Friday, October 28, 2016

Taken by Dee Henderson

At sixteen Shannon Bliss was abducted, now eleven years later she turns up in the hall outside private investigator, Matthew Dane's hotel door with a crazy story about being coerced into assisting the Jacoby crime family.  A normal life is all that Shannon desires, but she has a list, a list of things she must do to set things right and Dane is determined to help her.


Perhaps I was expecting this novel to be a thriller, and it certainly sounds like a thriller, but it isn't, which left me disappointed.  When I examine it as a different genre, such as a survival-faith book, I can appreciate how deeply the author understands the complexity of her characters as well as the intricacy of the plot.  Over all it is a well written novel within that context, just don't expect a suspenseful thriller and then you won't be disappointed.

Monday, May 16, 2016

Still Life by Louise Penny

     Jane Neal, retired teacher, private artist, and loving friend, is not the type of woman to be murdered, even an accidental hunting death seems unlikely, but murder in the form of a hunting arrow straight through the chest is exactly how she dies.  The quiet village of Three Pines simply can't imagine anyone wanting to harm Miss Neal and believing it is someone they know in the village is beyond acknowledgement, until Chief Inspector Armand Gamache begins to pry into their lives and their secrets.
     Loaded with suspense, Still Life, oozes tension.  The depth of the forest, the inflection of each voice, and the potential significance of a scrap of conversation, infuse the novel, teasing the perfect puzzle piece forward.  One, that  in the end, does not fit. 
    Crafted so carefully and perfectly, it is hard to imagine the possibility of future Armand Gamache novels measuring up. 

Mr. Darcy's Secret by Jane Odiwe

Elizabeth Bennet, blissfully married to Mr. Darcy, arrives at Pemberley confident that she will manage her new home and husband with aplomb.  Then her sister-in-law falls for the wrong man, Lady Catherine de Bourgh arrives unannounced and secret, passionate love letters apparently from Mr. Darcy to a mysterious Viola are discovered. Suddenly, she realizes that she truly knows very little about her proud and prejudiced husband.


Odiwe captures the essence of Austen, which means one must slow down and enjoy the complexity of the society, the details of the setting, and the pace of a story that unfolds more through its characters than its plot.  Mr. Dary's Secret is perhaps one of the best "sequels" to Pride and Prejudice that I have read.

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Everything, Everything by Nicola Yoon

Diagnosed with a rare disease, Madeline lives in her home and only her home to protect her from everything because everything will make her sick.  The only people she ever sees are her nurse, Carla and her mom, who is also her doctor.  Then one day, a moving truck shows up across the street and she falls in love.  Olly is tall, dark and handsome, and falling in love with Olly dramatically changes her life.  She will risk everything, including her life, to be with him.


Everything, Everything is a dynamic story of self discovery and the power of love, both good and bad.  Maddy and Olly are well developed characters with authentic voices and complex issues that mirror much of what teens feel and experience.  Tragic, yet resilient, these young people forge forward, true to who they are, supportive of one another even as they discover truths that are increasingly difficult and painful.


Love, love, love this story and the end was not only completely surprising, but perfectly matched to essence of the book.

Silent in the Grave by Deanna Raybourn

Julia Grey's husband Edward, collapses and dies at a dinner party they are hosting.  While she is ready to accept his death because of an ongoing family physical infirmity, she is outraged when Nicholas Brisbane introduces the possibility of murder.  Brisbane, a detective to the wealthy Victorian class, claims to have been working for Edward, employed to discover the author of some very frightening letters.  Having no physical proof, Julia dismisses the charge completely, until she finds the proof in the form of a letter, and sets off determined to find Edward's killer placing herself in the path of a murderer.     
To try and delineate the good and evil or right and wrong in this novel is difficult.  Love and lust mingle with revenge and tolerance creating quite a surprising ending.    Definitely a murder mystery over a romance, readers need to be prepared for just about anything.  Even though it was bit slow to start, I really liked Rybourn's style including the mix of suspense and drama as well as the exquisite atmosphere.  Occasionally, the characters come off a bit modern, but overall they are complex personalities that progress and develop throughout the story.                                                    
Readers should be aware that the complexity of relationships include all aspects of sexual preferences dealt with in a very Victorian manner.
 
 





Friday, April 29, 2016

Massacre at Mountain Meadows by Rondal W. Walker, Richard E. Turley Jr., Glen M. Leonard

     In September of 1857, as Utah Mormon's prepared to face the marching army of the United States, a group of emigrants travelled south through Utah on their way to the California gold fields and cattle ranches.  On the 11th of that month, they were drawn from the safety of their circled wagons by a waving flag of truce flown by a group of Mormon militia, only to be slaughtered: men, women and children.
     Examined repeatedly, this shocking event, has troubled both Mormons, non-Mormons and historians for more than a hundred years.  Walker, Turley, and Leonard have set aside previous biased "histories" of the event and with unprecedented access to documents not previously available have written a powerful narrative of not only the event itself, but also of the myriad of contributing factors including the characters involved, the atmosphere, the political realities, and the previous events that predicated the Mountain Meadows Massacre.
     As a student of history and having studied various histories and learned of the event from LDS church historians and college professors, I found Massacre and Mountain Meadows, to present a balanced engaging account.  This book is a must read for any student of history, as it is exemplary of professional historians' skill and purpose.

Willoughby's Return, a Tale of Almost Irresistible Temptation by Jane Odiwe

     Three years after he left Marianne for another, Willoughby returns and stirs up the heartbreak and memories created by the passion they shared, and his abrupt departure and marriage to Miss Jane Grey.  Marianne is busy raising her son, and husband hunting for her sister Margaret when Willoughby returns determined to win her back.  Unfortunately, Colonel Brandon is preoccupied with his ward and her ill daughter, leaving Marianne uncertain about his love and sorely tempted.
     Definitely a fan of Austen, I can't help but be tempted by fan-fiction that carries on her characters and her style.  Most of the time I'm just a little disappointed.  Then again, who can possibly capture Austen today?  Her writing is a product and a reflection of her times.
     Jane Odiwe captures well the feeling if not the essence of Austen's times and writing, but for me the characters don't ring quite true.  Colonel Brandon, so attentive in Sense and Sensibility, is off mark with his obsession over his sense of duty to his ward. (Did he really believe that he was the only one who could support and care for a sick child?) and Marianne, who is not one of my favorite Austen characters, was outspoken with everyone but the man she claims to love so deeply, her husband. I found it doubtful that she wouldn't just tell him her concerns.  Finally, Willoughby wanders about like a lost teen unsure of who and what he is, self-absorbed one minute, taunting the next, and then suddenly caring about results of his insensitive actions.  Totally off.
     That said, I think most young readers of Austen will enjoy the storyline and the ending, as I did when I decided to not compare it to the real thing.

P.S.  If you haven't read Sense and Sensibility, and your moving on to this novel from the movie version of Austen's classic, please, please, please be sure to read the classic.  It is more than worth your time.