Saturday, December 27, 2025

Mother Mary Comes To Me by Arundhati Roy


 Most people know Arundhati Roy as a novelist and she has written beautiful books such as The God Of Small Things which won the Booker Prize in 1997.  But she is also known for her essays and her political writing.  She has also worked on several movies as a scriptwriter.  This is her memoir, the story of her life.

Roy grew up in poverty, her father never in the picture and her single mother not supported by the family.  She had one brother.  But her mother, who is tornadic in personality force, wasn't content for that to be her life.  She started a school and made it one of the best in that area of India.   She was honored for her work in education.

But her skills as a mother were definitely lacking.  She seemed to hate her children, abusing them physically and emotionally.  She had impossibly high expectations of them and was ruthless in her scorn and blame when they didn't meet those expectations.  Roy left home for good at eighteen.  She said that it wasn't because she didn't love her mother but that she left so that she could continue to love her mother.  She put herself through university and has a degree as an architect.

Readers will learn of her life in the university, the friends and contacts she made there and her love for architecture.  They will learn of the love of her life, who was married to someone Roy worked with but the marriage dissolved and Roy lived with him the majority of their lives.  They will also learn about her jobs over the years, her political work and her determination to live the life that she had dreamed about.  This book is recommended for memoir readers for a fascinating life and for literary fiction readers to see what Roy's influences were and how they played out in her novels.  

Monday, December 22, 2025

Autumn In Oxford by Alex Rosenberg

 

Tom Wrought, an American teaching for a semester at Oxford falls in love with Liz Spencer, one of his neighbors.  The problem is that both are married.  They start an affair anyhow.  Tom pretty easily sheds his marriage but Liz has children and supports her husband so it is more complicated for her.  Before she can get herself free, her husband is pushed in front of a train and Tom, who was on his way to meet her, is arrested for the murder.

Tom has had a varied career.  He is teaching history but has worked in the United States with the civil rights movement, has a military stint behind him and worked for the CIA for a short time.  In addition to teaching, Tom reviews books and writes articles for the newspapers.  

Liz finds a barrister that is as determined as she is to find the real killer and set Tom free.  The two women soon determine that the plot against Tom goes back to his young student days when he was a member of the Communist party for a short while and some of his articles that hint at secrets the government wants kept hidden, both in England and in the United States.  Can the three find a way to set Tom free?

Alex Rosenberg is a professor of philosophy at Duke University but he also makes contributions to economic and the philosophy of biology.  He has written multiple novels that use history as a starting point.  In this book, I thought too much time was spent at the beginning establishing Liz and Tom's affair but outside of that one quibble, I enjoyed learning more about the time after World War II and the various government agencies that were set up to protect us but often take actions that question that mandate.  This book is recommended for historical fiction readers.  

Sunday, December 21, 2025

November Road by Lou Berney

 


In this novel, the reader meets Frank Guidry who works for the Mob, doing whatever he's asked to do.  When the Kennedy assassination bursts into the news, Frank is back in New York and shocked like everyone else.  Except that he remembers flying into the city two weeks before and stashing a car in a parking garage.  Except that now he is asked to go back and get the car that's in its place and get rid of it.

Frank realizes that there is more going on than the newspapers realize and that Lee Oswald isn't the whole story.  He flies in and does his job but when he reports in, he realizes himself that he is now a loose end and the Mob is ready to tidy up all the loose ends.  He manages to get out of town and now is on the run.  

Along the way, Frank meets Charlotte Roy.  She has just left her husband and taken her two daughters with her as she drives to Los Angeles to stay with an aunt.  She is determined to make a new life for herself and her girls but when her car breaks down, she agrees to let Frank take her as far as Las Vegas where he has a friend who will loan her another car to make it to California.  Along the way, Frank comes to think that a wife and children are exactly what he needed in his life and Charlotte wonders if Frank is the answer to all her problems.  Will they make it to California with the Mob on their trail?

Lou Berney is an American thriller writer.  His novels have won the Edgar, Anthony, Macavity, Steel Dagger and other awards.  In this book, he draws the reader into the lives of both Frank and Charlotte and make them care if the pair manage to find that normal life they are looking for.  There are twists and turns along the way and bursts of violence that are breathtaking.  One thing I particularly liked in this novel is the epilogue that looks back from twenty or so years out and lets the reader know how everything ended up.  This book is recommended for thriller readers.  

Saturday, December 20, 2025

A Dictator Calls by Ismail Kadare

 

This is the story of a call make in 1934 in Russia.  Joseph Stalin was in power and cracking down on authors and poets due to their creativity and writing critical of the government.  One famous author caught up in this was Boris Pasternak.  His Dr. Zhivago novel was banned in Russia and he lived under constant fear of being arrested as his friend, the poet Osip Mandelstam had been.  Mandelstam was arrested, some say tortured, then sent into exile.  Upon his return, he had a small window of time, then was arrested again and died in a transit camp.

The repression and fear of arrest made a call from Stalin an unwanted one as one never knew what could offend him and make one a target themself.  Kadare tells thirteen versions of the call.  He uses Pasternak friends, wife, mistress and then government agents to give their versions.  In each what stands out is the fear of making a mistake that could lead to imprisonment or death.  Stalin asks Pasternak what he thinks about Mandelstam's arrest and then chides him for not reacting in a stronger fashion. Playing on the game of telephone where a message is passed around a circle and emerges almost unrecognizable by the end, each version is a bit different depending on the viewpoint of the person relating it.  But each version throws into stark relief the tyranny of the government and the fear of those in the creative community.

Ismail Kadare was an Albanian author and poet.  He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature fifteen times and two of his books were nominated for the International Book Prize, this being one of them.  Writing under tyranny, he used fables and myths in his writing to portray the conditions under which his people were kept.  This short novel is a searing indictment of authoritarian governments and those who head them up.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers and those interested in writers from other countries. 

 

Friday, December 19, 2025

Broken Country by Clare Leslie Hall

 

Beth is a country girl.  When she was a teenager, she met Gabriel, son of a lord and from a very wealthy family whose land was adjacent to her family's.  Gabriel is about to attend university while Beth still has a year before she can go.  But the two fall in love, and give their virginity to each other.  But when Gabriel goes away, the strain of a long distance relationship tears them apart.

Beth ends up marrying Frank who has had a crush on her since his boyhood days.  The two live on Frank's family farm and have a son together.  But life isn't always fair.  Their son is killed in a farming accident and as the novel opens, the couple is in a strained relationship.

The setting of the beginning of the novel is a courtroom.  Someone has died and someone else is being tried for causing their death.  We don't know who either of these people are until it is revealed later in the book.  What we do know is that Gabriel has returned to the area with his own son and the spark between he and Beth flares again and they have an affair.  Did it cause the death?

Clare Leslie Hall is an English author who lives in the same kind of farm setting as Beth does in the novel.  This book will draw you in and then rip your heart in two.  It is the tale of love in all its myriad fashions and what happens when love is destructive rather than positive.  I think it is probably one of the best books I've read in 2025 and I'll definitely be looking for the next novel by Hall.  This book is recommended for readers of women's and literary fiction.

Thursday, December 18, 2025

The Book Of Evidence by John Banville


 

Freddie Montgomery is a cad.  He has been traveling the world with his wife and child for years, living the life of a wealthy man although he isn't one.  He has expectations; when his mother passes he will inherit the house and more importantly, his father's art collection.  When he runs afoul of those who loaned him money he cannot pay back, he leaves for Ireland to see if he can round up some money there.  He leaves his wife and child behind

But there's a surprise waiting for him at home.  His mother has sold the art collection for much less than it was worth to a neighbor so she can open a pony farm.  Freddie is furious and decides that he will visit the neighbor and at least steal back the most valuable.  But even that goes wrong and in the process, someone is killed.

Now Montgomery is on trial that's the biggest thing going.   Will he be found guilty?

John Banville is an Irish author whose work has been regarded as some of the best in literature.  This book was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and Banville won the Booker with his novel The Sea.  He also writes mysteries under the pen name of Benjamin Black.  His forte is writing shocking events as if they were commonplace and it is up to the reader to realize the horror of what they are reading.  Freddie is almost unimageable in his criminality but he manages to rationalize everything he does as the inevitable next step in events.  This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

The Puppeteer's Daughters by Heather Newton

 

Walter Gray has made his career from being a puppeteer.  He never used hand puppets; all of his work has been with puppets manipulated and given life through strings and the puppeteer's artistry.  Walter is turning eighty, now retired, and wants to protect his legacy.  He is also teetering on the edge of dementia and his three daughters are never sure when he tells them something if it is real or a fantasy of Walter's mind.

And he has something big to share.  At his eighth birthday party, Walter tells his three daughters that there is a fourth daughter and he wants them to find her.  He tells them about his will and the conditions that are placed on each one of them separately in order to gain their inheritance.

Jane is the oldest daughter and is a very strait-laced and organized person.  She has never liked puppets and resents the money that came to the family after she was grown as her childhood had been one of poverty.  Her inheritance requirement is to make a puppet herself.

Rose is the middle sister and she was born out of wedlock.  She has always felt like she wasn't really part of the family because of that and because of her weight problem.  Rosie basically lets anyone walk all over her due to her insecurities.  Her inheritance requirement is to lose weight, around one hundred pounds.

Cora is the youngest and was raised with money.   She always loved the puppets and went to work with Walter as she as she was old enough.  She has never married or even had a serious relationship, devoting herself to her career.  Now she must decide if she wants to continue running Walter's organization.  Her inheritance requirement is to get an outside life.  Can the three find the fourth daughter?

Heather Newton is an American author who writes in the women's fiction and Southern life genres.  In this book, she has created four unique personalities and the way that they interact and get along is interesting and involved.  The reader will get caught up in the various lives and want to read more to see how everything turns out.  I listened to this novel and the narrator did a great job.  This book is recommended for women's fiction readers.  

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

The Cyclist by Tim Sullivan


 When a construction crew starts to demolish a row of garages, a body is discovered.  DS George Cross and his partner, DS Josie Ottey are assigned the case.  It takes a while to identify the body but it turns out to be Alexander Paphides, son of Greek immigrants.  He and his brother run the family Greek restaurant and Alex is an avid cyclist.  He had not been reported missing because his family thought he was on a cycling trip abroad.

Cross is autistic so although he in actuality leads the investigation, DS Ottey is the officer in charge.  She knows how to work with Cross better than anyone and is working on his social skills as well.  There are several possibilities for who might be the killer.  Alex was caught up in the world of doping to improve his cycling performance.  Could he have gone astray of local drug dealers?  In his thirties, he is dating a sixteen year old waitress from the restaurant and now she is pregnant.  Could that be the motive?  Then there is business.  Alex wants to expand from their Bristol location and have a second restaurant in London.  His brother and partner is adamantly opposed.  Could that have sparked murder?

This is the second novel in the George Cross series.  Readers will be fascinated to see how he has made a life that works for him and how his mind works to unravel the mystery.  Those around him, like the new police intern Alice, learn to work in the ways that George can process.  His strength is looking at the little details that tend to slip through the cracks and that often can provide clues that can change the whole focus of the investigation.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Monday, December 15, 2025

King Sorrow by Joe Hill

 


They met at the university and were soon a group of six.  There was Colin who lived in a mansion and came from a fantastically wealthy family; Donna and Van who were twins, Allison who they both loved.  Arthur was the intellectual and Gwen the daughter of Colin's family housekeeper.  They found that they loved the same things and everyone got along.

Then Arthur got into trouble.  He was cornered by a group of criminals, junkies, who got him in a financial corner and insisted that he start stealing rare books from the library.  It killed him to see the books disappear but he couldn't lose his dreams.  Together the group came up with a solution one night when they were all intoxicated.

They used some relics Colin's grandfather had collected and called forth a spirit from the other world.  What they got was King Sorrow, a massive dragon.  He made a deal with them.  Every year they could pick someone to be killed.  If that person managed to escape, King Sorrow would kill one of them.  They really didn't believe anything had happened, that it was just a drunken dream so they agreed and named the junkies threatening Arthur.  The person or persons to be killed were picked at the New Year and death day was Easter.  They laughed among themselves but were worried as Easter approached.  When the junkies were killed that day, they realised they had started something they never wanted but now it was too late.

The book follows the group as they mature into adults and make adult lives for themselves.  But each year someone else has to be chosen.  They usually pick people like terrorist leaders or demagogues that had taken over countries.  They could tell themselves that these people deserved to die, but weren't they themselves murderers?  

Joe Hill is one of the best thriller writers to be found.  I've loved each and every one of his books, although they come out rarely.  This one may be his masterpiece.  The reader will emphasize with the group, especially Arthur and Gwen, and hope the group can discover a way to defeat what they have called forth.  Over the years, the group starts to splinter and turn on each other as the weight of what they have done sinks in.  This book is recommended for thriller and horror readers.  

Sunday, December 14, 2025

America For Beginners by Leah Franqui

 

They are a strange traveling group.  Mrs. Sengupta is a recent widow from a wealthy Indian family.  She is leaving her pampered life to try to find the son her husband rejected when he told them he was gay.  Rebecca is a failed actress who is hired to be Mrs. Sengupta's traveling companion as it wouldn't be proper for her to travel alone with just a male guide.  Satya is the male guide and he is a recent immigrant to the United States; in fact, this is his first tour and he is quite nervous about it.

They travel to various sites throughout the United States, heading always towards Los Angeles which is the last place the son was known to have been.  As they travel, Rebecca starts to question her life and whether she really wants to be an actress.  Mrs. Sengupta starts to loosen up, throwing aside some of the strictures that she grew up with and had to observe in India.  Satya starts out determined to be the expert, lying when he doesn't know something but gradually learns to relax and sometimes let others take the lead.  

Leah Franqui is an American author with a Yale degree in screenwriting.  She has written both novels and plays.  She lived in India for six years so she has the background to correctly portray the customs and rituals of the Indian characters.  But this book is about relationships.  Relationships with our children, with our lovers and with the people we meet along the way and call friends.  Each of the characters is changed by their travel, some gaining new life goals while others give up unhealthy ways of living.  This book is recommended for literary and multicultural readers.  

Saturday, December 13, 2025

The Last Trial by Robert Bailey

 

Tom McMurtrie is known for his prowess in the courtroom.  In his long career, he's been involved in some of the most challenging cases in Alabama and won.  He had a distinguished career in the classroom but when politics pushed him out, he went back to his law practice with a partner, Tom Drake.

Now one of his longtime nemeses, Jack Willistone, has been found dead on the banks of the river.  He had just gotten out of prison that morning and Tom had been the one who put him in prison.  Who killed Jack?  Was it his father-in-law, who controls the drug trade in the area and who Jack had worked for?  Was it his ex-wife, who after his imprisonment, fell on hard times that she blames on him?  Was it an old rival who had been biding their time?  

When a young girl comes and begs Tom to help her mother who has been arrested, Tom is hesitant but agrees.  With the help of an old friend who is working as a private investigator and all the friends and colleagues he has built up over the years, Tom may be able to win.  But he knows his health isn't the best and he suspects that this might be his last trial.  He is going to have to face one of his best students who is now the district attorney and that pains him but he is determined to help.

Robert Bailey knows the areas he is writing about.  He lives in Alabama and is a civil defense attorney.  This is the third book in this series.  Bailey gets the Southern feel and lives exactly right, the way a man can use his upbringing and longtime associates throughout his life there.  He also gets the respect that a man who has used his influence to do the right thing his whole life is regarded with.  Readers will enjoy untangling the mystery along with Tom.  This book is recommended for literary thriller readers.  

Friday, December 12, 2025

Lost Light by Michael Connelly

 


Harry Bosch has retired from the LAPD.  He's not sure what he wants to do but then he realizes that he now has the time and attention to devote to a case that has haunted him and was never solved.  Four years ago, there was a bank robbery.  During the robbery a woman who worked at the bank was shot and killed.  The police who caught the case had walked into another situation a few weeks later at a bar and it left one of them dead, the other paralyzed for life and the case went cold.  

Harry starts to nibble around the edges of the case and he soon realizes how different it is to work a case without his badge.  An FBI agent had vanished a few months after the robbery and some believe that her disappearance was also connected.  Whether or not that is true, the FBI and the LAPD top brass all want Bosch shut down and are willing to do whatever it takes to accomplish that.  Can Harry solve the case?

This mystery is the ninth in the twenty Harry Bosch series.  He is as determined as ever, singly focused on this one case and the woman who lost her life.  He is divorced from his former FBI agent wife, Eleanor, but gets help from her when the case shifts to Las Vegas where she now lives.  He still loves her and wonders if they could make things work now that he is retired.  The case has lots of twists and readers will enjoy seeing how it all plays out.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.   

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Fire On The Fens by Joy Ellis

 

The Fens has a serial arsonist.  At first it is small businesses, then a body is found in the rubble of one fire.  It's considered an accident but then another body is found.  The victims are both what might be considered 'good guys', people who spent a lot of times helping others.  It's hard to imagine who might want to help them.

Things are different at the Fenland Constabulary.  While Nikki Galena is still leading the detectives, her boss has changed.  It's a temporary assignment but Nikki will take it.  The new boss is a friend of hers and the man who was supposed to take over had been anything but.  The fires keep occurring and it's soon obvious that murder is the arsonist's true aim.  A retired fire inspector comes to help the team but what ties the victims together?

This is the ninth novel in the Fenlands mysteries.  Joy Ellis is an English author who lives on the Fens herself.  Readers have followed Nikki Galena from a new detective to her current position where she is in charge of the investigation.  They also know about her life and her romance with another member of the detective team.  In this mystery, even Nikki's mother and her mother's roommate get involved in the mystery and contribute to the solution.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

A Guardian And A Thief by Megha Majumdar

 

Kolkata, India, is in crisis.  The neverending heat means that crops have failed.  People can barely stand to be outdoors and the markets are empty pretty much anyway.  Ma's family has done better than others.  She runs a nonprofit agency that distributes food and has managed to bring enough home to insure that her father and daughter can eat.  

Things should improve though.  Ma's husband has been in the United States for six months, working as a scientist.  He has finally managed to get visas for the three of them and they are to leave in a week.  

Boomba has no such luck.  He came to the city to find work to send money back to his family whose house has been destroyed and who have nothing.  He wants to bring them to the city but doesn't have anywhere for them to stay.  He has been staying at the refugee center Ma runs and he saw her stealing food.  Now he goes to her house during the night, gets in, and steals food and her purse which holds the passports and visas. 

It is now a fight to see which family will survive.  Ma finds Boomba but he has blackmail power over her.  Can she manage to get her family to the airport to fly out?  Can Boomba bring his family to the city and take over Ma's house when she leaves?

Megha Majumdar is an Indian novelist who now lives in the United States where she teaches at Hunter College.  This is her second novel and it is a finalist for the National Book Award and has been named a Notable Book by multiple media outlets.  The relationship between Ma and her family and Boomba and his family illustrate the love and protectiveness one has for loved ones.  As it becomes a fight for suvival, the reader sees how both main characters are willing to do things they never thought they would be capable of, and how they justify the evil they are willing to perpetrate.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Booked On A Feeling by Jayci Lee

 


Lizzy has always been an overachiever but she never feels like she lives up to her Korean mother's expectations.  Lizzy is a lawyer and just won her first court case, but she is exhausted and needs to take a break.  Her mother is appalled, telling her that breaks are not how you make partner but Lizzy insists and returns to the town where she spent her childhood summers.

One of the draws of that town is that her best friend, Jack, lives there.  They have been friends since they were ten.  Lizzy and Jack's parents are best friends and they basically grew up together.  What Lizzy doesn't know is that Jack has been in love with her for years.  But this time, when they hang out together, she has a different feeling for him and wonders if she has been blind and if she might love him also.

Lizzy finds another friend, a single mom who is trying to make a living with an independent bookstore.  It's not going well, and Lizzy agrees to help the owner spruce up the store and make it more appealing.  She also helps with marketing.  Jack helps the two women when he can but he also works at his family's winery.  Will the attraction between the two flame into love?

Jayci Lee is a Korean American author who writes in the romance genre.  Her characters also tend to be Korean American and it's refreshing to see other demographics represented.  I listened to this novel and the narrator was wonderful, moving the story along with a light touch.  If I had a criticism, it would be that the two main characters act as if they are teenagers with a high school crush rather than thirty year old professionals.  I don't think most adults do as much to'ing and fro'ing when they are interested in a romance.  But the book is charming and I'd like to read another by her.  This book is recommended for romance readers.  

Monday, December 8, 2025

Beyond Black by Hilary Mantel

 

Alison is a medium but one of the few real ones.  She is the daughter of a prostitute whose only use for her was how she could make money from her.   She rented Alison out to whomever would be interested and that was mostly men.  The horrors of Alison's childhood are hinted at but never spelled out.  She connects at will with the black, where the souls of the dead bring her messages.  Alison's spirit guide is a lowlife named Morris, a dwarf from the circus and one of the men whose existence haunted her childhood.

Colette has no spirit talent at all.  But she meets Alison at a medium fair where she has gone to decide what to do next with her life.  Newly divorced and out of a job, Colette is efficient and she and Alison are drawn to each other immediately.  Alison suggests that Colette join her as an assistant and companion and Colette agrees.

At first the partnership works well.  Colette takes care of all the mundane parts of Alison's life such as driving, hotel reservations and paying the bills.  She finds new ways to market Alison's talent and the money pours in.  The two even go together and buy a house.  But soon there is trouble in paradise.  Colette starts to boss Alison around and with Alison's childhood, she is not prepared to fight back and allows it.  Colette starts to feel the malignant presence of Morris and his friends and becomes afraid.  How will it end?

Dame Hilary Mantel was a celebrated English author.  She is best known for her trilogy on Thomas Cromwell, two of which won Booker Prizes.  This novel was also nominated for a Booker Prize in 2005.  Mantel wrote in the genres of memoirs, historical fiction and literary fiction.  In this book, there is a slow horror revealed as Alison's life of being terrorized by her talent is at first hinted at then gradually revealed.  Alison wants to help others but it often results in being victimized by those she attempts to help.  Readers will feel an uneasiness as they read this novel and finish wondering if some can really reach beyond black.  This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction. 

Sunday, December 7, 2025

City Of The Dead by Jonathan Kellerman

 

It's been a long day of moving furniture and the two movers are glad when they finally reach their destination.  While maneuvering their oversize van down the narrow street, they feel a bump and know they have hit something.  They are appalled when they get out to check and find a nude young man laying in the street.  When the police arrive, they are able to console the men; there is a blood trail leading back from the man.  When  they follow it, they find a woman brutally murdered in her home.

The case if given to homicide detective Milo Sturgis and he calls in his friend, psychologist Alex Delaware who often consults with the police.  Alex looks once, then more closely.  He has met the woman before.  Alex does child evaluations for the county and city in custody divorce cases.  He had given his opinion in one case and then was opposed by the woman lying dead on the floor.  It turned out that she had no credentials as a psychologist and she narrowly escaped prosecution.  Now she is dead.

The two men take up the case.  She had been involved with various men, some of them dangerous.  Her relationship with her family was marginal and she was closer with her stepfather than her mother.  What had she been up to lately that could have caused someone to kill her?

This is the thirty-seventh novel in the Alex Delaware series.  Jonathan Kellerman has managed to keep his main characters interesting throughout the series and each novel is a different case for the reader to try to figure out.  Family relationships are explored as well as various forms of crimes by those willing to do whatever it takes to get what they want.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.   

Saturday, December 6, 2025

The Secret Scripture by Sebastian Barry

 


Readers first visited County Slingo, Ireland and met the McNulty family in The Whereabouts Of Eneas McNulty where they met the three McNulty brothers, Eneas, Tom and Jack.  In this novel, Sebastian Barry returns there to tell the story of Roseanne McNulty.  Rose grew up poor, the daughter of the town's gravedigger and later town ratcatcher.  She is exposed early to the violence and turmoil of the Irish Troubles where neighbor fought neighbor and the penalty for a traitor is death.  

Rose was the most beautiful woman in the area and many men wanted her.  She married Tom but his family always disapproved and the marriage fell apart.  She comforted Eneas on the night before he left his native land for years.  She spent years along and destitute and then was put into a mental hospital where she has spent decades.  The hospital is about to be closed and it falls to the head doctor to establish which patients should be transferred to the new one and which should be set free.

He is fascinated by Rose and there is little in the records to go on.  He has to research her story through other hospitals and those who may have known her.  Some tell the truth, some repeat the lies they have always told about Rose.  This latter group includes the man who was the town priest and who later rose in the Catholic hierarchy.  Slowly, Rose's story is teased out and what a story it is!

Sebastian Barry is an Irish writer who is one of my absolute favorites.  His work has been nominated for the Booker Prize five times which is amazing.  His novels document Irish history and troubles as few other authors have with the details being slowly revealed and often ending in a surprise revelation.  The language is amazing and his understanding of human nature is what makes the works so interesting to read.  This is the second novel in the McNulty family trilogy and very rewarding.  It is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Friday, December 5, 2025

The Truth-Teller's Lie by Sophie Hannah

 

DS Charlie Zailer is about to go on vacation with her sister when Naomi Jenkins comes in to make a missing person report.  The missing person is her lover, Robert Haworth, and she is sure that something has happened to him.  Once Zailer and her assistant, DC Simon Waterhouse, hear that the lover is married they start to doubt Naomi.  After all, her only evidence is that Haworth missed their weekly tryst and Jenkins insistence that he loves her so much that he would never do that.

Charlie goes off on vacation, first to Spain then when that doesn't work out, on to Wales to a set of luxury chalets.  She is there when she hears that Naomi now insists that Robert had kidnapped her three years ago and attacked her in front of an audience of men eating dinner.  It seems like the wildest of stories but then, after searching files, the police realize that there have been other women who tell the same story.  Sure that there is a serial rapist on the loose, Charlie cuts short her vacation and comes back to work the case  Can they find the truth?

Sophie Hannah is an English author who has written more than thirty mysteries.  She has a series where she continues Agatha Christie's series about Hercule Poirot along with the Zailer-Waterhouse series and other standalone novels.  She teaches a master's program at Cambridge on mystery writing and is also a poet.  This is the second novel of the Zailer-Waterhouse series.  Charlie is in love with Simon but he doesn't return the sentiment and there are many embarrassing moments between the two.  It definitely affects the everyday working of the murder team and it's surprising that it is allowed to continue.  Zailer seems very emotional but has a good grasp of the case and how to run one.  I will be reading more in this series to see what happens to Charlie and if her love for Simon is ever returned.  This is one of the most diabolical mysteries I've read and the coldness of the perpetrators and the constant twists and turns make this one a definite win for me.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Thursday, December 4, 2025

The Best American Mystery Stories 2010 edited by Lee Child

 

The twenty stories in this anthology are by a mix of authors.  Some are well known names in the mystery genre, others are less well known.  Authors most mystery readers will recognize include Matt Bell, Lyndsay Faye, Jon Land, Dennis Lehane, Phillip Margolin and Kurt Vonnegut.  

One of my favorite stories in this collection was Animal Rescue by Dennis Lehane.  It's the story of a guy who works in a bar, a neighborhood figure nobody really notices.  He finds a dog thrown into the garbage and he and a woman he meets save the dog.  When the original owner shows back up a few months later and demands the dog back, it starts a series of events that won't be soon forgotten.  This book is recommended for mystery and anthology readers.