Fiction by Jordan Crouch and Blake Crouch
Saturday, October 31, 2020
Eerie
Friday, October 30, 2020
The Outside Boy
Fiction by Jeanine Cummins
https://www.barnesandnoble.comThis story is set in 1959 Ireland and is about the Pavee, a race I'd never heard of. They are sort of Irish gypsies, although they are not related to the European Roma people, ones typically called "gypsy."
Anyways, the Pavee family in the story are travelers who live in wagons, and the main character is a 12-year-old boy called Christopher. I really enjoyed the story and the characters; this was a good book, although not as good as Ms. Cummin's more recent novel American Dirt. It's still well worth reading.
I also read recently by this author: The Crooked Branch
Monday, October 26, 2020
Desert Places
Fiction by Blake Crouch
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/This book is labeled "a thriller" on the cover above; however, the library copy I read said "a novel of terror" on it. That would be a more accurate description.
This is one of Blake Crouch's earlier works, and while I've really enjoyed several of his later books, this one I did not like. It was well-enough written, but the subject matter was unpleasant. If you like dark-terror stories, however, maybe you'd like this one.
I did not really like it.
I also read recently by this author: Wayward /The Last Town
Sunday, October 25, 2020
Mrs. McGinty's Dead
Fiction by Agatha Christie
https://www.barnesandnoble.comIn this story, a charwoman who takes in lodgers is murdered, apparently by the dodgy young man who rented a room from her. In fact, the man is convicted by a jury of his disapproving peers and sentenced to hang. But Superintendent Spence doesn't think he did it, and he enlists the help of Hercule Poirot to prove it, hoping to find out the truth before the guy gets the noose.
I don't think it would be a spoiler to say: Hercule Poirot comes through on this.
I have read this book more than once, and I still wasn't sure who the real killer was. Amazing!
I also read recently by this author: Taken at the Flood
Friday, October 23, 2020
Don't Let Go
Fiction by Harlan Coben
https://www.barnesandnoble.comAt the beginning of this story there is a girl called Daisy who is running a kind-of-scam entrapping men into driving drunk while her policeman friend waits outside the bar to catch them in a DUI situation. But then it turns out that Daisy herself has been trapped. The story just gets more exciting from there!
I pretty much love everything Harlan Coben writes, and this book was great. I did not expect the ending.
I also read recently by this author: The Boy From the Woods
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Get a Life Chloe Brown
Fiction by Talia Hibbert
https://www.barnesandnoble.comThis was a fairly decent straight romance, although it had an awful lot of, um, S-E-youknowwhat. There were good characters and some plot development, but I did have to skim a bit. I get tired of a straight romance plot quickly, unfortunately.
Still, I'll give it a mostly thumbs-up. If you like romances, this is a good-enough one.
Monday, October 19, 2020
The Girl Without a Name
Fiction by Sandra Block
https://www.barnesandnoble.comThis book is actually a sequel to Little Black Lies, (see link below) which is not mentioned anywhere on the cover. So read that one first, or you'll be annoyed.
In this story, Zoe Goldman, psychiatry intern, encounters another mysterious patient. A girl of perhaps thirteen comes into the ward with no identification and an apparent inability to speak. The plot was good with some surprises.
I also read recently by this author: Little Black Lies
Sunday, October 18, 2020
Playing Nice
Fiction by JP Delaney
https://www.barnesandnoble.com
Pete and Maddie have no idea that their two-year-old son Theo is not their biological son until a stranger arrives one morning to tell them. Myles Lambert and his solicitor appear and inform them that he and his wife Lucy have the couple's actual son, and that the boys were switched at birth.
This is a sensational beginning, and the story gets even more compelling. Pete and Maddie try to resolve everything amicably with the Lamberts and work out an agreement where bot set of parents have access to the boys, but it turns out that Myles isn't necessarily interested in "Playing Nice"...
This was an exciting story!
I also read by this author: The Girl Before
Thursday, October 15, 2020
Phreaks
An Audible Original /Fiction by Matthew Derby
https://www.audible.comSIDE NOTE: Hey, Audible Original designers and promoters? This cover is a masterpiece! Number one: You had me at Christian Slater. I still haven't gotten over 1988's Heathers or 1990's Pump Up The Volume. He lives in my heart. Number two: This picture of the old-timey phone is great. I'm all, "You kids today don't know what it's like to have to use a rotary dial and only go as far as the phone cord will reach!" This thing is just so perfectly aimed at my demographic, I HAD to love it!
I also read recently from Audible Originals: Escape From Virtual Island
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
The Wicked King/ The Queen of Nothing
Fiction by Holly Black
These are sequels to The Cruel Prince, a novel set in the Faerie Kingdom. They wrap up the story begun in the first book very well.
I highly recommend this trilogy to fans of fantasy stories!
Sunday, October 11, 2020
The Home for Unwanted Girls
Fiction by Joanna Goodman
https://www.barnesandnoble.comAt the beginning of this story, sixteen-year-old Maggie finds herself pregnant and shuffled away from her home to live with distant relatives for a year to hide her shame. It's 1950 in Quebec, and keeping the baby seems out of the question. Maggie doesn't even tell her boyfriend Gabriel, who is unsuitable for her in any case, according to her parents. Baby Elodie is sent to the orphanage, the eponymous Home for Unwanted Girls.
This was a good story which explored a lot of cultural/historical facts I was quite unaware of. I'm not from Canada and was not familiar with the French vs. English politics of Quebec, or the "Duplessis Orphans" who were abused and neglected by the government of Quebec and (allegedly) the Catholic Church during the mid-twentieth century. (Look it up in wikipedia.) So there was a lot of history here for me to learn.
Still, the point of a story is, well, the story. And this was a good story about a girl who gives up her baby and hopes to find it again.
Saturday, October 10, 2020
The Evening and the Morning
Fiction by Ken Follett
https://www.barnesandnoble.comThis book is the prequel to The Pillars of the Earth, which was the beginning of a trilogy itself. That means that barnesandnoble.com lists it as book number four in the "Kingsbridge series." However, in this case each story could really be read on its own, because they are linked only by place and each separated by at least a century of time.
This book begins in 997 AD. (For context, The Pillars of the Earth takes place in the mid to late 1100's.) The characters are very good, as I'd expect from Mr. Follett, and the writing really transports you back into the time period.
It's a good book.
I also read recently by this author: On Wings of Eagles
Wednesday, October 7, 2020
Transcendent/Outlier/ Catalyst/ Dissident
Four Book Series; Fiction by Lisa Beeson.
https://www.amazon.comSaturday, October 3, 2020
Ten Little Girls
Fiction by Willow Rose.
https://www.amazon.com