Nonfiction by Natascha Kampusch
Natascha was ten years old in 1998 when she was abducted near her home in Austria, and it was more than eight years before she was finally able to escape her captor. This is her true story.
Nonfiction by Natascha Kampusch
Natascha was ten years old in 1998 when she was abducted near her home in Austria, and it was more than eight years before she was finally able to escape her captor. This is her true story.
Fiction by Wendy Corsi Staub
This book completes the trilogy begun in Little Girl Lost and continued in Dead Silence.
For some reason, I enjoyed both of those books more than this one; maybe it had just been too long in between reading the others and reading this one for me to get back into the story. Still, this book wraps up all the loose ends from the others and I liked the conclusion.
I definitely recommend reading all three books together for the full effect!
Fiction by Holly Jackson
This was a good book and I liked the characters, but I thought the ending was a bit of a stretch.
Nonfiction by Cathy Glass
I've read at least fifteen of Cathy Glass's books now; you might say I'm addicted! This one was less sensational and more relatable to me than a lot of the others.
At the center of this story is six-year-old Danny, who is NOT an abused or neglected child as so many of Cathy's charges are. Danny is just a special-needs kid whose loving mother and bewildered father can't figure out how to cope with him. Danny's mum is overwhelmed and his dad is distant; they give the boy up to the foster system in desperation.
I really enjoyed this story and how Cathy was able to help little Danny.
I also read recently by this author: The Child Bride
Fiction by Harlan Coben
In this book, Mickey Bolitar is stuck going to high school and living with his uncle Myron, a great character who already has a long series of thrillers by Harlan Coben that I loved. To young Mickey, however, his uncle is hopelessly square. But Mickey has plenty of adventures of his own!
I'm looking forward to the next in this series soon!
I also read recently by this author: Win
Nonfiction by Cathy Glass
Fiction by Kristin Hannah
The family in this book lives on a farm in Texas that was incredibly prosperous in the 1920's and then goes sharply downhill in the 1930's. As neighbors lose their homes to the bank and set out for "better lives" in California, I was hoping against hope that this family would resist that idea. With our historical hindsight, we know that California was a bad bad idea, but of course, the characters in the story don't know that, and they were starving and trying to grasp at any kind of hope.
It's not a happy story, but still a good one.
Fiction by Ian Mortimer
The rest of the book is interesting philosophically, but pretty weird from a story-line perspective. We get John's (and some of William's) point of view on a single day in each of the following years: 1447, 1546, 1645, 1744, 1843, and finally 1942. It makes the reader think a bit about what the progress of humanity means, if people are really better off now than they were in the past, can we know the purpose of life in general, and so on.
All in all, this was a good book but not really a good story, if that makes sense.
Nonfiction by Cathy Glass
In this story, a seven-year-old boy called Alex has been bounced around to different homes all of his short life after being born to an imprisoned mother. Now he has been brought to live with foster mother Cathy Glass to prepare for his new adoptive family, a couple he has been matched with but whom he's never met.
This was both a sad and heart-warming story; one hopes that the adoption goes perfectly but knows that it probably won't. I really liked that the author gave us the long-term follow-up on Alex's life as well.
Fiction by Ron Currie Jr
This book should actually have been called “Nothing Matters,” because that seemed to be the author’s point.
It began with the birth of a child who —for reasons never explained— was born with the knowledge that the world would end in destruction by fiery comet before his 40th birthday, and nothing could change that. I don't want to put any spoilers here, but... what would you do if you knew this? Try to prevent the disaster? Give up in despondency?
I did not like this book.
Nonfiction by Cathy Glass
Fiction by John Marrs
There's a killer in London, methodically taking out people who seem to be unrelated to each other; however, the reader knows that the anonymous murderer is working from a list of people he has a grudge against. Now it's a race against time for police detectives Becca and Joe. Will they be able to discover the link between the victims and unmask the killer before it's too late?
This was an exciting thriller with a surprise ending.
Fiction by Cathy Glass
Unlike the (many) other books I've read by this author, (See Another Forgotten Child) this is a novel told from the point of view of the child, based on a true story.
It was a good short read, about a boy called Ryan who likes to tell the local bullies that his Dad is a policeman when in truth he doesn't know who his father is.
Fiction by Jackie Kabler
Gemma and her husband Danny are newlyweds who have just moved to Bristol when Danny doesn't come home one evening. She reports him missing after a full day, but the police wonder if she is telling all she knows about his disappearance.
At the same time, the police are on the track of an unknown killer who was struck twice in the area, and both victims happened to look exactly like Danny...
This book was pretty good, and the ending was a surprise.
Nonfiction by Cathy Glass