents and how their livelihoods are being affected.  It also delves into family relationships and the need for a feeling of belonging that everyone has.  This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.  

Sunday, November 3, 2024

Daisy Darker by Alice Feeney

 

It is Daisy's grandmother's eighth birthday and the entire family has gathered at her house to celebrate.  Nana lives in a sprawling mansion that is cut off by high tide twice a day.  The celebration is forced because this is no happy family.  Nana is a famous author; her most famous book is Daisy Darker named after her favorite granddaughter, Daisy.  There are three sisters, their parents and the neighbor boy who spent most of his childhood with the girls.

The mother is Nancy, who showed favoritism to her two older daughters, Rose and Lily.  She alternated between ignoring Daisy and over protecting her as Daisy was born with a broken heart and had numerous operations to try to keep her from dying.  The father is Nana's son but his musical career was more important to him than his family and he and Nancy divorced and the girls rarely saw him after that.

Rose is now a vet.  She had an early love affair with Conor, the neighbor boy but never had another serious love or married.  She devotes herself to her career.  Lily is the spoiled one, a mother herself.  Trixie is her fifteen year old daughter, no news on who the father was.  Lily was the kind of teenager who was boy crazy and would do anything to get attention.  Conor is now a journalist, his days of living with a brutal, alcoholic father long gone.  

Now someone is killing all the family while they are cut off from help and a storm rages.  One person dies each hour.  Who is doing the killing and who will survive?

Alice Feeney is known for her thrillers, often involving family relationships.  As each person dies, their secrets and backstory are revealed.  The sisters were never close, Daisy envying the older girls and those two locked in a rivalry and feud that has lasted for decades.  There are twists and turns and few readers will see the ending beforehand.  This book is recommended for readers of psychological thrillers.  


Saturday, November 2, 2024

Many Rivers To Cross by Peter Robinson

 


One thing is sure in Eastvale.  There will always be more murders for DCS Alan Banks' team to solve.  This week's case is that of a young Middle Eastern male teenager whose body has been found in a household's trash bin.  He has been stabbed but no one around seems to have seen him before or know his name.  As the case is investigated, it turns out that he had spent months getting to England and the plan was to work and send money back home to bring over the rest of his family.  That never happened because they were all killed by a bomb after he left.  He had gotten mixed up in drugs as the cartels like to use young people who won't be prosecuted or punished as heavily as an adult.

In the meantime, Annie Cabbott's father has moved into the locality although he is currently in the United States due to his painting and business interests there.  Zelda is the young woman who lives with him although she could easily be his granddaughter.  But she had undergone sex trafficking as a young woman and Ray is the only man she has found that she feels safe with.  Zelda has seen the man who tried to kill Alan Banks years before and is working on trying to find him in London.  Alan doesn't want her involved so she is investigating in secret.  How will that turn out?

This is the twenty-sixth book in the series.  Alan is feeling his age as are others on his team.  The newest members of the team are working on fitting in and they tend to have degrees that Alan never did.  But the cases keep coming and somehow Robinson manages to make each book seem fresh even as the reader becomes familiar with the team and feels like they are old friends.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.