Friday, June 28, 2013

The Stockholm Octavo by Karen Engelmann



The year is 1791, and change is in the air.  In country after country, the population is rising up against the idea of being ruled by the nobility.  Sweden is no different.  King Gustav is popular but some of his political moves are creating dissent.  He has given rights to the common man and while they eagerly accept, those who have been in power due to their birth are definitely opposed.  Soon there are two camps and individuals who never thought much about politics must decide which camp they belong to. 

One is these individuals is Emil Larsson.  He has fought his way up to become a bureaucrat in the Customs Office; a position that offers the potential for outside income.  He is also a man about town, seen frequently in the company of the card players at the town’s premier gaming house, that of Mrs. Sparrow.  When Emil is forced to consider marriage by his boss who wants to see his employees married, he seeks Mrs. Sparrow’s help.  She introduces him to a method of determining his fate he had never heard of; The Octavo.  The Octavo is a set of eight positions that each player must fill with the individuals around himself.  When the players are in place, their decisions and moves will impact the seeker’s fate, and often the fate of others.  Emil’s Octavo soon has him right in the middle of the conflict between the opponents and the supporters of King Gustav. 

The book is full of other interesting characters.  The Uzanne is a woman who is the social arbitrator of Stockholm society.  With her connections, a debutante cannot hope to advance without her approval.  The Uzanne uses a collection of fans to communicate her approval and influence those around her.  Johanna Gray is one of her protégé’s, a young woman who has made her way to Stockholm to seek her fortune and who has extensive knowledge of potions.  There are the fan creators, newly arrived from France, and the man who is the only one the nobility trusts to create their invitations and other printed material.  There are various nobles, some of whom are firmly under the Uzanne’s influence, and others who oppose her.  Which side will win the battle to determine the fate of Stockholm’s government and place in the world going forward?   

Karen Engelmann has created an entrancing collection of characters and a story that will capture the reader.  There are alliances and betrayals, plots and counterplots, gambling, fights for social position, and maneuvering for rewards that would rival any moves made on a battlefield.  The plot is delightfully complex, and the resolution is a satisfying ending that ties together all the disparate threads.  The history behind the Octavo is fascinating, and the slice of life that was Stockholm at this critical time is well-researched and portrayed.  This book is recommended for readers of historical or literary fiction. 

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Restrike by Reba White Williams

Cousins Coleman and Dinah Greene came to New York to take the city's art world by storm after their college educations.  Coleman bought an art magazine, ArtSmart, that quickly became known as the place for witty relevant articles about all that was happening in the art world.  Dinah opened a gallery after her marriage to Jonathan, specializing in art prints.  Things seem to be going well.

But trouble has a way of entering paradise.  Coleman's magazine is being targeted by a California upstart that somehow seems to find out all her article ideas and get them to print before she can.  She must have a spy, as unseemly as it is to suspect the staff that helped her build the magazine.  Dinah's galley is in financial trouble, a victim of a poor location and customers who are scarce on the ground. 

Things are also brewing in the art world.  A reclusive billionaire, Heyward Bain, has come to town to start a print museum.  Both Coleman and Dinah get involved with him due to their careers.  It becomes evident that the man Heyward hired to bid on exclusive prints for him, is cheating him as the prints he uncovers turn out to be stolen.  An art dealer no one has heard of is murdered, and then one of Coleman's editors is also killed.  Soon Coleman and Dinah seem to be targeted as well, and it's unclear if their sleuthing is the reason.  Can they uncover the mysteries before they are brought down?

This is the first Coleman and Dinah Greene mystery, and Reba White Williams has created a delightful pair of detectives.  Full of Southern charm, gutsy and resourceful with tons of contacts, this pair can uncover crimes that the police don't have the resources to understand.  The differing lifestyle choices of the cousins and their strong relationship make this book a jewel to read.  This book is recommended for mystery lovers.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

The Thief by Fuminori Nakamura


The Thief lives his life on the outskirts of society.  Living in a small room in Tokyo, he has no family.  He steals what he needs, robbing the rich men and women around him, sometimes for profit but more often just to prove that he can.  The Thief loves no one and no one loves him.

But that state of affairs changes when he sees a young boy and his mother in a supermarket shoplifting food.  They are clumsy and about to get caught so he takes them under his wing.  He becomes attached to the boy who looks up to this man who is the only one to show him any care. 

A former acquaintance comes back into the Thief's life, and talks him into working with him on a simple robbery for a mob boss, Kizaki.  Kizaki needs some loners to fill out his crew for this robbery and offers a fortune for their help.  The robbery is successful, but The Thief is now under the control of Kizaki.  Will this lead to his downfall?

Readers will be compelled to read and finish the story of The Thief.  It is bleak in a way that seems to echo the underside of Japanese society, and in a way that American mysteries rarely exhibit.  The reader emphasizes with The Thief, although he lives an amoral life.  This book has received many awards.  It as one of the Amazon Best Books Of The Month in March 2012.  It was a Wall Street Journal Best Mystery of 2012, and won the prestigious Oe Prize for literature in Japan.  This book is recommended for mystery and suspense readers.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

The Altarpiece by Sarah Kennedy

The year is 1535, and King Henry's martial issues and his defiance of the Pope and Catholic Church is having far-reaching consequences for his people.  As he sets himself up to be the religious power, he decides to break the settings of the Catholic Church and orders the nunneries and monasteries to be closed; their inhabitants required to renounce the vows they made before God to now shift their allegiance to the King.

The Altarpiece tells the story of one such convent.  The nuns are faced with soldiers in their holy house.  All the treasures that were used to honor God in their ceremonies are now forfeit, either going to the Court or to the local landowner who will receive the land.  Most of the nuns are frightened enough to take the renunciation oath and be turned out to find work as servants or even to marry if a man will have them.  Others take to the roads, begging for their food.  Four nuns refuse the oath and attempt to salvage part of the treasures given to them to watch over. 

Tensions grow higher as the soldiers demand the nuns comply.  The village folk, who revered the nuns, now curse them and accuse them of witchcraft, blaming them for bringing the soldiers to their village.  An epidemic of smallpox erupts, killing some and laying others low.  The nuns are the ones with medical knowledge, especially the young nun Catherine.  While asking for her services, the locals and the law also accuse her of using witchcraft to heal.  Then several individuals die of what looks like poison.  How will this all be resolved?

Sarah Kennedy has written a well-researched history of this turbulent time when vows were broken and allies became enemies overnight.  The reader is taken to a time when nothing is sure and anyone or anything could mean death and destruction.  This book is recommended for historical fiction readers.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Vampires In The Lemon Grove by Karen Russell


Vampires In The Lemon Grove is a collection of eight stories by Karen Russell, whose novel Swamplandia was a major literary event, nominated for the Orange Prize and selected as a New York Times Best Book of the year as well as a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.

The book's title is also the title of the first story in the volume, a tale of two vampires who have loved each other for decades and who now reside in a lemon grove as their love dissolves.  In "The New Veterans", a massage therapist has a soldier back from the Iraqi War as her client, and his experiences there seem to transfer to her through her contact with his skin.  In "The Graveless Doll Of Eric Mutis" a group of young teen boys discover a scarecrow created to look like the boy they spent a year bullying, and they relieve the experience and wonder if retribution is about to find them.  "Reeling For The Empire" tells the story of a group of young women torn from their homes and forced to spend their lives creating silken thread the empire can sell. 

The other stories in the collection share the same characteristics as those above.  They all show the creative imagination that Karen Russell is known for.  Readers either love or dislike her writing intensely; there is no middle ground.  The world she creates is one just below the surface where things are not as they appear, and fantastical images and events are commonplace.  The reader is drawn into her imagined worlds and emerges from them knowing that what they have experienced is different from what is experienced from reading most literature.  An excellent anthology from one of the best of the young American writers, 'Vampires In The Lemon Grove' will prove an unforgettable experience.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

The Golem And The Jinni by Helene Wecker


A golem is a creature of Jewish folklore, an inanimate being made of clay who is created and brought to life to serve a master and have no desires or thoughts of its own.  A jinni is another spelling for the more common word genie, as in a genie in a bottle; a magical being who can sometimes be trapped to serve another's desires.  Helene Wecker has employed these two fabled creatures to create a magical novel that will enchant readers.

The golem is created in Poland in 1899.  The young man who comes to the rabbi who knows the incantations to create such a being is about to emigrate to New York.  He wants a wife to accompany him and is not the kind of man who can attract one.  The rabbi creates the golem and tells the man how to activate it, and how to destroy it if necessary.  For if a golem has reason to become violent, it is almost impossible to stop it and it becomes necessary to destroy it.  The man activates the golem, then doesn't survive the trip.  The Golem is set adrift in New York, a new being who must make her way as well as learn the ways of humans and hide her nature.

The jinni has lived for hundreds of years in the desert.  He is lured by boredom to get involved in the lives of the humans who share the desert with him, and his involvement leads to his captivity at the hands of a wizard.  He is entombed in a brass vase which ends up buried in the desert.  It is found and becomes a kitchen utensil, used and passed down in a family until it makes its way to New York City also.  When it needs repair, the owner takes it to the local metalworker. In the process of repairing it, the jinni is released.  A master metal worker, the jinni starts a life as apprentice/partner to the man who released him.

Two magical creatures, both in New York, both desperate to hide their different natures from those who surround them.  Unlikely as it seems, they meet and begin a friendship of sorts.  What follows is sheer magic and readers will not soon forget their story. 

This is a debut novel, and readers will be anxious to read Wecker's next work, to see if she can possibly create another work that is as wonderful as this one.  It is imaginative, creative, and the reader will not be able to pull away from this world she has created.  This book is recommended for fantasy readers and for anyone ready to believe there is more in this world than the prosaic humdrum that makes up most of our lives. 

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Blood Moon by Teri Harman

Willa has always felt different.  As long as she can remember, she can sense and even speak to the ghosts she feels all around her, and as long as she can remember, she has had to hide that part of herself.  Simon has also always felt different, his ability to read minds and heal injuries a secret he kept in order not to be shunned by others who just wouldn't understand.

When Willa and Simon meet, it is like a homecoming, the sudden sense of belonging with each other.  As they become closer, they slowly reveal their secrets to each other and find that it is one more thing they can share.  The stakes become higher when Willa senses that someone is being held in captivity.  She sees a slender woman, chained to a basement wall who is being slowly tortured.  Against all odds, she discovers the location and she and Simon manage to free the woman.  That's when their world collapses, what they called normal never to return.

For Simon and Willa are witches, as is the woman they rescued.  The Blood Moon is coming soon, the only chance for a witches covenant to be formed.  The Dark Witches and the Light Witches are vying to see who can collect the requisite number of members to form the covenant, and both sides want Willa and Simon to join them.  They will have to make a decision which side they will fight on and their decision will impact their survival.

Teri Harman has written an engaging first novel in what will be called The Moonlight Trilogy.  YA readers will relate to the young protagonists and paranormal readers will be interested in the storyline that pits Good against Evil.  This book is recommended for those two categories of readers.

Friday, June 14, 2013

The Art Forger by B.A. Shapiro


Claire Roth has a decision to make.  While she was in graduate school, she became embroiled in a scandal over whether she or her professor/lover had painted a picture considered his greatest success.  As a result, she has been shunned for several years.  Her work gets no consideration from the critics and she has resorted to making high-end copies of famous art for a reproduction company so that she can pay the bills and continue to paint her own pictures.

But things might change now.  The owner of a successful galley has come to Claire with a proposition.  Twenty-five years ago one of the most famous art thefts in the country occurred in Boston at the Gardner museum where pictures of unimaginable value were stolen, never to be seen again.  It is the biggest mystery in the art world.  Aiden Markel, the galley owner, comes to Claire and asks if she would be willing to make a copy of Degas' After The Bath.  He claims to have the original that was stolen and wants Claire to make a copy that he can sell while keeping his copy.  Along with the money, there is the promise of her own show at the galley, a way she can redeem herself.

The Art Forger tells the story of what occurs once Claire agrees to the deception.  There are layers upon layers of misdirection and lies, of loyalties betrayed and truths uncovered.  The reader is caught up in the story and eager to turn each page to determine the truth of what happened twenty-five years ago and what will happen now with Claire and her career.

B.A. Shapiro has written an engaging, well-researched novel of the art world and its players.  Readers learn about famous paintings, famous collectors, famous artists and famous forgers.  The craft of making a forgery that can pass testing is explained in intricate detail.  Along with the knowledge, the story is compelling; a race to see whose version of the truth will be the winner.  This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction, for mystery lovers and for art lovers. 

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Guest Post by R.T. Kaelin


I asked R.T. Kaelin, the author of Progeny and Prophecy, as well as short stories about his imagined world, to write a guest blog this week and he was gracious enough to agree.  His topic?

Hiking through the Wilderness 

“I don’t know.”

That’s my response whenever I get one of two what has come to be frequent questions:
1.       Where do you get your ideas?
2.       How do you come up with all this?

It all sort of…just…happens. The ideas come whenever they feel like it. When I’m driving, standing in the grocery store line, lying in bed before I go to sleep, in the midst of writing guest blog—hold on, I’ll be right back…
 
Hey. Now, where were we?

Ah, that’s right. I don’t know my ideas’ origins. I’m just glad they come. What I can (semi) intelligently speak to is how I take those ideas and process them into stories.

In my view, there are two vastly different ways to approach writing. You can do extensive research, outlining of scenes, setting descriptions, character profiles, etc. before ever writing word one of the manuscript. I call this sort writer (rather unoriginally) “The Planner.” 

Imagine you’re hiking down some beautiful mountain trail, on your way to have lunch at some outcrop with a majestic vista. Planners are the sort with map clasped tightly in hand who, when they spot something interesting off the trail, ignore it and keep going on the path. They’ll reach their destination long before the other hikers, but they might have missed something truly spectacular in the process.  

The polar opposite of The Planner is a writer who sits down at the keyboard with a (hopefully) general idea about what they will be writing and…off they go! Thinking ahead? Bah. Waste of time. This type of writer I have dubbed (slightly more originally) “The Pantser.” As in flying by the seat of their pants. 
 
Imagine you’re back on that mountain trail. Smell the pine trees?  

A Pantser is the sort who you’d find meandering about the wilderness, forging a trail as they go. They risk never getting to that vista, they more than likely will need to backtrack numerous times because they’re quite lost, but their journey is full of surprises. Some may be wonderful (Hey, look!! Sasquatch!) some may be utterly mundane and uninteresting (hey, look…a rock).  

When I started writing, I was mostly a Pantser with a rough map scrawled out on the back of a napkin. In the case of Progeny (and the series), I knew where I was starting and where I would end. The rest? Well, it sort of just happened. Still is happening. I’m editing the third in the series now. 

An example of those happy surprises that come from pantsing (look, it’s a verb, too):  

Nundle Babblebrook, many people’s favorite character and rather important part of the series, was an accident. I started writing a chapter from the point of view of what I thought was going to be a throwaway character, only I liked writing him so much that I completely rearranged things to incorporate him. Had I been a Planner at that point, poor Nundle might not have made it. 

Now, as time has gone on, I’ve found myself slowly migrating along the spectrum toward being a Planner. While pantsing it can result in a more organic, natural story, the process to get there is a lot—a lot—of work. A lot of edits. A lot of rewrites. A lot of time. The adage about not wanting to see how the sausage is made? It applies to books that have been pantsed, too.  

Just how far have I evolved? A while back, I had an idea for a new novel (and no, I don’t know from where the idea came). As of this moment, I have 17k words of notes, 48 chapters descriptions, 14 character synopses, 20 settings, etc. Seems like I’m a total Planner, right?  

Well, I can guarantee the moment I see a shiny object flashing off the hiking trail, I’ll be crashing through the underbrush to investigate. Like most things in life, the best approach rarely exists at the extremes, but somewhere in the middle. 

Good days ahead. 

--R.T.



Monday, June 10, 2013

Special Event at Booksie's Blog!


I'm excited to announce a special event this month at Booksie's Blog.  R.T. Kaelin, the author of 2011's Booksie's Best Book of the year, Progeny, will be writing a guest post this month.  In order to give relevance, I'm rerunning the review of Progeny.  After his post, later this month, I'll review his second book in the series, Prophecy.  Haven't read his books yet?  Why not resolve to correct that this month and discover a great fantasy series and author.  Thanks, R.T.! 

With no more delay, here is the review of Progeny:

  Rarely, readers are honored to discover a book that is so entrancing, so fascinating, that they are carried away to another land.  Progeny is such a book, and those who read it will be changed by the experience.

Nikalys and his sister, Kenders leave their small farm to go swimming for the afternoon.  Little do they know their trip will change their lives forever.  Returning after their swim, they are horrified to observe a saeljul using magic to destroy their village and everyone they have known, including their parents and brother, Jak.  They flee, unsure what to do or why their village has been targeted.

Fearful, they are unwilling to trust anyone, but find themselves in the company of a giant man who somehow wins their trust.  This man, Broedi, reveals much to them as they travel.  He reminds them of the story underlying their society, that of the White Lions who came together to save humanity when the God of Chaos decided to destroy the world.  The ancient stories that tell of the White Lions also foretell of new heroes that will emerge when the world needs them--the Progeny.  Nikalys and Kenders are shocked to find that Broedi is one of the White Lions and a Shapeshifter, but totally disoriented when they come to realise that they are the Progeny of the legends.

For Chaos is again making an attempt to destroy all that is known.  As they determine to fight the forces of evil, their group is joined by others.  Wonderfully, they discover that Jak has somehow escaped the carnage that destroyed the village and is able to join them.  A tomble with magic powers becomes one of the band.  A company of soldiers that is sent by the saeljul to find and destroy them instead become part of the group.  They save a family out on the remote plains, and the surviving members of that family also start to travel with them.  Together, this small band must attempt to fight the overwhelming forces of evil that are determined to destroy everything they hold dear.

Robert Jordan.  George R. R. Martin.  Stephen Donaldson.  Brandon Sanderson.  These are the masters of fantasy and readers of Progeny will be able to discover a new voice that is destined to match those authors.  R.T. Kaelin has created a complex world that his original and creative storytelling manages to make realistic and believable.  The characters are fresh and engaging.  While the story of good versus evil and a band who comes together to fight overwhelming odds is a staple of the fantasy genre, Kaelin manages to make it seem new again.  He draws the reader along marveling at the story that unfolds and willing to go wherever he leads.  The book is very highly recommended for all readers, and especially for fantasy fans.  When the last page is read, readers are left satisfied, fulfilled and impatient for the next book in the series.


Friday, June 7, 2013

Cold Killing by Luke Delaney

Inspector Sean Corrigan is disturbed when he goes to the scene of the latest murder.  A young man whose life has been brutally ended, one of the victims Sean must encounter in his work.  But this murder is different.  The victim has been stabbed multiple times, but not in a frenzy as is often seen.  This stabbing was methodical and calculated.  The killer also left no forensic evidence behind, indicating that he planned everything.  He is what is dreaded most, a cold killer.

Sean is effective at his job since he has the ability to get inside the heads of those he hunts.  He recognizes this is a master killer, devious, organized and one who won't stop.  Soon the police uncover a suspect, and the game begins in full force.  The suspect is wealthy, successful and utterly devoid of conscience.  Even as the net starts to close on him, he plays the game showing contempt for the police, even committing new crimes.  The reader is taken inside the police investigation and the tension mounts with each incident in this cat and mouse game.  Can the police stop the killer before more people are killed?

Luke Delaney has written a chilling psychological mystery that readers will not soon forget.  A former Murder Squad detective himself, the author has the ability to transport the reader inside the police investigation to understand the process and the emotions in this deadly profession.  Effective use of the murderer's point of view is interspersed with the clues and steps in the investigation.  The tension mounts to a stunning climax which the reader won't see coming.  This is Delaney's (a pseudonym) debut novel but crime fiction has a new star.  This book is recommended for mystery readers and a second book can't come too soon.  This is an excellent example of the mystery genre.

Monday, June 3, 2013

The Girl Who Married An Eagle by Tamar Myers

Julia Newton realizes she may have made a big mistake.  An Ohio native and a recent college graduate, she can't imagine anything more exciting and satisfying than serving as a missionary in the Belgian Congo.  She goes there to serve in a school set up to protect young girl brides sold to older men who have run away from their fate.

But Africa isn't anything like what Julia expected.  The natives don't seem particularly grateful; instead they are quick to let her know that the white man is ugly and has stupid customs.  The mission nurse who should have been her friend seems to hate her.  The other missionary is much too good looking for a man she'll be seeing every day; a recent widower that she can't help thinking about.  He has a precocious daughter who looks at the world with a mixture of intelligence bordering on genius and the naivete of a child. 

Buakane is one of the girls the mission is set up to help.  Her name meant perfect and her beauty from birth was just that, perfect in every way.  Buakane captures the attention of the biggest chief of her people, Chief Eagle.  Eagle decides that he must have the beauty of Buakane and that she will become one of his many wives.  Buakane is scared, as she regards Eagle as an old man and even worse, when he dies all his wives will be buried alive to accompany him to the afterlife.  She runs away during the wedding ceremony and ends up at the mission.

Soon there is strife between the missionaries and the natives.  Can the missionaries protect Buakane, or will the tug of war between the two groups set the region ablaze?

Tamar Myers, who grew up in the Congo, has written an engaging mystery that will please mystery readers.  The characters are believable yet humorous, and the conflict is set up realistically.  The denouement is satisfying and rings true.  This book is recommended for mystery readers who like their mysteries light and satisfying in their depiction of other cultures.

In A Dark House by Deborah Crombie


In this novel in Deborah Crombie's excellent police investigation series, Duncan Kincaid has been called to the scene of a murder.  A woman's body has been found in a warehouse that burned the night before.  It is unclear if the murder was the reason the fire was set, or if it was a coincidence.  It also is unclear who the victim was.  There are several women missing, and any of them could fit the forensic description of the victim.

The warehouse's closest neighbor was a woman's shelter for victims of domestic abuse.  Was the victim Laura, who was on the shelter's board of directors?  She is missing, along with her ten year old daughter.  Did someone kill her and take her daughter, as her ex-husband believes, or did Laura decide to take her daughter and move to keep her from her father?  The daughter of the warehouse owner is missing, and a street camera shows her in the vicinity shortly before the fire.  Is she the victim?  A local woman who is sick and has a roommate to help out during her recuperation reports that the roommate is missing.  As the investigation into her disappearance evolves, it turns out that she wasn't what she proclaimed she was, having multiple identities and life stories depending on her audience.   Could that be the victim?

Then there are the fires.  Does this section of London have an arsonist at work?  If so, none of the usual clues to an arsonist seem to exist, such as multiple points of origin.  But as the fire investigators work, they start to see a cunning mind behind a series of recent fires that point to a very careful setting of fires, perhaps designed to prove the arsonist is better than the fire service and police can be. 

As Duncan works through the case, his former work partner, now domestic partner, Gemma James, gets involved.  When they became a family, Duncan and Gemma split into different teams, but their cases often require coordination between them.  In the meantime, life goes on with it's own issues.  Duncan and Gemma are facing a court case where their oldest son's grandparents are suing for custody.  Will they be able to convince a judge that their family, composed of children each of them brought to the partnership, is able to care for the children, or will the judge decide that their careers make them unfit to give the children enough care and attention? 

This is the tenth book in Crombie's Kincaid/James series.  It is satisfyingly complex, while showing the inside of a police investigation.  But Crombie's real strength is the human side of police work, showing how the crimes they investigate affect family's lives and how the policeman's own life can impact the work, or how the work can impact their lives.  This book is recommended for mystery lovers.



Thursday, May 30, 2013

Guilt by Jonathan Kellerman

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.

Sunday, May 26, 2013

The Last Newspaper Man by Mark Di Lonno

 
 
Looking for a human interest story, a local newspaper journalist wanders into a retirement home, looking for a human interest story.  He finds much more than he ever expected.  He finds Freddie Haimes.  Freddie was one of the best of the tabloid reporters in the 1930's, back when newspapers were kings.  He covered all the big stories; the execution of Ruth Synder, the burning of the Morro Castle cruise ship, the explosion of the Hindenburg.  He also covered the biggest story of them all, the story that exemplified the tabloid story: the kidnapping of the Charles Lindbergh baby and the subsequent investigation and trial. 

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.

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.

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.