Monday, December 30, 2024

Headhunters On My Doorstep by J. Maarten Troost


 

J. Maarten Troost made his name writing humorous travel books, the first being on a remote island where his wife took a job for a humanitarian agency.  Since that book, he has written several others, all with a breezy style and irrelevant take on the people and places he encountered.  This book was written about a year after Troost realized that he was an alcoholic and much of the book is centered on this discovery and his rehabilitation and recovery.

He returns to the islands he lived on and follows in the steps of others such as Robert Louis Stevenson, the artist Toulouse Lautrec and others.  Better known locations he visits include Tahiti, Fiji and Samoa.  But he also visits less known places such as the Marquesas, the Tuamotus and Kiribati.  Wherever he can he travels by himself, seeking out remote visas that the average tourist will never see and forming relationships with the native populations he encounters.

A Dutch author, Troost wrote several best selling books and travel articles that appeared in publications such as the Atlantic and the Washington Post.  Those readers who enjoyed his past books will enjoy this one as well as his breezy style wears well.  But others will be turned off by the large portion of the book devoted to his alcoholism and recovery.  This is a more mature Troost, who doesn't have the live and let live feeling about various individuals such as Gauguin who could be considered a pedophile, or parents that let their children run free to encounter danger.  This is a married man with children and his maturity has affected his writing in what I consider a positive way.  This book is recommended for nonfiction readers who enjoy travel writing.  

Sunday, December 29, 2024

Perfume River by Robert Olen Butler

 

We meet Robert Quinlan and his wife Darla right after he meets a Vietnam War veteran, Bob, one night at a local restaurant and buys him supper.  It brings memories back to Robert who met his wife after she marched in an antiwar rally when he had just returned from Vietnam.  He served near the Perfume River and he still has many secrets he has never told anyone.  The woman he loved there.  What he did the night of Tet offensive.  

Robert went to try to please his father.  The war tore his family apart.  His younger brother Jimmy went to Canada to avoid the draft and never returned.  He is still there, still with the woman who went there with him.  The brothers were also torn apart, neither approving of the other's choices.  The family hasn't seen or spoken with Jimmy in decades.  

Now things come to a head.  Robert's father falls and breaks his hip and at age eighty-nine, the prognosis isn't good.  The family reaches out to Jimmy but he remains aloof.  Bob, the homeless veteran, is attacked when seeking shelter and it takes him back to his days of service.  The three men will come together in an explosive moment that echoes the violence that the war perpetrated on everything and everyone.

Robert Olen Butler is a distinguished author who has won the Pulitzer Prize along with many other honors.  Like his protagonist in this novel, he teaches at Florida State.  This novel explores the impact that the Vietnam War had on families and individuals and how war resonates down through the years, sometimes separating those who served and often damaging them in ways that one never recovers from.  The writing is spare yet draws the reader in and for those who lived through the Vietnam War, reminiscent of those times in ways both good and bad.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Saturday, December 28, 2024

Middle Of The Night by Riley Sager

 

Thirty years ago, Ethan Marsh and his best friend, Billy, camped out in his backyard as they did every Friday night.  But when Ethan woke up the next morning, things would never be the same.  There was a cut in the tent and Billy was gone.  Despite an intensive police investigation by local police and the FBI, the case was never solved and Billy was never found.  Ethan's life changed that night and he is still somehow in that tent.

Now forty, Ethan has come home.  His parents have moved south and Ethan is staying in his childhood home getting it ready for sale.  He is now a teacher but the disappearance of Billy has affected his whole life, making him hesitant about new things and afraid to live his life completely, sure that people still think he was involved somehow.  The same neighbors are still living in his six house development and reminders of Billy are everywhere.  Then Ethan starts to feel Billy's presence.  A few days later, Billy's body is finally found.  Has he come back so that Ethan will finally solve the mystery?

Riley Sager has written a haunting tale that seems possible.  Ethan now interacts with the grown up versions of the children he grew up with; his former babysitter, now back home looking after an ailing father and with a son of her own; the neighborhood bully who is now a police officer in charge of the cold case, another friend who now owns a sporting goods store and lives with his wife, child and soon to be second child.  Even the adults are still there for the most part.  Overhanding everything is the existence of a forbidden research institute which is about a mile away in the woods and where no one was ever allowed to enter.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Friday, December 27, 2024

The Greatcoat by Helen Dunmore

 


Philip and Isabel Carey are newlyweds.  They have come to a small English village where Philip is taking up a post as a new doctor.  They don't have money yet for a house so they move into an apartment in town.  Isabel isn't happy there.  The landlady lives updoors and Isabel is sure she is spying on them.  She feels the women in town are judging her and she feels isolated and lonely.  Although the war has been over for a while, there is still rationing making the job of a new cook even harder.  She takes long walks, often out to the deserted airfield where pilots were stationed during the war.

The apartment is always cold.  One day while searching for another blanket to put on the bed, Isabel finds an airman's greatcoat pushed far back in a cupboard.  She takes it down and puts it on the bed for another blanket.  It's warm and somehow makes her feel safe.  

One night, while Philip is out on another call, she hears tapping at the window.  She goes there and sees a man standing there.  He puts his hand against the window and Isabel does the same.  Soon she has met him, a former pilot named Alec.  He talks about the missions he is going on and how it feels to fly against the enemy.  They start an affair although Isabel knows it can't be real.  The war is over and the airfield is deserted.  Yet Alec comes to her most days.  How can it be?  What's the connection?

Helen Dunmore was an English author and poet.  She wrote novels and short stories as well as poetry, both for adults and children.  One of her novels won the first Orange Prize now named the Women's Fiction Prize.  Her novels write about love and loss, often set in or around World War II.  There is often a supernatural element as in The Greatcoat.  Readers will be drawn into Isobel's lonely life and the slow reveal of a long past love affair is fascinating.  This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.

Thursday, December 26, 2024

Once A Liar by A.F. Brady

 

Peter Caine was determined to become a success.  He had grown up desperately poor in New England, the unwanted child taken in by his aunt and uncle who already had four of their own.  Luckily, Peter was bright and as soon as he could, he got away, changed his name and became a lawyer.  He ended up in New York and was taken under the wing of the best defense lawyer in the city.  He also married his daughter and had a child, a son.

But Peter is a sociopath and has no feelings for others.  It doesn't bother him to set free the worst of the worst, murderers and pedophiles.  It doesn't bother him to cheat on his wife or to ignore his son.  He uses people to achieve his goals, then drops them.  Eventually his wife divorces him.

Two things happen to change Peter's life.  His ex-wife dies and his son, now sixteen, comes to live with him and his new partner Claire.  In the same time period, his long time mistress, the daughter of Manhattan's D.A., is murdered and Peter is suspected.  Peter is a prime suspect and as he tries to extricate himself he starts to realize that his life is all wrong.  Is it too late to change it?

A.F. Brady is a thriller writer and a practicing psychotherapist.  The action and pace in this book are very fast as the reader moves through these fateful weeks with the principal character.  I had two issues with the character.  First, although described as charming there was little evidence of it, rather he came across as condescending and impatient.  Secondly, Caine was given every bad characteristic of someone who has his diagnosis and it starts to feel like overkill.  There is a big twist at the end that the reader won't see coming.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Tuesday, December 24, 2024

The Flag, The Cross, And The Station Wagon by Bill McKibben

 

Bill McKibben grew up in a well to do suburb.  Everyone went to the same school and mothers were usually home when the kids came home from school.  Patriotism was high and everyone was sure that the United States was the best country in the world.  

Now, as an older man, he sees many changes.  It is increasingly difficult for a family to get by on one salary and many of the jobs are gone, sent overseas.  The ability to buy a starter home that would eventually turn into enough money to fund retirement is gone, along with most of the pensions that supplied stability.  The automatic patriotism is strained as the truth about those groups that were excluded is more transparent.  Church attendance is falling rapidly and is mostly composed of older people, escalating the dearth of those who identify as religious.

Along with these issues, McKibben believes there is hope.  He encourages municipalities and suburbs to encourage and support lower income housing.  He hopes that resources will increasingly go to those in need.  He wants the United States to once again feel as if they were a beacon of freedom throughout the world.  

McKibben is a scholar, an author and an environmentalist.  In this book, he outlines the issues he sees and then the improvements that he believes can occur.  I listened to this book and the narrator had a clear voice that made listening easy.  This book is recommended for nonfiction readers.  

Monday, December 23, 2024

The Immortalists by Chloe Benjamin

 


Four children set off to see a fortune teller one of them had heard about.  Varya is the oldest, then Daniel, Klara and youngest child Simon.  When the children get to the fortune teller, she only tells people the date of their death.  The children agree to hear this and then leave scarred forever.  Those who are to leave early go to find their dreams, those who will live longer have to live with the guilt and loneliness of losing their family.

The children grow up and the rest of the book tells each child's story as they grow and make a life for themselves.  Simon becomes a dancer in San Francisco.  Klara becomes a magician and after she marries, has an act in Las Vegas.  Daniel is a doctor who makes the decision whether or not a soldier is fit to go to combat.  Varya becomes a scientist and works to find out how to extend human life.  

Chloe Benjamin has written a novel I won't soon forget.  Each of the children has a distinct personality and each a different dream.  The tension comes from each following their dreams and whether they will all learn the meaning of family.  I found the book fascinating and I'm glad I chose it to read.  This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction and family dramas.  

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

The Diva by Daisy Goodwin

 

They were the two most famous Greeks in the world.  Maria Callas was the leading opera singer.  Aristotle Onassis was one of the richest men in the world.  When they met, they were both married to other people but the passion they felt for each other could not be denied.  They spent the next decade together but it was not an easy relationship.

While Onassis loved Callas, he continued to have relationships with other women and then eventually married the former First Lady, Jackie Kennedy after having an affair with her sister, Lee Radziwill.  Maria had married a man who also was her manager for her early career but ended her marriage once she met Onassis.  In her divorce, he ended up with much of her money.

In this novel, Daisy Goodwin tells Maria's story, her recognition that a singer has a purse of golden coins which is the number of performances before the voice starts to change and go.  Maria lived for her music for much of her career but once she met Aristotle, she changed and started living for love.  The relationship broadened her emotional repertoire as she experience the emotions of love and jealousy that many of her opera roles portrayed.  

Daisy Goodwin has made a career of writing the stories of famous women.  Most are set in Victorian times and she also wrote the screenplay for the television series Victoria.  In this book, she has moved into more recent times and explored the life and loves of a woman who is not a ruler.  Callas was the reigning singer of her time but she never managed to marry the love of her life or have a good family relationship with her mother or sister.  Does greatness require pain?  This book is recommended for readers of women's fiction.   

Monday, December 16, 2024

Ordinary Monsters by J.M. Miro

 

The Victorian world is one of strict rules and class distinctions.  Then there is the world beneath, the world that isn't spoken of but which makes the other one possible.  That world is centered at the Institute.  It's stated purpose is to collect children with unusual talents and educate them to make their way in society.  The unstated purpose is to guard the gateway between the living and the dead.  

The children come from all over the world and have varying talents.  Charlie is an American who heals.  He has been a slave, imprisoned and executed but he is still here.  Ribs is a girl who can make herself invisible.  Oscar can make companions from meat so he is never alone.  Komako is a dustmaster and can collect and use dust to obscure or tighten around others.  Marlowe is the youngest.  He was found as a baby in a boxcare with a dying woman and then adopted into a circus.  He can glow blue and either rend or mend flesh.

But some talents get corrupted.  Jacob is one such.  He is also a dustmaster and the one who finds Komako in China.  But he gets involved with the other side when he attempts to visit there to find his dead twin and is changed forever.  Now he only wants to take down the Institute and take Marlowe with him.  He also wants to destroy the scientist who instead of helping the children wants to use them in his own battle against the Drucker, a creature of the dead.  Jacob came once and almost succeeded in capturing Marlowe as a baby.  Now that Marlowe is back, Jacob is ready to mount another attempt.

I listened to this novel and it will definitely be one of my favorite books of 2024.  I loved the Dickensian writing style and the slow unraveling of the plots and counterplots at the Institute.  The relationship between the children is fascinating and the way they complement each other's talents and their ability to form a united front is key.  I listened to this novel and I must mention the narrator, Ben Onwukwe.  His deep voice lends menace to the story and accentuates the slow unraveling of the climax of the book.  This book is highly recommended for fantasy readers.  

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Midnight And Blue by Ian Rankin

 


John Rebus has finally fallen.  He is in prison, his actions in the death of Edinburgh's crime boss questioned and charged, and after a trial, found guilty.  Cops in prisons usually don't do well and at first he was in isolation.  But the man who runs things inside puts Rebus under his protection and he is moved to the general population.  He keeps to himself, is helpful where he can be, and does his time.  But things change when a man on the wing is found dead one morning, his throat slit.  Who could have done it at a time when everyone was locked in?  Was it a guard?  Did someone unlock the cell and let in an enemy?  

On the outside, Rebus's best friend, Siobhan Clarke, is busy with police work.  She has a missing teenage girl and is also involved in the prison case.  When an old nemesis Malcolm Fox shows up in the prison as well, Clarke asks to go full time on the missing teenager case and is given permission.  Fox used to work in what is called Professional Standards, charging his fellow officers when they strayed, and Rebus had been one of his major targets.  Clarke isn't sure what happened to the girl but as the days go by and she isn't found, projections aren't good.  When a man she worked for is found killed, Clarke has a bigger case and breaks a pedophile ring.  

This is the twenty-fifth book in the Rebus series.  It is rare that an author can keep a series fresh and involving but Ian Rankin has been able to do so with this one.  Rankin is a Scottish author and he knows the territory.  The writing is crisp and Rebus is the focus even brought down low.  The ending to both cases is unexpected and satisfying.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  


Friday, December 13, 2024

The Rising by Heather Graham and Jon Land

 

Alex Chin is the high school's IT guy.  He's the star quarterback, the prom king, the most popular guy in the school who can date any girl he wants.  He's the blonde haired, blue eyed guy that girls fantasize over although his parents are Chinese.  They have told Alex that he was adopted as a baby and he's never really thought about how unusual that is, Chinese parents adopting a Caucasian child.

Sam is definitely not in the popular crowd.  She's a math/science geek and she lives for the goal of someday being an astronaut.  She has a prestigious internship at a government lab nearby and she's just noticed some irregularities she wants to share there.  Sam is Alex's tutor and although she knows that's all it will be, she has a crush on him.

When Alex gets a concussion on the field one Friday night, he is taken to the hospital.  While there, although his recovery is rapid, some strange results come back from his tests.  His parents are hesitant to talk about it and Alex can't get anything from the doctors.  When he goes to see his doctor, he is dead and when he returns home, the same is true of his parents.  There are policemen everywhere but they seem android like and they are.  For Alex has a secret that even he doesn't know he carries and it could affect the fate of the world.  He and Sam hit the road, running from those who would kill them both without asking any questions.  

Heather Graham has written over two hundred books across a wide variety of genres.  Jon Land writes technothrillers and increasingly, murder mysteries.  Their partnership in this book has generated a story that moves fast and initiates the question of the existence of aliens and why they would be interested in Earth and its inhabitants.  This book is recommended for thriller readers.  

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros

 

Violet Sorrengail grew up believing that she would serve the kingdom as a scribe as her father had.  But her mother is a General and head of the Rider Academy and she forces Violet into the applicants for riders.  The Academy is where riders are chosen by their dragons for life and learn to ride and fight.  Violet is small and has an illness that makes her bones easy to snap and her muscles to part and strain.  She doesn't expect that she'll survive but she has to.  Her brother Brennan was a rider and he died in battle, tearing their family apart.  Her sister Mira is also a rider and in constant danger.  Another loss is unbearable.

Violet passes the first test and discovers both good and bad news.  The good news is that her best friend is her squad leader.  The bad news is that her wingleader is Xaden Riorson, the most ruthless leader in the force and a sworn enemy of her family.  His parents had been the leaders of a rebellion and all the adults in the rebellion had been executed as their children watched.  The children were bound to the rider academy.  There are a hundred ways an enemy as a leader could make sure Violet doesn't survive and the intense looks he gives her makes her sure that he is counting them.

To everyone's shock, Violet is chosen by the most powerful dragon in the force and then chosen again by another dragon.  No rider has ever done this and it marks her as someone to watch.  Violet constantly trains and makes adaptions to survive.  Her best friend becomes less of one as he constantly tries to shelter her and keep her weak in order to survive.  She needs someone to push her and to her shock she finds it in Xaden.  They are now tied together for life because their dragons are mates.  Violet hates to admit it but she starts having feelings for Xaden and she thinks he has the same for her.  Can they have a love in such an environment?

This book took the fantasy world by storm.  Before this, she was known as a romance writer and that shows through in the love scenes.  But she also has a lifelong love of the military and that is also obvious.  This is the start of a great fantasy series that has already been optioned for a tv series.  Violet is a wonderful character to serve as a model for young women and Xaden is every woman's dream.  This book is recommended for fantasy and romance readers.  

Monday, December 9, 2024

The Last Party by Clare Macintosh

 


When Rhys Lloyd is murdered the night of his New Year's party, there is no shortage of suspects.  Rhys had been a local Welsh boy who won a singing contest and made it big.  When his father died, his will gave Rhys his land and Rhys leveraged it into a high end development of vacation homes.  The local townspeople are not happy with that.  Rhys is also a bully and a philander.  He has cheated routinely on his wife and isn't above a little force if a woman or girl isn't willing.  

He's also a rogue in business.  He owes the local contractor for his work and his plans for a water sports center will put another out of business.  He lies to his partner about their financial position and spends company funds on his personal debts.  

Since the development is on the border between Wales and England, two police forces are assigned.  Leo is the English DI.  He is divorced and his ex wife is keeping his young son from him.  The Welsh police are represented by Ffion Morgan.  She grew up in the village and knows everyone there.  This case could uncover her biggest secret and she can't have that.

Clare Mackintosh is an English author whose mystery novels have been successful from the start.  This novel is the first in the Ffion Morgan series and its Welsh policewoman is a fiercely independent woman who has secrets of her own.  The lives and motives of all the characters are revealed with just the right speed and the solution to the murder is shocking when it is finally revealed.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.   

Sunday, December 8, 2024

The Boys In The Boat by Daniel James Brown

 

This is the story of the 1936 Olympics and the men who rowed for the United States and brought home the gold medal, putting another arrow in the puffed vanity of Adolph Hitler who had stage managed the entire event to make Germany look good to the world.  These were the nine men who crewed for Washington University during a time when the world was crawling out of the Great Depression.

Daniel Brown has done a masterful job of setting the stage for the climatic race which is the book's focus.  He gives the backstories of the coaches, the English man who came to America and revolutionized the construction of the racing shells.  Washington's greatest rival was the University of California and we hear about this rivalry and how the coaches tried to outdo each other.

But it is mainly the story of the men who rowed.  Chief among them is Joe Rantz who exemplified the stories of the others.  Joe grew up poor, his father unemployed due to the Depression.  His mother died young and when Joe's father remarried, his stepmother didn't care for him, especially once her own children came along.  At age eight, she forced his father to put him out.  Joe was given a spot on the schoolhouse floor to sleep but had to cut firewood and keep the building maintained.  In order to eat, he ate with the miners of the town but had to work in the kitchen.  But he persevered.  He was taken back home for a while, but when the family moved, Joe was once again left behind to make his own way, his stepbrothers and sisters torn away.  He learned to rely on no one, to make his own way in the world.  Unfortunately, that is the exact opposite of what is required in rowing where each man must subsume himself to the group effort.  Joe and the other men learned this lesson and were considered the best rowing team ever seen.

In Berlin, Hitler and his group organizers tried to fix the race.  There were six lanes in the race.  The three inside lanes were calm and easier to row in while the outside lanes were difficult, facing the winds and waves of the lake.  Germany was given the prize position of the first lane, their ally Italy the second and the Swiss third.  The two favorites coming into the race, Great Britain and the United States were given the outside lanes with the United States being assigned the worst lane.  The man who set the stroke for the boat was ill and had collapsed two days before.  But the crew managed to pull together and win the gold.

Daniel James Brown is an American author who specializes in writing nonfiction about historical events.  His research is meticulous and he gives enough background for the reader to emphasize with the subjects of the book without becoming overwhelming.  I read his book earlier about the Donner Party and years later still remember that harrowing event through his research.  Here, once again, he brings this event to life with vivid outlines of the lives of those involved while he sets the historical events of the world in place as the background.  This book is recommended for nonfiction readers.  

Saturday, December 7, 2024

Close To Death by Anthony Horowitz

 

When Anthony Horowitz talks with his agent, she reminds him that he is due to turn in a book by Christmas.  He doesn't have anything in progress and his agent suggests that he write up one of Hawthorne's, the private detective he partners with, old cases when Hawthorne was working with his old partner who Horowitz has always been curious about.

Hawthorne, of course, hates the idea but gives in.  He dumps case files and recordings on Horowitz and leaves him to it.  The case took place in an upscale community called Riverside Close.  It has only a few houses so when the latest resident, Giles Kentworthy, is found dead the suspects are limited.  Kentworthy and his family had moved in a few months before and no one cared for him.  He blared his music, his kids were terrors and his parking blocked the other residents.  It was suspected he was a racist.  Worst of all, if anyone talked to him, he blew them off.

The suspects include two elderly women who had been nuns before coming to Riverside, a GP, a dentist, a retired barrister and a chess grandmaster.  Most of these had spouses although some had lost their mates as they are all getting older.  The superintendent in charge goes for the most likely suspect as there is another death with a locked room plot and it appears that this was the culprit.  Horowitz had come in and solved the murder but wasn't pleased with the result.

Anthony Horowitz is an English author who has been successful in several genres.  He is best known for his mysteries and has several series that are ongoing there.  He was the screenwriter for the respected TV series, Foyle's War and is also a successful children's author.  In this series, he makes fun of himself as a bumbling sidekick and the reader knows as little about Hawthorne as Horowitz has managed to learn.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Friday, December 6, 2024

The Glovemaker by Ann Weisgarber

 


Deborah and her husband Samuel live in Junction, Utah in the late 1800's.  The first settler there was Samuel's stepbrother, Nels, who came there after his wife and child died in childbirth.  Later, other families came including Deborah's sister.  At the time of this novel, there were eight families there.  All are Latter Day Saints but one of the draws to Junction is that they have a step back from the authority of the Church and can make their own way more.

Each fall, Samuel goes away for several months to outlying towns.  He is a wheelwright and there is no other in a hundred miles.  This year, he hasn't returned on time but Nels and another man searched for him and found a rockslide that would have made him turn around and find a longer way home.  But it means that Deborah is by herself when the man comes.

Only one family in Junction practices multiple marriage, but the authorities suspect them all.  Men come there to be guided to a refuge where they can live the life they choose.  But rarely does a man come in January with snow blowing.  He knocks on Deborah's door and she feeds him but there is something about him she doesn't trust.  She knows Nels will guide him the next day and she agrees to shelter the man in her barn that night.  He eventually tells her that there is a marshal and his men chasing him which increases her worry.

The next day Nels sets off with the man, barely before the marshal arrives.  The man is belligerent and insists Deborah is lying and breaking the law.  He searches around the settlement and Nels and the man have returned due to the weather.  Somehow, the marshal is injured and the entire settlement is in jeopardy.

This was an interesting historical fiction based on truth.  The orchards of Junction are now within a national park and visitors are encouraged to pick the fruit when they visit.  The extensive research into live in the 1880's and the Mormon religion is particular is evident.  Deborah's love language is making gloves for those she loves.  Her courage in the absence of her husband and her determination to shelter the other inhabitants of Junction are stirring.  This book is recommended for historical fiction readers.   

Thursday, December 5, 2024

The Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty


 Ten years ago Amina al-Sirafi was known far and wide as a pirate queen, a woman who went after what she wanted whether it was treasures, men or just the thill of exploring a new place.  But now she is forty and has been away from the sea for a decade.  She is now a mother and lives quietly with her mother and daughter.  Then a visitor arrives.

It is the mother of one of Amina's former crew, a man who did not make it home from their last voyage.  The woman reports her granddaughter has been kidnapped by a wizard and wants to hire Amina to find her and return her.  Amina demurs but the woman insists Amina owes her and her son and offers her a fortune to take on the job.  Reluctantly, Amina agrees.

She gathers up her former crew, her first mate who has been taking care of the ship, a woman known for her skill with poisons, the best navigator in the world and her crew.  She also encounters her husband, a man she married before she realized he was a demon instead of a human.  They set sail and discover that the wizard is looking for a specific treasure and is willing to do anything to attain it.  He has managed to enthrall a sea monster twice the size of a ship and it does his bidding.  Can Amina find the girl and defeat the wizard?

Shannon Chakraborty is known for her fantasy novels.  Her fantasies are a bit different from the norm as she doesn't build an imagined world.  Instead she uses her extensive research into history to set her stories in a true setting.  The characters are enticing and Amina is the middle-aged heroine all women will love.   The loyalty and family feeling among the crew is heartfelt and Chakraborty has set the scene for further adventures from Amina and her crew.  This book is recommended for fantasy readers.