Things were kind of slow for Alex Delaware when he gets the call from Milo Sturgis. A child psychologist, Delaware gave up his formal practice to consult with the Los Angeles Police when they had a case that needed his special skills. According to Milo, this was such a case.
A new home owner had arranged to have a tree removed before moving in. When the excavation was completed, a small metal box was found, and inside the box was the skeleton of a baby. Probably a few months old. There was no way of determining who the baby was, as the probable age showed that it had been buried around fifty years ago.
Things went from bad to worse. Within days, a female body was found in a nearby park, along with the bones of another baby. Horribly, this baby's bones had been cleaned and coated with wax, making them shiny. Again, no clue who the bodies might belong to.
As Alex and Milo try to unwind the tangled threads of these two incidences, they start to find other things. Things like several more bodies. Things like a connection to the power couple of Hollywood. Things that could ruin the reputation and end the career of those running the investigation. Can they solve the case before it hurts them?
This is the twenty-eighth Alex Delaware novel Kellerman has written. Fans of the series will settle back in quickly to the lives of Alex and Milo and the interplay between them. The fascination of this series is the way that traditional crime investigation and forensic psychology blend together to solve cases that might never be resolved otherwise. This book is recommended for mystery readers. Although it is one of a series, the reader could easily start with this one also. Another excellent outing for Jonathan Kellerman.
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Sunday, May 26, 2013
The Last Newspaper Man by Mark Di Lonno
Lindbergh was America's first reality star and he was idolized by the common man. The media made him out to be a real hero, and he was that, but he was also a man, subject to human frailties like the rest of the population. He could be cold and distant, and that side of him was never reported. It was unimaginable that the son of such a man could be taken, or that the story wouldn't turn out well, as heroes don't deserve pain and suffering. Haimes was the first reporter on the scene that night and managed to worm himself into the investigation.
As the days bled into weeks, he was changed. He admired Anne Lindbergh and the quiet dignity with which she faced this tragedy. He fell in love himself with a local woman. Still, he was a newspaperman, and his job was to get the story. When he gets a huge scoop, he must decide if he will print it, or withhold it to spare Mrs. Lindbergh. His decision has far-reaching consequences that changed his life forever.
Mark Di Lonno has written a fascinating story about the news events of the 1930's, tabloid reporting, and the men who made up the reporting profession. A journalist himself, he is spot-on in reporting the conflicts and moral decisions that must be made between the need to inform the public and the need to help the victims retain some humanity. He explores the dying of print journalism and discusses the rise of alternate media such as radio, television and the Internet. More than any of this, however, Di Lonno takes the reader inside the life of a real newspaperman and shows his conflicts and pride. This book is recommended for readers interested in great writing and a wonderful story.
Saturday, May 25, 2013
The Interestings by Meg Wolitzer
At a summer camp for the arts in 1974, a group of six teenagers come together as friends. They are fifteen and sixteen and somehow, of all the campers that year, they gel as a group. They call themselves The Interestings. The core of the group are Ash and Goodman Wolf, a brother and sister duo from a wealthy family. Ash is beautiful in a fragile way, interested in becoming an actress. Goodman is one of those golden teenage boys, so vital that everyone is fascinated with him. Ethan Figman is a talented illustrator, homely but witty and an obvious talent. Jules Jacobson is the group comedic relief, not sure why she has been chosen but desperate to remain part of the group. Cathy Kiplinger is a dancer, but with such a womanly body that she is destined for lots of love affairs. Jonah Bay is a gorgeous boy, a talented musician who is the son of a famous folk singer.
The book follows this group of friends over the next forty years, as they grow up, find themselves in work and love, marry, divorce, and have children. Some find success, some are lost along the way. Some are sick and others take care of them. There are alliances and secrets. The group is sometimes close and sometimes distant, but they all look back fondly on the summer they spent together as they learned who they were and how their lives would be.
Meg Woltizer has written a compelling narrative of how lives are lived, how our friends can define us and make us more than we expected to be. The personalities of the six main characters are finely drawn, each a separate person yet tightly entwined in the group over the years. The novel explores the themes of friendship and loyalty, of learning what one really wants and how one should relate with spouses, children and friends. This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction and for readers struggling to make sense of their own lives.
Sunday, May 19, 2013
The Roots Of Betrayal by James Forrester
William Harley, known as Clarenceux, is a worried man. It is 1564, and there are so many ways that a man can be accused of treason and lose his life. Clarenceux is a Herald of the Queen, someone who is charged with ascertaining the family history and lineage of various individuals. But he is also a Catholic, and that is a dangerous place to be in the court of Elizabeth.
There is a document Clarenceux has been charged with keeping for safety. It could be used to declare Elizabeth illegitimate, and is called The Catholic Treasure. It is a very dangerous document, as the use of it could tear England apart once more into another bloody religious war. Imagine Clarenceux's shock when he checks the hiding place and finds it missing.
The Roots Of Betrayal covers the quest to locate the missing document. It involves those high in the government such as William Cecil, the Queen's chief advisor, and his man in charge of investigating conspiracies, Francis Walsingham. On the other side are a Catholic group who call themselves Knights of The Round Table, who are determined to use the document to restore the English crown to a Catholic. They use Widow Machyn in their plots, aware that Clarenceux has feelings for her. Other players include corrupt men in the administration who will stop at nothing to keep their power, and a ship of pirates, headed by the most notorious of all, Raw Carew. Clarenceux must weave his way between all these factions to try to reclaim the treasure that only he can keep safe, preventing another round of bloody war.
James Forrester has written a fast-paced, exciting historical adventure. Forrester is the pen name of Dr. Ian Mortimer, Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and winner of the Alexander Prize for his work on social history. His scholarship concerns this time period, and the details of the story reveal his knowledge of everyday life in this era. Readers will thrill to the nail-biting suspense and admire the hero, Clarenceux, who is motivated by love of country and who uses his knowledge and logic to escape the various predicaments he finds himself in. This book is recommended for readers of historical fiction and for those readers interested in an intriguing suspense tale.
There is a document Clarenceux has been charged with keeping for safety. It could be used to declare Elizabeth illegitimate, and is called The Catholic Treasure. It is a very dangerous document, as the use of it could tear England apart once more into another bloody religious war. Imagine Clarenceux's shock when he checks the hiding place and finds it missing.
The Roots Of Betrayal covers the quest to locate the missing document. It involves those high in the government such as William Cecil, the Queen's chief advisor, and his man in charge of investigating conspiracies, Francis Walsingham. On the other side are a Catholic group who call themselves Knights of The Round Table, who are determined to use the document to restore the English crown to a Catholic. They use Widow Machyn in their plots, aware that Clarenceux has feelings for her. Other players include corrupt men in the administration who will stop at nothing to keep their power, and a ship of pirates, headed by the most notorious of all, Raw Carew. Clarenceux must weave his way between all these factions to try to reclaim the treasure that only he can keep safe, preventing another round of bloody war.
James Forrester has written a fast-paced, exciting historical adventure. Forrester is the pen name of Dr. Ian Mortimer, Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and winner of the Alexander Prize for his work on social history. His scholarship concerns this time period, and the details of the story reveal his knowledge of everyday life in this era. Readers will thrill to the nail-biting suspense and admire the hero, Clarenceux, who is motivated by love of country and who uses his knowledge and logic to escape the various predicaments he finds himself in. This book is recommended for readers of historical fiction and for those readers interested in an intriguing suspense tale.
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Dead Peasants by Larry D. Thompson
Jackson Bryant is a very successful plaintiff's lawyer. He made his fortune representing clients against big companies that had wronged them. Having all the money he'd ever need, Bryant decides to retire and chooses Fort Worth as his locale. His son is about to start playing football at TCU, and Bryant decides all he wants to do is watch J.D. run that ball.
But, after buying a mansion and having it decorated and a few weeks of playing golf and poker at the country club, Bryant is bored. There's nothing really interesting in his life except his new friendship with Colby Stripling, the realtor/designer who sold him his house. So Jack decides to offer his services pro bono to the folks in Fort Worth who can't afford a lawyer.
June Davis is one of those folks. She is a recent widow; her husband of fifty years having died while fishing near their home. She comes to Bryant when she gets a confusing letter in the mail. It contains a check for four hundred thousand; a check made out to the company where her husband had worked for years as a porter, never making more than twenty thousand a year. The letter says the original letter was damaged, and Mrs. Davis' name was the only one that could be made out. She is confused, as she never knew of any life insurance on her husband, or why if there was a policy, the company is the beneficiary.
As Bryant delves into this mystery, he finds that this was a common practice at one time. Companies would take out life insurance not only on the top earners whose loss would hurt the firm, but on regular employees such as housekeepers or secretaries. They would continue to pay the premiums on these policies, which the employees often knew nothing about, even after an employee left the firm. Eventually, when the ex-employee died, the firm collected on the policy. These type of policies were known as dead peasant policies.
The dealership where Mr. Davis had worked still used these policies, even though they were outlawed in Texas years ago. Even worse, people who worked there were now dying in accidents, or were they accidents? With a bad economy and double indemnity in the case of accidental death, these deaths were very profitable for the company.
Thompson is a former defense attorney in Texas himself. He has crafted a mystery that takes the reader behind the scenes of the legal profession and shows what strategies and maneuvers take place in a trial. The concept is novel, and the execution is satisfactory. This book is recommended for mystery readers.
Monday, May 13, 2013
Dark Tide by Elizabeth Haynes
Genevieve has it made, or at least that's how it appears. Young and attractive, she has managed to buy a 70-foot barge that she is living on and renovating; taking a year off from working. Living on a boat has long been a dream of hers and her father, and he taught her carpentry when she was younger so that she can make it a reality.
But how does a young woman manage to raise the kind of money that purchases this dream? In Genevieve's case, she had a good job selling software. It paid well, but was very high-stress and she knew she couldn't do it long-term. Always athletic and having taken dance, she turned a pole dancing class into a moonlighting second job. She is hired at the Barclay, one of London's exclusive male clubs and is soon a favorite and a top earner there. The money is great, and she is able to save enough between the two jobs to purchase her dream life.
But is it all she expected? On the night that she has a boat warming party and invites her old crew of friends to come and see the boat, a body is discovered in the river. It turns out to be her mentor and friend at the Barclay, Cassy. Why was she killed, and is it a warning to Genevieve that the life she rejected as being too dangerous is about to catch up with her new life?
Elizabeth Haynes has written an interesting second mystery novel. Her first, Into The Darkest Corner, was a major hit when it was released. Haynes is a police intelligence analyst, and her firsthand knowledge about police investigations is evident. This novel is quite different from her first, and it will be interesting to read her future novels to see how she develops her skills. This book is recommended for mystery readers.
But how does a young woman manage to raise the kind of money that purchases this dream? In Genevieve's case, she had a good job selling software. It paid well, but was very high-stress and she knew she couldn't do it long-term. Always athletic and having taken dance, she turned a pole dancing class into a moonlighting second job. She is hired at the Barclay, one of London's exclusive male clubs and is soon a favorite and a top earner there. The money is great, and she is able to save enough between the two jobs to purchase her dream life.
But is it all she expected? On the night that she has a boat warming party and invites her old crew of friends to come and see the boat, a body is discovered in the river. It turns out to be her mentor and friend at the Barclay, Cassy. Why was she killed, and is it a warning to Genevieve that the life she rejected as being too dangerous is about to catch up with her new life?
Elizabeth Haynes has written an interesting second mystery novel. Her first, Into The Darkest Corner, was a major hit when it was released. Haynes is a police intelligence analyst, and her firsthand knowledge about police investigations is evident. This novel is quite different from her first, and it will be interesting to read her future novels to see how she develops her skills. This book is recommended for mystery readers.
Saturday, May 11, 2013
True Believers by Kurt Andersen
As Karen Hollander enters her sixties, she contacts her
publisher about writing her autobiography. She is certain that the offer
will be taken; she is a successful attorney, spent time in government and
public service, was one of the best corporate lawyers, and now teaches at a
prestigious university. She was even on the shortlist to be nominated for
the Supreme Court. Karen has definitely led an interesting life, one that
the publisher nor her public image would ever support. She sees this book
as her confession about a time in her life when she did something so outrageous
that she has lived her life since expecting retribution.
Karen was a teenager in the sixties. Raised in a small
town outside Chicago, she spent a normal life with school, friends, liberal
parents. Her two best friends were Chuck Levy and Alex Mcallister.
They were brought together by a shared love of all things James Bond.
They read all the books, saw the movies, and even went on pseudo-missions they
made up. But the times were changing. The sixties brought a radical
change to the United States. Integration and civil rights were in the
news. The Vietnam War was raging, and the coverage it got led to massive
disillusionment with the government. It was the age of the hippie, and
the free sex, drugs and rock and roll that accompanied that lifestyle.
When Karen, Chuck and Alex all went East to college (Karen
to Radcliffe, the guys to Harvard), they became more and more
radicalized. Chuck’s roommate, Buzz, joined their group. As a
Vietnam vet, he had plenty of information to stir up their sympathies with the
antiwar protestors. There were protests against everything, big business,
big government, big society telling others how to live. As the group
moved further into the radical left, they decided on a plan to carry out an
action; an action that brought tragedy and that they would spend the rest of
their lives trying to make up for.
Kurt Andersen has written a compelling history of the
Sixties and the seismic changes that occurred in society. He does an
excellent job writing from Karen’s viewpoint, that of a liberal woman who has
achieved everything she set out to do in life, but who is tormented by a short
period in her life when the choices she made had consequences she had not
anticipated. This book is recommended for those who lived through the
Sixties and those interested in reading about such an influential era.
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Black Venus by James MacManus
They were an unlikely pair to even meet. Charles Baudelaire was a French society gentleman, from a family with wealth and some social standing. He was part of the Bohemian crowd of artists and authors who frequented the Paris nightclubs to indulge their appetites and argue about art into the night. Men like Dumas, Balzac and Manet were his friends and acquaintances. Jeanne Duval was a Haitian cabaret singer, the product of a liaison between a French plantation owner and one of his slaves. She had made her way to nineteenth-century Paris to make her way in the world, using her voice and beauty to make her living.
But meet they did and started a love affair that was the talk of the city. They loved and fought, lusted and cheated on each other, parted and reunited for years. Beaudelaire called her his 'Black Venus', the inspiration for his poetry. That poetry broke new ground, frank, sensual and above all scandalous. Their affair gained even more notoriety when he was arrested and tried on obscenity charges due to the content of the poems published. As the years went on, they fell into poverty and illness, but never were able to forget each other and the part each played in the others' lives.
James MacManus has written an arresting tale that brings nineteenth-century Paris to life. Everything was changing. There was political turmoil, and new ways of experiencing the world. Breakthroughs were happening in art, in music, in the written word, and Beaudelaire occupied a large part in this new milieu. His disdain for a society that rejected him and his poetry for its frank discussion of sexual pleasure while indulging in sexual alliances was clear, but he paid dearly for it. Jeanne was one of the new women who were determined to make their way, regardless of what they had to do to earn a living. Together they changed their world. This book is recommended for those readers who enjoy historical fiction as well as for those interested in this epic change in society and the rise of the individual over the strictures of society.
For more information, there is an interview with the author here
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Tuesday's Gone by Nicci French
When a social worker goes on a routine home visit to check on a client, she receives a massive shock. The client, Michelle Doyle, offers her tea and shows her to the sitting room where the social worker discovers the body of a man, obviously dead for a while. Michelle seems to think nothing is wrong.Put into a hospital, the police are baffled about Michelle. The man was murdered. Did Michelle do that, or was this body just another symptom of the obvious hoarding disorder Michelle's home gives evidence of? There is trash collected everywhere, carefully put into categories, including bird corpses. Was this just another body?
Detective Chief Inspector Karlsson calls on his expert, Dr. Frieda Klein, a psychotherapist who has worked with the police before. That case resulted in the recovery of a kidnapped child, and the uncovering of another kidnapping that had taken place over years. Klein agrees to work with the police.
They soon discover the body was of a charming con man, Robert Poole. He was involved in a series of scams with different people as his skill was discovering and exploiting people's weaknesses. His method changed with the situation. An elderly woman might be bilked of her savings, while a woman trapped in a loveless marriage would be wooed into an affair and then asked for money. The police have a long list of suspects and need Klein's help in determining the truth. Can they discover who murdered Robert Poole?
This is the second mystery in the Frieda Klein series, and readers of the first will eagerly read this one and clamor for more. Following Klein's unraveling of the secrets of the human mind is fascinating, and the steady suspense underlying the case mounts until the surprising resolution. This book is recommended highly for mystery fans.
Friday, May 3, 2013
Virgin Soul by Judy Juanita
Eighteen year old Geniece didn't know what she wanted, except that she wanted out. Out of Oakland, California, where she had known up with extended family when her parents weren't around. Out of being ignorant and not having a future. Out of being a virgin, and not being in the groove of the Sixties sexual revolution.
So, Geniece heads across the bridge to San Francisco where she starts pursuing her education. She does two years at a community college, then transfers to a four year college, just in time to be in at the beginning of the Black Pride movement. She makes friends with those in the movement, and the speeches she hears about black empowerment starts to radicalize her. Her friends and she begin to live as the movement wanted, black friends, black lovers, black literature, helping other black families to make it through life.
Geniece and her friends end up joining the Black Panther Party. They know the party leaders such as Bobby Seale, Stokely Carmichael, Huey P. Newton, and Bobby Ethridge. Geniece becomes the editor of the BPP newspaper, while continuing her education. She also becomes involved in tutoring and programs such as feeding breakfast to young children. As the movement becomes more radical, she must decide if this is still the place for her to make her dreams come true.
Judy Juanita has written a stirring novel that transports the reader back to the Sixties. San Francisco was the hub of much of the social turmoil that ended up changing the country; the Black Power movement, the hippie movement, and others. She effectively outlines the impetus that drove young people to join the movements and how this decision affected their lives. This book is recommended for readers who are interested in the time period or in black history.
So, Geniece heads across the bridge to San Francisco where she starts pursuing her education. She does two years at a community college, then transfers to a four year college, just in time to be in at the beginning of the Black Pride movement. She makes friends with those in the movement, and the speeches she hears about black empowerment starts to radicalize her. Her friends and she begin to live as the movement wanted, black friends, black lovers, black literature, helping other black families to make it through life.
Geniece and her friends end up joining the Black Panther Party. They know the party leaders such as Bobby Seale, Stokely Carmichael, Huey P. Newton, and Bobby Ethridge. Geniece becomes the editor of the BPP newspaper, while continuing her education. She also becomes involved in tutoring and programs such as feeding breakfast to young children. As the movement becomes more radical, she must decide if this is still the place for her to make her dreams come true.
Judy Juanita has written a stirring novel that transports the reader back to the Sixties. San Francisco was the hub of much of the social turmoil that ended up changing the country; the Black Power movement, the hippie movement, and others. She effectively outlines the impetus that drove young people to join the movements and how this decision affected their lives. This book is recommended for readers who are interested in the time period or in black history.
Thursday, May 2, 2013
A Natural History Of Dragons by Marie Brennan
A Victorian lady should follow very strict rules. She should concern herself with dress, hand sewing, flower arrangements, and music. She should arrange her life so that she can win a husband with means, and then spend her life running a household and the lives of her family.
But Isabella, Lady Trent, did not fit the mold. From a child, she thirsted for knowledge and was often found in her father's library reading his scientific books. She especially loved anything having to do with dragons. He indulged her curiosity and let her read as she would.
When it came time for her debut season, Isabella found herself one day at an exhibition of three dragons that had been captured. Rather than fainting and acting scared, she engaged a young man who was also visiting in a spirited conversation about dragons and their habits. The young man was Jacob, one of the catches of the season but his mother's despair, as he seemed to have no interest in marrying. Jacob was entranced with Isabella, though, and soon the pair were married.
When Jacob is invited to make up a party going forth to study dragons, he makes a surprising decision. He takes Isabella with him. Together with the other members of the party, they fight privation, dragon attacks, local superstitions, smugglers and danger to provide more scientific knowledge of these creatures that have captivated them both. The dragons are attacking the villagers and the company needs to determine what is happening.
Marie Brennan has written a charming fantasy in the form of Isabella's memoirs. Isabella is strong-willed, intelligent and absolutely irritating to try to control. The book is written so seamlessly that the belief that there are dragons and that they can be studied seems an everyday occurrence. This book is written for fantasy readers.
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
The Last Train To Zona Verde by Paul Theroux
If you are a fan of Paul Theroux's nonfiction travel books as I am, then you are probably familiar with the many great journeys he has taken, mostly by train, car, bus or foot. He likes to travel not with fanfare, but as a resident of the country would travel, so that he can experience what life is like for those who live where he is visiting.
Theroux started out as a Peace Corp volunteer as a young man, teaching school for six years in Africa, so he has an affinity for it. He has visited Africa many times over the years, but The Last Train To Zone Verde details what he expects will be his last journey to Africa, as he is now seventy. The words zona verde mean 'what is green' or as he puts it, everything that is not the city. This is what Theroux wants to see, the landscape and population the average traveler never sees.
He travels as he has in the past, riding old buses that are on the verge of breakdowns, spending hours at border crossings as border guards decide if they will approve his documents and let him through, and enduring the constant badgering of the indigent people he encounters everywhere. He is appalled at the poverty of the slums that surround all the cities. The population is deserting the country where they can at least grow and gather food for the dirty, crowded slums where there is little work. He is especially appalled that the general population is left to suffer while in many cases, such as in Angola, the government is making billions of dollars from natural resources such as oil, diamonds and other minerals. This enormous wealth tends to get siphoned into the pockets of a few politicians and business men at the top, who live in enormous walled compounds and drive expensive vehicles.
Theroux finds some things to enjoy. He has an acquaintance who runs a luxury safari where the guests ride on elephants; an experience that provides the money to reintroduce elephants into the wild. While he approves of the ultimate goal, he is not a fan of anything that restricts the freedom of the native animals. He finds good people wherever he goes, and finds hope in the schools where Africans are desperate for knowledge.
This book is recommended for readers who enjoy travel writing, and especially for those readers who have followed Theroux over the years on his many adventures. It provides a viewpoint of the state of Africa from someone who has experience with it, and has the clarity to identify the issues that create problems there.
Friday, April 26, 2013
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
A six year old girl loves her father, of course she does. Even when that father is a famous magician and bonds her to a contest that will take decades and whose purpose is to prove that she is the best magician alive. An orphan is grateful to the man who rescues him and more than willing to learn magic if that is what makes his rescuer happy. He is also bonded to the contest; these two children who will grow into adults whose life will be consumed by the contest.
Imagine a circus more magical than any ever seen. It shows up outside of towns unannounced. The tents are all done in black and white as are all the costumes. The circus is only open at night, but while it is open, those lucky enough to attend see sights that will stay with them forever.
Celia Bowen is the young girl, and she becomes the circus' main illusionist. Marco Alidair is the boy who is her adversary. He does not perform at the circus, but works behind the scenes keeping it organized and moving. Both individuals know that they are bound to the competition, and that the circus is the neutral proving ground. Each creates more and better acts and wonders as time goes by. As they meet over the years, they fall violently in love and then discover that they are, in fact, adversaries in the game and that one must utterly defeat the other. How will they reconcile the game with what they feel? Is emotion allowed in those who would perform magic?
Erin Morgenstern has written an original tale destined to captivate and enchant the reader. The details of the fabulous circus and the marvels contained within make the reader crave the experiences visitors have. The love between the two main characters introduces a conflict that is not readily resolved, and brings up the conflict between obligation and feelings. This book is recommended for readers ready for a wondrous tale that will leave them satisfied and sure that magic does indeed exist in this world.
Imagine a circus more magical than any ever seen. It shows up outside of towns unannounced. The tents are all done in black and white as are all the costumes. The circus is only open at night, but while it is open, those lucky enough to attend see sights that will stay with them forever.
Celia Bowen is the young girl, and she becomes the circus' main illusionist. Marco Alidair is the boy who is her adversary. He does not perform at the circus, but works behind the scenes keeping it organized and moving. Both individuals know that they are bound to the competition, and that the circus is the neutral proving ground. Each creates more and better acts and wonders as time goes by. As they meet over the years, they fall violently in love and then discover that they are, in fact, adversaries in the game and that one must utterly defeat the other. How will they reconcile the game with what they feel? Is emotion allowed in those who would perform magic?
Erin Morgenstern has written an original tale destined to captivate and enchant the reader. The details of the fabulous circus and the marvels contained within make the reader crave the experiences visitors have. The love between the two main characters introduces a conflict that is not readily resolved, and brings up the conflict between obligation and feelings. This book is recommended for readers ready for a wondrous tale that will leave them satisfied and sure that magic does indeed exist in this world.
Thursday, April 25, 2013
The Gods Of Gotham by Lyndsay Faye
The year is 1845, and New York City has finally decided to follow the lead of other capitol cities such as London and Paris and establish a standing police force. In New York, the men on this first police force are known as copper stars for the insignia they wear.
Since there is no trained cadre on which to draw, men end up as copper stars by patronage or by being burly and ready to fight. Timothy Wilde fits in this category. He has been a bartender, steadily saving his money so that he will be able to ask Mercy Underhill, a local preacher's daughter, to marry him. When a fire takes him money and leaves him scarred, he puts aside his dreams and follows his brother, Valentine, into the force.
New York is exploding in size. The Irish are immigrating in huge numbers due to the potato famine, and the city is unprepared to handle the flood of new bodies. The clergy attempt to minister to them, but there is much prejudice as Irish men desperate to support their families take up jobs for lower wages. The Democratic Party takes care of the immigrants in exchange for their votes, and has a stake in their success.
As Timothy patrols his beat one night, he is startled to have a young child barrel into him. On closer inspection, he is even more startled as she is covered in blood. Scared witless, she cannot speak and he takes her to his lodging and with his landlady finds out that she has witnessed the murder of one of her friends. She, like many other poor children, works in a bawdy house, forced into the sex trade at a tender age. As Timothy investigates Bird's story, he discovers a grisly truth. There are many more child 'stargazers' who have died, and he uncovers a graveyard where scores are buried. As he starts to bring this scandal to light, the murderer starts to send letters to those on the police force and to the papers, claiming credit for the murders and signing off as 'The God Of Gotham'. Many immediately blame Irish immigrants, as most of the children are Irish. Can Timothy and the police find out who is responsible before the city explodes?
Readers of historical fiction should rush out to get this book. Faye has meticulously researched the era and history, using real characters such as the man credited with creating the first police force and real murder cases. Timothy is a compelling hero who the reader will cheer on as he attempts to solve a series of murders with no experience in such work. The book ends satisfactorily with enough of a twist at the end to make readers ready for Faye's next novel. This book is recommended for mystery readers as well as those interested in the early history of New York.
Since there is no trained cadre on which to draw, men end up as copper stars by patronage or by being burly and ready to fight. Timothy Wilde fits in this category. He has been a bartender, steadily saving his money so that he will be able to ask Mercy Underhill, a local preacher's daughter, to marry him. When a fire takes him money and leaves him scarred, he puts aside his dreams and follows his brother, Valentine, into the force.
New York is exploding in size. The Irish are immigrating in huge numbers due to the potato famine, and the city is unprepared to handle the flood of new bodies. The clergy attempt to minister to them, but there is much prejudice as Irish men desperate to support their families take up jobs for lower wages. The Democratic Party takes care of the immigrants in exchange for their votes, and has a stake in their success.
As Timothy patrols his beat one night, he is startled to have a young child barrel into him. On closer inspection, he is even more startled as she is covered in blood. Scared witless, she cannot speak and he takes her to his lodging and with his landlady finds out that she has witnessed the murder of one of her friends. She, like many other poor children, works in a bawdy house, forced into the sex trade at a tender age. As Timothy investigates Bird's story, he discovers a grisly truth. There are many more child 'stargazers' who have died, and he uncovers a graveyard where scores are buried. As he starts to bring this scandal to light, the murderer starts to send letters to those on the police force and to the papers, claiming credit for the murders and signing off as 'The God Of Gotham'. Many immediately blame Irish immigrants, as most of the children are Irish. Can Timothy and the police find out who is responsible before the city explodes?
Readers of historical fiction should rush out to get this book. Faye has meticulously researched the era and history, using real characters such as the man credited with creating the first police force and real murder cases. Timothy is a compelling hero who the reader will cheer on as he attempts to solve a series of murders with no experience in such work. The book ends satisfactorily with enough of a twist at the end to make readers ready for Faye's next novel. This book is recommended for mystery readers as well as those interested in the early history of New York.
Monday, April 22, 2013
Blood Money by Doug Richardson
Greg Beem has a foolproof plan to strike it rich. He has stolen a tractor-trailer load worth of frozen blood supplies, which he can sell overseas for a cool million. All he has to do is get from the robbery site to the Los Angles port where he can offload. It seems like an easy gig, but Murphy's Law reigns supreme.
In the desert, Beem comes on a deputy investigating an accident. Not wanting witnesses, he kills both the deputy and the accident victims. Little does he know the trouble he has just unleashed. Now forces are trained on him and there are suddenly lots of people who want to stop him before he can make delivery.
Lucky Dey is the Kern County deputy whose brother Beem has just killed. He tracks him to LA, determined to get justice. Lydia Gonzalez is a six-foot LAPD officer, a single mom assigned to babysit Dey. Rey Palamino is the contact in LA who is supposed to arrange the shipment overseas, but decides instead to turn in Beem to the FBI when things get hairy. There is Lilly Zoller, a federal prosecutor who sees a chance at making a name for herself. There is Conrad Ellis, the father of the accident victim, who turns out is famous herself, and famous for being Conrad's daughter, as he is a billionaire in the film industry.
Everyone converges in Los Angeles in a climax of stunning violence and terror. Some are lucky, some are not. Who wins and who loses is a matter of who wants it most and who has planned the best.
Doug Richardson has written a compelling, gritty novel that grabs the reader by the throat and doesn't let go until the heart stopping end. Richardson is known as a screenplay writer on films such as Money Train and Die Hard 2, Die Harder. Readers who were fascinated by the action in these films will also love Blood Money and its fast-paced action. This book is recommended for readers in the thriller/suspense genre.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
The End Of The Point by Elizabeth Graver
The year is 1942, the place Ashaunt Point, Massachusetts. The reader is introduced to this place where well-to-do families summer, and to the Porter family. In this first section, the Point has new residents. The Army has built a compound where soldiers train and watch for spies or enemies trying to land. The Porter family is there, as always. The two oldest girls, Helen and Dossy, run wild. The son is in the military and posted overseas. The littlest Porter, Janie, is coddled and raised by the Scottish nurse, Bea, who has been with the Porter family for years. This is the summer that Bea falls in love and must decide between her life with the Porters and building one on her own elsewhere.
The next section takes place a generation later. Helen is now grown and married, as are Dossy and Jane. They all have children of their own, who still have summers as they did themselves. Helen is obsessed with her academic career, and sets high standards for her children.
The 1970's are represented by Helen's son, Charlie's story. Caught up in the hippie phase, he must decide whether to drop out of society or let his love for Ashaunt Point define his life forward. He strays from the straight and narrow, and it is unclear what life will hold for him.
The book ends in the present, when all the children are grown with children of their own. Yet the Porter family attachment to the land they have all shared is intact, no matter how short a time they can actually spend there each year.
Elizabeth Graver has written a luminous, generational saga that covers the life of one family. Family secrets and arguments are covered, as well as the family loyalty and love of the land that defines them. The children and parents strive against each other but the love and time they spend together keeps them from separating. This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction and those interested in family relationships.
The next section takes place a generation later. Helen is now grown and married, as are Dossy and Jane. They all have children of their own, who still have summers as they did themselves. Helen is obsessed with her academic career, and sets high standards for her children.
The 1970's are represented by Helen's son, Charlie's story. Caught up in the hippie phase, he must decide whether to drop out of society or let his love for Ashaunt Point define his life forward. He strays from the straight and narrow, and it is unclear what life will hold for him.
The book ends in the present, when all the children are grown with children of their own. Yet the Porter family attachment to the land they have all shared is intact, no matter how short a time they can actually spend there each year.
Elizabeth Graver has written a luminous, generational saga that covers the life of one family. Family secrets and arguments are covered, as well as the family loyalty and love of the land that defines them. The children and parents strive against each other but the love and time they spend together keeps them from separating. This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction and those interested in family relationships.
Thursday, April 18, 2013
There Was An Old Woman by Hallie Ephron
Evie Ferrante is not surprised when she gets a call that her mother has been taken to the hospital. Her mother is an alcoholic and trips to the hospital, followed by a trip to recovery then months of sobriety before the cycle repeated were common.
But Evie is shocked when she arrives t her mother's house and sees the condition. The house is full of trash and rotting food. Roaches abound and the mail and unpaid bills are heaped in unattended mountains. There is a big new TV and Evie discovers envelopes stuffed full of money. What is going on?
As Evie starts to clean tings up, she renews her acquaintance with Mrs. Yetner, their neighbor across the street. Mina Yetner is now ninety, but a competent ninety. She takes daily long walks and spends time helping to keep the marsh that borders the neighborhood safe from development. Evie hasn't seen Mina in years, but quickly forms an attachment to her.
Mina has her own mysteries, or are they just signs of aging? Possessions show up in unexplained places, other items are lost, and her nephew, Brian, insists that it is time for Mina to head to a nursing home. Is the condition of Evie's mom and Mrs. Yetner inevitable signs of age, or is something going on in the neighbor Evie grew up in?
Hallie Ephron has written a compelling page turner about preserving the past and how old age can make that difficult. The reader learns about old New York history such as an earlier plane that flew into the Empire State Building decades ago. The plot is satisfactorily intriguing and the reader is drawn into sympathy with the protagonists. This book is recommended for mystery readers.
But Evie is shocked when she arrives t her mother's house and sees the condition. The house is full of trash and rotting food. Roaches abound and the mail and unpaid bills are heaped in unattended mountains. There is a big new TV and Evie discovers envelopes stuffed full of money. What is going on?
As Evie starts to clean tings up, she renews her acquaintance with Mrs. Yetner, their neighbor across the street. Mina Yetner is now ninety, but a competent ninety. She takes daily long walks and spends time helping to keep the marsh that borders the neighborhood safe from development. Evie hasn't seen Mina in years, but quickly forms an attachment to her.
Mina has her own mysteries, or are they just signs of aging? Possessions show up in unexplained places, other items are lost, and her nephew, Brian, insists that it is time for Mina to head to a nursing home. Is the condition of Evie's mom and Mrs. Yetner inevitable signs of age, or is something going on in the neighbor Evie grew up in?
Hallie Ephron has written a compelling page turner about preserving the past and how old age can make that difficult. The reader learns about old New York history such as an earlier plane that flew into the Empire State Building decades ago. The plot is satisfactorily intriguing and the reader is drawn into sympathy with the protagonists. This book is recommended for mystery readers.
Monday, April 15, 2013
Bristol House by Beverly Swerling
Dr. Annie Kendall has come to London on a research project she hopes will reestablish her academic career. That career had been promising until alcoholism wrecked it and her personal life. Now sober for four years, Annie is given a chance to make a contribution to history. A Jewish billionaire named Weinraub has offered to support Annie's research into the Tudor era in England and establish the historical reality of a silversmith known as the Jew Of Holbern.
Annie rents a flat near the Holbern section of London and starts her research. She is disturbed when she senses a ghostly presence in the flat's back bedroom; a monk from the same Tudor period. Annie meets a reporter, Geoff Harris, who becomes involved in her quest. Geoff is not a fan of Weinraub, and suspects him of using his wealth and Annie's research to support an agenda that could destabilize the entire Middle East. Can Annie and Geoff uncover the mysteries associated with the Jew Of Holbern or will it be co opted by forces determined to use the knowledge for their own ends.
Beverly Swerling has written a historical mystery that will appeal to readers. As with her wonderful series about New York, there are a wealth of characters, all richly imagined. The research behind the many topics covered in the book is evident, and the mystery compelling enough to keep the reader turning pages. This book is recommended for readers of historical fiction, those interested in Jewish history, and those interested in groups such as the Templars.
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Untold Damage by Robert K. Lewis
Mark Mallen has hit rock bottom. Four years ago he had a glowing future. He was a policeman, one of the best and rising fast. He had a beautiful wife and a daughter he adored. All that disappeared due to his own bravado. Working undercover to bring down a drug ring, he decided that he couldn't play the part without using heroin himself. He quickly became addicted, losing his job, his marriage and his child.
Now Mark just marks time from score to score. He lives quietly, his police pension just enough to keep him going. He expects nothing and has nothing to live for. That is, until he hears the news about Eric. Eric was his best friend on the force. Like Mark, he left the police, got addicted, and even spent some time in prison. But Eric had turned his life around after prison. Mark can't believe he is dead.
Mark decided to try to kick his habit and find out what happened to Eric. He has some help. Detective Kane remembers Mark from his police days and gives him some help. He also gets help from a new friend and some old ones. Other bodies start showing up and Mark realizes he is also targeted. Can he solve Eric's murder before he is killed himself?
Untold Damage is Robert K/ Lewis's debut novel. Mark is a flawed character, but the reader can see through his addiction to the good that still exists inside. The action is fast and furious, and the denouement is satisfying. This book is recommended for mystery lovers.
Now Mark just marks time from score to score. He lives quietly, his police pension just enough to keep him going. He expects nothing and has nothing to live for. That is, until he hears the news about Eric. Eric was his best friend on the force. Like Mark, he left the police, got addicted, and even spent some time in prison. But Eric had turned his life around after prison. Mark can't believe he is dead.
Mark decided to try to kick his habit and find out what happened to Eric. He has some help. Detective Kane remembers Mark from his police days and gives him some help. He also gets help from a new friend and some old ones. Other bodies start showing up and Mark realizes he is also targeted. Can he solve Eric's murder before he is killed himself?
Untold Damage is Robert K/ Lewis's debut novel. Mark is a flawed character, but the reader can see through his addiction to the good that still exists inside. The action is fast and furious, and the denouement is satisfying. This book is recommended for mystery lovers.
Latent Lives by Larry Parr
The most sensational murder in decades has hit Duluth. The mayor, her husband and her son have been killed, each dispatched with a single knife thrust to their heart. They were having a quiet evening at home, watching old home movies. The only survivor is Linda Lavaque, the daughter and now heir to the family fortune. The police are stumped as to motive or any viable suspects.
Linda remembers how her mother used to talk about the policeman she found most impressive, John Stauber. John is no longer on the police force, having suffered a breakdown after the deaths of his wife and infant daughter. Linda reaches out to him to help her solve the murders but he is reluctant. He is not on good terms with the police after his separation from the force, especially the man in charge, Mike Johanson. John had rubbed Mike the wrong way while on the force and Mike wants no part of him.
But Linda is persuasive, and the murders keep happening. The Lavaque's cook is killed, as is the mayor's main researcher. The murders also hit John personally. His sister, Jamie, has just invented a laser device that can locate evidence such as fingerprints that have eluded detection. Her supervisor is murdered as he discusses the invention and the device is destroyed. How does this tie in with the Lavaque family murders? John, Linda and Jamie join forces to try and determine what is going on and who is responsible. They are soon targets themselves and they race to solve the crimes before they are also killed.
Latent Lives is the first in the Stauber-Levaque mystery series. There are currently three books in this series. Mystery readers who enjoy fast-paced plots with lots of action will be glad to discover the author and his Midwestern mysteries. The relationship between John and Linda propels the plot forward. This book is recommended for mystery lovers.
Linda remembers how her mother used to talk about the policeman she found most impressive, John Stauber. John is no longer on the police force, having suffered a breakdown after the deaths of his wife and infant daughter. Linda reaches out to him to help her solve the murders but he is reluctant. He is not on good terms with the police after his separation from the force, especially the man in charge, Mike Johanson. John had rubbed Mike the wrong way while on the force and Mike wants no part of him.
But Linda is persuasive, and the murders keep happening. The Lavaque's cook is killed, as is the mayor's main researcher. The murders also hit John personally. His sister, Jamie, has just invented a laser device that can locate evidence such as fingerprints that have eluded detection. Her supervisor is murdered as he discusses the invention and the device is destroyed. How does this tie in with the Lavaque family murders? John, Linda and Jamie join forces to try and determine what is going on and who is responsible. They are soon targets themselves and they race to solve the crimes before they are also killed.
Latent Lives is the first in the Stauber-Levaque mystery series. There are currently three books in this series. Mystery readers who enjoy fast-paced plots with lots of action will be glad to discover the author and his Midwestern mysteries. The relationship between John and Linda propels the plot forward. This book is recommended for mystery lovers.
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