Sunday, May 3, 2026

The Executor by Jesse Kellerman

 

Joseph Geist is at loose ends when he sees the ad.  He has been kicked out of his graduate program after years of not producing his dissertation.  His girlfriend has broken up with him and since they live in her apartment, he no longer has anywhere to stay.  The ad asks for someone who can provide discussion on various topics on a regular basis.  Desperate, he answers the ad and meets Alma Spielman.  Alma is an elderly woman who is wealthy.  She is lonely and wants someone intelligent to talk to a couple of days a week.  After meeting Joseph, she hires him.  After a few afternoons of conversation, Joseph ends up moving in and starts taking care of Alma, at least as much as she will allow.

But there's always a fly in the ointment.  With Alma, it's her nephew, Eric.  Eric was raised by Alma and he is a drifter, a con man, someone who lives waiting for his rich relative to die and leave him the money he thinks he is due.  Eric strikes up a relationship with Joseph and soon is suggesting that if they killed Alma, he would get his money and would give Joseph the house.  Joseph is appalled and tries to warn Alma but she brushes him off.  Where will it end?

Jesse Kellerman started as a playwright.  He is the son of Jonathan and Faye Kellerman and has written several books with his father.  In this book, the tension mounts slowly.  Joseph knows what is about to happen but can't find anyone to take him seriously.  He starts to unwind himself as he tries to save Alma yet lured by the thought of riches for himself.  This book is recommended for suspense readers. 

Saturday, May 2, 2026

The Suitcase Clone by Robin Sloan

 

James Bascule has always lived in Northern California except for one trip to Europe where he fell in love and got his heart broken.  Now he is adrift.  It's time for college but he's not sure that's what he wants to do.  He knows the military isn't for him but what is?

Then James meets a man who would love to hire him.  The man is starting a vineyard and wants to hire a suitcase clone.  That's someone who goes to a famous vineyard, snips a vine from there and brings it home to be propagated elsewhere.  James doesn't have any other plans so he says yes.

But can he pull it off?  There is a partner, a woman who plays techno music and he can go into the vineyard as her technician.  He has the suitcase and a place to hide the cutting.  Now the only thing that's left is to find a way to steal a cutting and get home without being detected.  Is he up to the task?

Robin Sloan is an American author and his interests lie in the fields of technology and AI.  He also is part owner of a company that makes olive oil and lives in Northern California.  This novella fits between two of his other books, Mr. Penumbra's Twenty-Four Hour Bookstore and Sourdough.  James is a loveable villain who the reader is sure will eventually be caught but probably get by with not much punishment.  It is comedic without being overwhelming, just enough to make reading about James enjoyable.  This book is recommended for literary fiction readers.  

Friday, May 1, 2026

One Hundred Years Of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez

 


This is the story of the Buendia family who settled and founded the mythical city of Macondo.  It follows the lives and loves of the men and women who made up the family.  Some of the men were inventors and magicians, some were warriors, all had lovers and sometimes their love was sustaining and sometimes their downfall.  The exact location of Macondo is never specified so it becomes the archtype for South American culture.  It is a blend of love, lore, politics, mystery, decades-long feuds and resentments and history that continually circles around again.  The novel follows the birth, life and eventual death of the city and those within it.

Although Marquez did not invent magic realism, this novel soon became known as the masterpiece of this technique.  This technique is known for weaving magical or supernatural elements into a story as if they were just commonplace occurrences.  In this novel, some examples include the entire town having insomnia for an extended time, a four-year rain of yellow flowers, the extreme old age of the founding characters, a female character ascending to heaven while folding clothes, the wizard's workshop and many other things.  

Gabriel Garcia Marquez was a Colombian author whose work brought Latin American literature to the world's notice.  It won awards as the best foreign book in both Italy and France and was a founding brick in the body of work that brought Marquez the Nobel Prize in Literature.  The book was written in 1967 and released in the United States in 1970.  I read it first in 1971, a college freshman.  It was probably the most significant book I read during those years of college and my first experience of magic realism as a literary technique.  As I downsize my library, I read it again and was delighted to find that I loved it as much now as all those years ago. Some readers may find the similar names confusing as new babies are named after ancestors and it is easy to confuse characters at times.    This book is recommended for literary fiction and multicultural readers.