Monday, April 27, 2026

The Sideways Life Of Denny Voss by Holly Kennedy

 


Denny has a good life.  He lives with his Nana-Jo, his elderly mother with his cousin, Angus, next door in the duplex.  He has George, his rescued Saint Bernard.  Denny is intellectually challenged, the result of a birth accident that kept oxygen from getting to his brain but he is quick to tell everyone his number is 72, and you're not retarded unless your number is seventy or less. He has a big sister named Lydia who he seldom saw and with whom he wasn't on good terms He works with Angus, the two of them riding the roads for the city, scooping up roadkill and various other tasks.

Their is one person Denny doesn't like.  Henry Tesky employed Nana-Jo for years as the housekeeper.  But when his first wife died and he quickly remarried, Nana-Jo was fired.  Denny asked Mr. Tesky to give Nana-Jo her job back, but Tesky yelled at him and called him an idiot.  Mr. Tesky is also running for town mayor and Denny hopes he doesn't win.

When Tesky is found killed, Denny ends up being arrested.  He had been found near Tesky's house, on a sled full of guns.  With the animosity between the two, Denny seems like the perfect suspect.  He is put in jail where his lawyer and a doctor try to get the story of what happened from Denny.  Denny, who never uses one sentence when twenty come to him, tells stories and hides from the truth of what happened that night and what he has found out about his life.  

Holly Kennedy is a Canadian author.  Her novel about Denny is delightful with plot twists and secrets that are slowly revealed.  Denny is a lovely man, making the best of a life that has challenges and taking joy in the everyday events that we all have but most ignore.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers who also enjoy comedy.

Sunday, April 26, 2026

The Book Of Doors by Gareth Brown

 

Cassie Andrews is living in New York City with her friend, Izzy.  She works in a bookstore and she's not sure if that's what she wants to do but it's great for now as she loves to read and has customers who come often enough that they are familiar.  One of those, an elderly man she always talks with, unfortunately dies in the bookshop, his heart giving out.  He leaves a book behind for Cassie.

Cassie loves the book which is full of pictures and strange writing.  But soon she notices that another man seems to be wherever she and Izzy go.  He finally introduces himself as Drummond Fox, a Scotsman who tells her that her book is special, one of a set of special books.  Hers is the Book Of Doors and with it, she can be transported to anywhere that has a door, even back or forward in time.  Cassie doesn't believe him until she uses it to do just that, go somewhere else without trying.

But Fox warns her there are people who will want her book.  Some buy the books they are able to locate but there are others who will kill for them.  There is a woman who has killed all of Fox's friends and another evil man who will do whatever it takes to get books.  Soon Cassie and Izzy are being chased all over the world by these evil people.  What will it take to be safe?

I can hardly believe this is a debut novel as it is one of the best standalone fantasy novels I've read in a long time.  Gareth Brown is a Scottish author and I really hope he is working on another book.  Cassie grows from a young woman who is pretty aimless to a strong character willing to do whatever it takes to protect those around her and keep her book.  The other characters are imaginably drawn and I wonder if a romance could happen between Cassie and Drummond.  I can highly recommend this book to fantasy readers.  

Saturday, April 25, 2026

My Phantoms by Gwendoline Riley

 

This is the story of Bridget and Helen Grant, daughter and mother.  Bridget's parents divorced when she was young and she and her sister saw her father less and less often so they were mainly raised by Helen.  Helen is narcissistic, finding ways to make every situation about her.  The wants and needs of the girls are far down on her scale and she only wants their adoration.

As adults, both the girls have moved away and have little to do with their mother.  Bridget, who lives in London with her partner, sees Helen about once a year.  Helen does what she can to make friends.  She goes to anything free; galley openings, lectures, club gatherings.  As social as she is, she has few if only friends, others sensing the vast cavern within Helen that she expects others to fill.

As Helen gets older, she wants more from her girls and they reluctantly do what they can as Helen's health falters and then crashes.  Yet even as they face losing their mother forever, the women know that they must protect their own core and the lives they have built without her.

Gwendoline Riley is an English author whose books have won acclaim.  They tend to be short and to the point, outlining lives in an unsparing fashion.  This novel in particular may be helpful to those struggling to separate from overpowering parents when they are adults.  Bridget manages to move away and build a satisfactory life without her mother but her interactions with her are sharp and some readers will be uncomfortable with them.  This book is recommended for literary and women's fiction readers.   

Friday, April 24, 2026

When We Were Real by Daryl Gregory

 


No one was the same after the Great Reveal.  That's when the Creators told everyone that they were just a simulation, a computer program that could be crashed or deleted whenever they chose.  Suddenly, marriages fell apart.  People quit jobs.  Suicide rates increased at first but have settled out as time went by.  It's kind of hard to just go along with your life when you find out something like that.

Dulin is worried about his friend, JP.  JP had a brain tumor and went through the surgery and radiation and chemo.  He got a clean bill of health but now it's back and JP isn't doing another round of treatment.  Dulin sees that JP is depressed and thinks what could cheer him up.  Maybe a cross-country bus trip to see some of the computer created miracles?

JP agrees and Dulin signs them up.  They have a busload of other folks riding.  There are four older folks who move and talk to each other and consider themselves a group.  There is the bus driver who's seen it all and the tour guide who just started working and doesn't know much about what she is doing.  There's an older woman in a wheelchair who spends her time complaining and her daughter, a middle-aged nurse.  There's a very pregnant influencer who thinks she can spin the birth of her baby into more clicks and likes.  There's the skeptic who is determined to show that the Great Reveal was false and his son who is college aged. There is a woman on the run, a scientist who is working against the government and who is being hunted by both government agents and a right-wing group stirred up on the Internet against her.   Finally there are the nuns; an older one who is having doubts and writing a book about them and a young one sent by those higher up to keep an eye on the older one.  Finally, there is a rabbi who is the older nun's friend.  

Together they ride the bus, view the sights which are manipulations of the world as they know it, such as a tunnel where they can spend five minutes or weeks but it will seem like the same time on the other side, or the site where things put in a vortex disappear.  They make friends and try to make sense of lives turned upside down.  Where will this tour end up?

Daryl Gregory is an author who focuses on science fiction and who writes with humor and a genuine liking of his characters.  His work has garnered awards such as the World Fantasy Award, the Shirley Jackson Award and notice by various publications.  He has also been nominated for the Nebula award.  His comic take on the situations he writes about is one of the main reasons Gregory is a must-read for me.  His books can never be called boring as he pulls the reader along on his newest adventure and his characters are everyday folks who encounter extraordinary events.  This book is recommended for science fiction and fantasy readers.  

Thursday, April 23, 2026

The In-Between Bookstore by Edward Underhill

 

Darby hasn't been home to Oak Falls for a decade.  Not since that disastrous senior year in high school when suddenly his best friend, Matt, iced him out and found a new best friend.  Not since he realized why he felt so different from everyone else and found a way to transition from a woman to a man.  Not since he found a new life and a family of friends in New York

But when Darby loses his job, realizes that he can't make his rent and his mother lets him know that she is selling the house he grew up in for a condo, he decides to go back and help her pack up.  Who knows?  Maybe the next chapter of his life is in small town America.

One of the few places Darby has fond memories of is the bookstore where he worked throughout high school.  When he gets into town he stops by there even though he knows it is closed by now.  When he looks through the window, he is surprised to see that it looks the same, exactly the same.  He is shocked when he sees the salesperson who is closing up.  It is his teenage self doing the same routine he is familiar with.  As he turns away, he runs into Matt, an encounter he is definitely not ready for.  But Matt seems friendly if surprised.

As the days go by, Darby haunts the bookstore.  If he is alone, it's the bookstore of his high school days and he strikes up an acquaintance with his old self, trying to steer her towards realization of why she feels different and what to do about it.  If he is with his mother or anyone else, it's a modern bookstore, much fancier and modern.  There seems to be a breakthrough with Matt as well and Darby wonders if he stays if Matt will be a part of his new life.  

Edward Underhill grew up in a similar small town.  He started writing young adult novels and this book is his first in the adult market.  It is a great book about finding your place and how everyone feels like an outsider sometimes.  It is also a book that is accepting of all lifestyles and one that someone thinking about transitioning would appreciate.  The physical side of things is handled nicely, steamy without being too much.  This book is recommended for readers of fantasy and those wondering about their next stage in life.  


Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Trouble In The Brasses by Alisa Craig

 


Detective Inspector Madoc Rhys of the Canadian Mounties is visiting his parents.  His father is the conductor of an orchestra and the rest of his family is musical as well with the exception of Madoc.  While watching one of his father's performances, Madoc notices that one of the players in the brass section seems to be having issues.  The man finishes the performance then collapses and dies.

It appears to be a health issue and the orchestra needs to leave for their next performance in another town so they leave and board a plane.  However, it definitely isn't their night and the plane develops engine problems and has to make an emergency landing in remote country near a deserted resort.  The orchestra is able to stay in the resort and there is some food left in the hotel kitchen but there is no phone or radio to summon help.  Soon more deaths occur and it is clear that someone is targeting orchestra members.  Can Madoc solve the case before more tragedy occurs?

Alisa Craig is a pen name for the well known mystery author, Charlotte MacLeod.  She was born in Canada but spent most of her life in New England.  She wrote more than forty novels under both her birth name and as Alisa Craig, most of which were in four different series.  This book was published in 1989 and does show its age somewhat, specifically in gender roles.  Still, the mystery has twists and turns and is successfully solved.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.

Monday, April 20, 2026

The Impossible Fortune by Richard Osman

 


The Thursday Murder Club is worried about Elizabeth.  She is still grieving the loss of her husband and they aren't sure what to do for her.  Joyce is ecstatic as her daughter is getting married to Paul.  Ron and Ibrahim are going about their lives.  They all attend the wedding including Elizabeth.

When things get too much for her, she goes outside for some air.  There she is approached by the groom's best friend, who tells her that someone is trying to kill him and that he heard she might be able to help him.  The man, Nick, tells Elizabeth that he and his friend, a woman he and Paul both knew from their university days, had been in business together for years.  They have something that is very valuable and only they can retrieve it.  When the woman is killed and Nick goes missing, the Thursday Murder Club goes into action.

But of course, there's always more to the story.  Ron is involved in family matters and worried that he may be getting too old to be the protector that is so much a part of his identity.   Ibrahim is treating a non-reformed criminal and just when he thinks he's making progress with her, she brings a naive young girl into her criminal world.  Can all these issues be solved?

This is the fifth Thursday Murder Club mystery and it is just as much a joy as the others were.  The supporting cast of Donna and Chris from the police, Bogdan the handyman who can do anything, and Ron's family are there.  The way these individuals all work together and put each other first is an amazing testament to the human spirit and it's all funny on top of that!  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Black Woods, Blue Sky by Eowyn Ivey

 

Birdie isn't living the life she envisioned for herself as a child.  She's stuck in a cabin next to the diner where she works and caring for her daughter, Emaleen.  She hadn't planned on being a single parent but loves her daughter more than anything.  But she wants to be free; free to wander, free to do whatever she wants whenever it strikes her fancy.

She sees another life when Arthur starts to come to the diner.  He is about her age but rarely comes to town, preferring to live miles away in his family's summer cabin deep in the forest.  He seldom speaks and when he does, it's like speaking is a task for him.  There are scars on his face and head and rumors about how he got them.  But Birdie sees more in Arthur and they strike up a relationship.  When he suggests that she and Emaleen move in with him, Birdie is ready to go, even when her boss and Arthur's father both recommend against it.

Because Arthur has a secret.  His father found him deep in the woods as a toddler, unable to speak English and apparently raised by a mother bear sow and her cub.  His father takes him home and he and his wife spend the next years trying to help Arthur settle into human society.  Only they know his secret but now Emaleen knows it as well as she watches Arthur near the forest where they now live.

Cut forward fifteen years.  Emaleen is now grown and has returned to Alaska to try to remember her early life which just seems like a dream to her now.  Will she learn the truth finally?

Eowyn Ivey was born and raised in Alaska and still lives there with her family.  In this book, there is a mythic quality about the writing.  What is the truth about Arthur?  Is he really different or does he have mental issues that can endanger Birdie and Emaleen?  The author leaves the issue open so that the reader can make up their own minds what really happened in the forests of Alaska in Emaleen's childhood.  I'm still thinking about it and can't decide what the author believes herself.  I find myself pondering questions about the book days after I finished it.  Emaleen is a real heroine and the reader will cheer for her.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Saturday, April 18, 2026

The Bones Beneath by Mark Billingham

 

DI Tom Thorne can't believe what those above him want him to do now.  Years ago, he put away a psychotic killer named Stuart Nicklin.  Now Nicklin has agreed to tell the authorities where he buried one of his first victims and the boy's family wants nothing more than to have him home to give a decent burial.  The catch?  Nicklin will only tell if Thorne is the policeman to accompany him and if his friend from the prison goes also.

The murder happened when the victim and Nicklin were teenagers.  They were both sent to an experimental prison that gave the boys much more freedom than most youth prisons and that was on a small island.  The water surrounding the island were the only bars.  But Nicklin escaped one night, killing the victim as he left. 

Thorne takes two of his team, the prison sends a couple of guards and there is a forensic team  The island is remote and can only be accessed by boat and not even that on every day if the sea is rough.  The group heads out and looks where Nicklin says he thinks is the spot..  Soon they find the victim and another one as well.  But when they are ready to leave, the weather has changed and a storm is coming.  They will have to stay on the island until things settle down.  What could possibly go wrong?

This is the twelfth Tom Thorne book in the series and one of the best so far.  The tension steadily increases as the book progresses.  The reader knows something will happen but what is it?  Thorne is still with his new girlfriend and it's nice to see this relationship and especially Thorne's relationship with her young son.  Readers will definitely get their money's worth from this episode.  I've started reading these more and more slowly as I dread when the series is over.  This book is recommended for mystery readers.  

Friday, April 17, 2026

Venetian Vespers by John Banville

 


Evelyn Dolman is a journalist but not a top-flight one.  His talent has taken him only to a job on a middling newspaper  When he meets Laura Rensselaer, whose father is one of the richest men on Earth and she seems amenable to his romantic pursuit, he is ecstatic.  The two marry and Evelyn expects that he and Laura are set for life.  But Laura and her father fall out shortly before his death and when his will is read, he has left the majority of his estate to Laura's sister.

Mr. Rensselaer had paid for the couple's honeymoon, so they go to Venice.  Laura has acted strangely since the wedding, refusing marital relations and acting like she is distracted and is not sure what Evelyn is doing accompanying her.  Fed up, Evelyn goes for a walk alone the first night they are in Venice.  He stops at a restaurant and runs into a man who claims that he remembers Evelyn from a shared boarding school experience.  Evelyn doesn't remember him but the man is younger and schoolboys don't hang out with younger ones although the younger ones may idolize the older boys.  Evelyn is about to brush off Freddie FritHerbert when he insists that Evelyn come and meet his sister.  

Cesca FitzHerbert is gorgeous, a woman who knocks the newlywed Dolman off his feet.  He believes he has fallen in love at first sight.  All he can think about is how can he find a way to see Cesca again?  He returns to his rented villa and has a fight with Laura.  When he wakes up the next morning, Laura has disappeared with no note left behind.  

John Banville, an Irish author, is one of my must-read authors.  This book was a joy to read.  The reader feels like they aren't sure what exactly is going on.  Cesca wraps Evelyn around her little finger and he is willing to do anything for her to be near her.  The atmosphere is haunting and it feels like everything should be shrouded in fog.  It is unclear what is happening for most of the book and then there is a stupendous climax where everything is explained and the reader is left saying, 'Of course!'  This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction and I won't be surprised if this novel is on the next Booker longlist.  

Thursday, April 16, 2026

The Tumbling Girl by Bridget Walsh

 

The time is Victorian London.  The Variety Palace Music Hall is one place people can go for entertainment, trapeze artists, animal acts, singers, comics, acrobats and mediums.  Minnie Ward used to be a mimic on the stage but got tired of it and now helps run the Hall  She is shocked when her best friend goes missing and is found dead.  It's ruled a suicide but Minnie doesn't believe it nor does her friend's mother.

Minnie and the mother decide to hire a detective since the police consider the death a closed case.  Albert Easterbrook comes from money.  He was a policeman himself and a boxer but he left both professions to go private.  He starts to investigate and soon agrees that the girl's death was no suicide but murder.  Minnie insists on helping and soon the two are deep in the midst of a scandalous club whose members regard women as disposable.

This is Bridget's debut novel.  She was an English teacher for twenty-three years and has a degree in Victorian domestic murder so the setting and actions are quite realistic.  There is romantic tension between Minnie and Albert, as they both realize that a romance between two people from differing social classes is fraught with difficulties.  I enjoyed this mystery and will be looking for others by the author.  This book is recommended for mystery and historical fiction readers. 


Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Rednecks by Taylor Brown

 

This is the story of the battle to unionize the coal industry of West Virginia. Miners were little better than indentured servants.  They lived in company houses from which they could be thrown out of at a minute's notice.  They were paid in company script which could only be spent in the company store with outrageous prices.  The miners seldom saw sunlight, entering the mines before sunrise and only emerging after sunset.  The mines were dangerous places with few safety devices and if a man was injured, he was done working.

A few men were willing to do whatever it took to make things better  They talked to the others and the miners decided to go out on strike.  The company responded by kicking them out of their houses to live outside with their families in tents in the freezing West Virginia winter.  Scabs were hired to break the strike and the union leaders had to go into hiding when several of them were beaten to within a beat of their lives.  Hard men who didn't care about the law were brought in to break the miners' will, no matter how far they had to go. 

The local law enforcement was on the miners' side.  Sidney Hatfield, from the Hatfield and McCoy family feuds, was the local sheriff.  When the company's men came to town with guns and the desire to use them, a fight broke out, leaving company men dead as well as some of the townspeople.  This brought things to a head.  Soon hundreds of miners from all over come to support the men of West Virginia.  It turns into a battle that ends with the largest battle ever fought on American soil outside of the Civil War.  

Taylor Brown was born in the South and his novels have focused on those who settled the land and built the country.  His work has been awarded various prizes and this work was a revelation to me.  I vaguely knew that there had been violence while unionizing but had no idea of the magnitude of the fight.  Historical figures were featured such as Sidney Hatfield and Mother Jones, a female union organizer who traveled the nation fighting for rights for working men until she was in her nineties.  Even those characters who were fictional were based on real men such as the author's grandfather who immigrated from the Middle East and was a doctor in the area and a composite figure who was legendary in the battle.  

The book also gave a reason for the term redneck.  Growing up, we always thought that the term came from farmers in the field who wore hats but their necks were unprotected and got red from the constant sun.  But these brave men also used the term, wearing red bandanas around their necks to distinguish themselves in the fight from those determined to break them.  This book is recommended for historical fiction readers  


Monday, April 13, 2026

Behindlings by Nicola Barker

 


Wesley has a following, although most people aren't sure why.  There are groups of people that attempt to locate where he is at all times and follow him.  They are known as Behindlings for their locations walking behind him.  Wesley is either loved or hated with a passion.  He is considered evil by some, a savior by others.  What does Wesley think?  Now that is something no one knows.

This week Wesley is in Canvey, a small island town.  The Behindlings discover he is there due to a contest that he is running that hints at the location.  Some of the more prominent characters in the group that follows Wesley are Shoes, an aging hippie, Doc who pretty much leads the way, Patty who is a young boy who should never have gotten mixed up in this quest and Josephine who is a nurse and acts as a go-between.

Then there are the town inhabitants, many of whom know Wesley.  There is Katherine, a woman who is known for her promiscuity.  Dewi is a huge man who lives across from Katherine and loves her even as she sleeps with other men.  Ted is a real estate man, a close friend of Katherine's and someone who despises Wesley.  Arthur is a sponsor of the contest Wesley is running and falls under Katherine's sway.

Nicola Barker was born in England but raised in South Africa.  Her novels are often about eccentric or offbeat characters and it is sometimes difficult to understand the points her novels are making.  Behindlings falls in this category, full of strange characters and leaving the reader with multiple questions.  Is Wesley evil or good?  What's the truth about Katherine and is her character maligned?  What will the Behindlings do if they manage to catch up with Wesley?  I feel like I will need to reread this novel in order to settle my mind about what is happening and which characters I like.  This novel is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Wolf Hour by Jo Nesbo

 

A new serial killer is working the streets in Minneapolis, Minnesota.  To all accounts, it seems to be a man called Tomas Gomez, who is an immigrant and who used to be an assassin for a local gang.  Now he seems to be working off a list and killing all those who were involved in a murder of a family on the streets of the city.

Bob Oz is a city cop but he's not been the same reliable detective for the past year.  These days, after a tragedy of his own, he comes to work when he comes, drunk.  His squad has been carrying him for almost a year but the higher ups are getting tired of him and he's been given warnings that its shape up or ship out.  Maybe catching Gomez will be his golden ticket back into the force's good graces.  

This is a new departure for Jo Nesbo.  His most famous work is his Harry Hole series with a detective set in Norway.  But his sympathy for those who life has beaten down is evident in this mystery as well.  I could read more books about Bob Oz, and I love that Nesbo is branching out as I always read everything he writes.  He is one of my favorite mystery authors and this one is no different.  This novel is recommended for mystery readers.  

Saturday, April 11, 2026

The Net Beneath Us by Carol Dunbar

 

Silas and Eva are living deep in the country, off the grid as much as they can.  Silas works as a logger, using the techniques used by the settlers who lived there before, with horses and sleds.  Eva grew up with money and no one would have predicted that she would end up with Silas.  She was in art school when they met and everyone expected an art career for her.  Instead, she married Silas and moved with him to his family land.  Now, they have a small daughter and a toddler son.

Things are going well and everyone is happy when it happens.  An accident with a rotten tree brings it down prematurely and Silas is trapped underneath it.  His uncle, who works with him, barely escapes.  Silas is taken to the hospital where he is in a coma, brain-dead.  Eva makes the hard decision to let him go but takes him home to die with the family.  Now she must figure out how to do everything he did and keep things going for the children.  Should she stay in this hard-scrabble life to honor Silas?  Or should she take the children and move away for an easier life?

This is Carol Dunbar's debut novel.  Eva's life echoes Dunbar's, although she was more of an actor and soprano than an artist.  But she also gave up her city life to live off the grid with her husband and children.  The reader will be crushed as Eva was by the accident and will question what they would do in such a circumstance.  It could be a depressing book but I felt the hope in it as Eva finally grows up without someone to watch over her and to start to make logical decisions for her family going forward.  I listened to this book and the narrator did such an impressive job.  This book is recommended for women's and literary fiction readers.  

Friday, April 10, 2026

Days At The Morisaki Bookshop by Satoshi Yagisawa

 


At twenty-five, Takako finds herself at loose ends after her boyfriend announces that instead of them getting married, he is marrying another woman.  Since they work together, she ends up losing her job as it is too painful to go in and see the couple together day after day.  She spends her days holed up in her apartment, spending entire days in bed.  Then her uncle calls.

Satoru runs a bookshop, one that has been in their family for several generations.  It is located on the street where there are more bookshops than in anywhere else in Japan and he suggests that Takako come and stay with him and work in the store.  Satoru has had his own heartbreak when his wife, Momoko, left him out of the blue five years ago.  Takako reluctantly agrees.

Slowly she gets her feet back under her as she works and starts to know Satoru's customers.  She finds a coffee house where she spends time reading and chatting.  When Momoko shows back up, she befriends her to help her uncle figure out why she left, why she is back, and if she plans to stay.

Satoshi Yagisawa is a Japanese author and this is his debut novel.  It has been popular and Yagisawa wrote a sequel to this one.  As in many Japanese novels, not much occurs but readers will get a real sense of the Japanese culture and the ways it differs from the more open friendships and casual ways other cultures handle friendships and acquaintances.  At the end of the novel, there is a hint that Takako has found a new relationship that could be very important in her life.  This book is recommended for multicultural readers.  

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Solar by Ian McEwan

 

Dr. Michael Beard won a Nobel Prize when he was a young man.  These days, as a middle-aged one, he has skated on his reputation for years.  Headlining a conference here, giving a lecture there, sitting on corporate boards and currently, heading up a company interested in alternative energy.  He is on his fifth marriage and due to his constant cheating, is about to get his fifth divorce.

He knows it's about time to reinvent himself and when a young research scientist at the company gives Beard his research notes shortly before he dies, Beard sees the way.  He appropriates the young man's work as his own and creates a new kind of solar energy device.  It doesn't hurt that he is able to frame his wife's lover as the young man's murderer and get him out of the way as well.

Although Beard is a despicable man and most people don't like him, somehow he still manages to get good women interested in him.  He currently has two on the go.  One has been with him for years and he has a daughter with her.  The other is a woman he met in Texas where the new solar device is about to be tested and wants to be the sixth Mrs. Beard.  Will he ever get his comeuppance?

Ian McEwan is a British writer whose novels have been nominated six times for the Booker Prize and his novel Amsterdam won.  Another novel, Atonement, was adapted into a movie.  He has also won various other literary awards.  In this novel, he has created a villain who readers will long remember while also sending up the environmental crisis field of study a bit.  His works are quite readable and are memorable after reading.  This one wasn't his best but I enjoyed reading it quite a lot.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Monday, April 6, 2026

The Eleventh Hour by Salman Rushdie

 

In this anthology, Salman Rushdie has given his readers five stories about the end of life.  In the first, 'In The South', two men live next to each other.  One is rich with a large family, the other is poor with no one.  They share a last name but are not related and have known each other for years.  Yet which is happiest?

In 'The Musician Of Kahani' a girl is born who is a musical prodigy, playing both the piano and sitar.  She makes a bad romantic choice, falling in love with an extremely wealthy athlete who lives for fun and entertainment.  As the marriage progresses, she becomes pregnant and the differing ways they see the pregnancy leads to a life-shattering event.

Another story, 'Late' tells what happens to a Cambridge don when he dies.  In 'Oklahoma' we read of a man who idolized a famous one.  As they were both immigrants, the older man took the younger under his wing for a while but then he disappeared one morning, his clothes left on the beach when he went for his morning swim.  The younger man learns the reality of the older one's life as he delves into it.

Salman Rushdie has long been my favorite author and these stories are just reminders of his genius.  Although all are focused on the later years of life, they portray old age and death as just another step in life and not something to be feared.  Readers will enjoy the stories and the message underneath.  I regard anything he writes at this point in his life to be a jewel to be appreciated and enjoyed.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Saturday, April 4, 2026

Blood Of The Mantis by Adrian Tchaikovsky

 


This is the third novel in the Shadows Of The Apt series by Tchaikovsky.  Most of the action in this series is centered around the shadow box that was stolen in the last novel.  Achaeos the Seer knows he must find the box and keep it safe but there are many others who also want it, including the Emperor of the Wasps.  He has been told that possession of it would be necessary for his magician to complete the ritual that would make him immortal and he is willing to dedicate any resources necessary to gain possession of it.  

Stenwold continues his project of gaining allies and uniting the Lowlands against the Wasps.  His group spends time with a new group of characters the Skater-kinden and Shay finds a new friend in a female Fly who is also a pilot and from whom Shay can learn more about flying.  The Skater-kinden are built much like the mantis kingdom and can skate on water on their long spindly legs.  The Mantis Tisamon and his daughter are there for protection but he is starting to have fantasies about a female mantis although his race is supposed to mate for life and his wife died long ago.  

This series has ten novels.  I'm getting drawn further and further into the steampunk world of men with insect-like traits.  There are battles, but also magic and spies and skullduggery.  Tchaikovsky is a master of conceiving a complex world and the reader is treated to a master of world building with lots of characters who interact in both loving and violent ways.  I've been listening to the series and the narrator, Ben Allen, does an amazing job of drawing in the reader and keeping attention focused on this world.  This book is recommended for fantasy readers.

Friday, April 3, 2026

House Of Day, House Of Night by Olga Tokarczuk

 

An unnamed woman and her partner, named only by R., move into a small Polish village far into the country and right on the border with Czechoslovakia.  They know no one and the book tells their story through the stories of those they meet and get to know.  One theme running through the entire book is that of a local saint, who was crucified by her own father for refusing to leave the nunnery and marry a man he wished to get in his debt.  Before he killed her, the woman was given a long golden beard by God in order to make her look like Jesus and thus save her from the marriage.

Much of what the couple learn about the villagers and their culture and history come from an old woman, Marta, who lives next door.  She treats their illnesses, brings them mushrooms and other plants to cook, and tells them stories.  The couple start to feel responsible for Marta's well-being.

The reader also learns the stories of other characters.  Paschalis is a monk who wishes he were a woman.  He is beautiful and ends up living in a nunnery where he writes the story of the local saint, who is named Kummernis.  There is the man who dies with one leg on the Polish side of the border and the other leg on the Czechoslovakian side and whose body border sentries move back and forth, hoping to get their own relaxation and put the work of reporting a death on the guards from the other country.  There is an alcoholic who drinks himself to death, after a lifetime of believing that he shares his body with that of a bird.

Olga Tokarczuk is a Polish author who has won both the Nobel Prize in Literature and the International Booker.  Her books tend to focus on lives in the country and how the isolation molds their characters.  Some are mysteries, some are biographical and some are shaped by classic books that were written in the past.  Her writing is dense but well-researched and the reader is drawn along by the desire to learn more about the individuals she is portraying.  I liked this book more than the other two I've read by her and was fascinated by the story of Saint Kummernis.  This book is recommended for literary and multicultural readers.

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Before I Forget by Tory Henwood Hoen

 

Cricket Campbell hasn't been to the lake and the cabin for over a decade.  She left after a tragedy rocked her world and set her on a path of dead end jobs and stalled relationships.  But now she is needed back on the lake.  Her father has Alzheimer's and needs someone to look after him.  Her sister, Carol, has been doing that but now she is headed to Europe for her job and someone else needs to step up.  

Cricket goes home, she thinks to help Carol find a new home for her dad but once she is there, she decides that she can stay and look after him at least for a while.  They both know her dad wants to stay on the lake in the cabin where he has lived for years.  Carol is hesitant but finally agrees and gives Cricket the strict schedule she has developed for their dad.

But once Carol is gone, Cricket decides that maybe the schedule isn't the best way to go.  Perhaps what her father needs is a life built around what he wants to do at any moment.  She settles in, spending hours with him just sitting on the porch or watching the lake.  Her dad has a friend who helps sometimes, a friend who is a neighbor.  Slowly she starts to realize that her dad is still thinking and sensing, it's just that he is reporting back from a different part of his brain.  Soon he is known as a wise man, a seer who can help others make sense of their lives.  But Cricket knows this is temporary.  What will happen in the future?

Tory Henwood Hoen is a Canadian-American author.  She writes lovingly about the relationship between Cricket and her father and the way that Cricket's ability to go with the flow frees her father not only to stay in his home but to thrive and find meaning in what Alzheimer's has left him.  In the process Cricket also has the time to resolve the tragedy that set her on her restless travels and find the stability to go forward with her life.  This novel is recommended for literary and women's fiction readers.