Wednesday, December 29, 2021

They Came to Baghdad

 Fiction by Agatha Christie



This was a fun story of the "intrepid young heroine" variety, like The Man in the Brown Suit.

Victoria Jones heads to Baghdad in search of adventure, and finds it when a young man stumbles into her hotel and dies!


I also read recently by this author: They do it with Mirrors

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

The Driver

 Fiction by Hart Hanson

Ex-soldier Mickey Skelling owns a limo service that employs a couple of wounded veterans and the Afghan interpreter he smuggled into the country. At the beginning of this story, Mickey saves the life of Bismarck Avila, a rich celebrity client. Avila makes Mickey an offer he can't refuse, and Mickey ends up working for Avila exclusively. But Avila's last driver was murdered, and Mickey needs to figure out how to keep that from happening again.

This was an exciting story with interesting characters and some funny dialogue. I really liked it.

Monday, December 20, 2021

Local Woman Missing

 Fiction by Mary Kubica 


Shelby Tebow goes for a run late one evening and never comes home. In the same neighborhood,  Meredith Dickey and her six-year-old daughter vanish two weeks later. Eleven years later, Delilah is found alive. What happened to Shelby and Meredith? Where has Delilah been? 

This story is told in two different time frames, and from several perspectives, keeping the reader intrigued and guessing. The twist at the end was very unexpected!

I also read by this author: Don't You Cry 

Friday, December 17, 2021

The Reckless Oath We Made

 Fiction by Bryn Greenwood


This author can write the craziest and yet most believable characters I've ever seen!

Zhorzha Trego (called Zee for short) is already having a tough night, and to top it all off, she's got to drag her five-year-old nephew on a drug run. Zee's sister LaReigne didn't come back from her volunteer job (as a Wiccan prison minister!) in time to relieve Zee from babysitting duty, and so Zee is stuck taking the poor kid along to haul suitcases full of dope over state lines.

Then Zee finds out that LaReigne didn't come home because she was abducted during a prison breakout. She can't go back to the apartment she and her sister share because the cops are there. She can't stay at their mother's house, because the woman is a hoarder and there is literally no room to even  lie down. What next? How about the fact that Zee has a stalker, an autistic man called Gentry who actually thinks he's a seventeenth century knight?

This is such an amazing book. I loved it!

I also read by this author: All the Ugly and Wonderful Things


Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Discordia

Audible Original Fiction by Max Barry


At the beginning of this story, a guy called Diego is digging a hole on the beach in Malibu. A really big hole. Why? Because some rich guy is paying him to do it. At the same time, cell service and internet connections go down everywhere, and the radio and TV report that the country is under attack. By whom? Nobody knows. Then Diego finds a mysterious box in the hole he's been digging, and his employer wants him to open it. What's inside? You'll never guess...

This was a fun little story that I really enjoyed.


I also listened to recently by Audible Originals: Second Skin


Monday, December 13, 2021

Counted With the Stars

 Fiction by Connilyn Cossette

This book is a novelization of the Hebrew people's exodus from Egypt. It is the beginning of a trilogy.

I liked it at the beginning but had trouble staying interested as the story went on; I'm not sure if this is because I knew exactly what would happen (it's in the Bible) or because I didn't like the writing style. Maybe I'm just distracted right now, but I didn't really care what happened to the characters.

In any case, this was an okay book but I didn't love it. I'm not sure if I want to invest in the other two books or not.

Saturday, December 11, 2021

Boy Underground

 Fiction by Catherine Ryan Hyde

Fourteen-year-old Steven feels like an outcast in his small California farming community; he's not like the other kids, or even like the people in his own family, because he's attracted to boys and not girls. He finally finds a group of non-judgmental boys he feels accepted by and takes a camping trip into the mountains with Nick, Ollie, and Suki.

The thing is, the weekend trip begins on December 6, 1941, and Suki is Japanese. The four boys come back to a world where everything has been changed: there has been an attack on Pearl Harbor and the US has been plunged into war. Steven feels even more oppressed in his tiny hometown now that racism as well as homophobia is a problem. Plus his friends are all in trouble: Suki might be sent to an interment camp, Ollie is almost old enough to be drafted, and Nick is being accused of a crime he didn't commit. 

This was good character story with a lot to think about. I did feel like the author was trying to force a contemporary issue into a historical setting, though. 

I also read recently by this author: Jumpstart the World

Thursday, December 9, 2021

Second Skin

Audible Original Fiction by Christian White

Stan Weir is left alone and devastated after the deaths of his daughter (Lucy) and wife (Joanne) in quick succession. But what Stan doesn't know is that a baby girl called Erin was born the same night that Joanne died, and that one day, eleven years later, Erin will begin to remember things about Joanne that she couldn't possibly have known.

Could Erin be the reincarnated spirit of Joanne Weir? Erin's mother Marcy has to find out!

This was a good story but not great. The characters were very good, but there is some stretching of reality in the final plot twist that can't be accounted for in fantasy terms. A reviewer on audible.com goes so far as to call this a "disservice to the reader." (Don't read the reviews on this one, by the way, unless you want annoying spoilers.) 


I also listened to recently by Audible Originals: Dade County Death Cruise

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

The Only Girl in the World

 Nonfiction by Maude Julien

This book is another example of a harrowing-ordeal-childhood story. I've read several of these lately (see Nowhere Girl).

Maude's father had a crazy goal of making a "superior" human being, and he had a detailed plan to make this idea happen. He literally purchased a six-year-old girl to bring up and educate, with the ultimate intention of using her to breed his special superhuman baby. Maude was that child, raised in complete isolation in rural France, and made to endure constant endurance tests along with severe emotional neglect. 

Many of her father's crazy notions seemed based in Nazi ideas. For example, he believed strongly in Aryan superiority, and taught Maude to play several instruments because "musicians always survive concentration camps."

This story was terribly fascinating and I was really rooting for poor Maude to get away from her lunatic father.

Monday, December 6, 2021

The Hush

 Fiction by John Hart. 

This is the sequel to The Last Child, which I read several years ago and have mostly forgotten the plot of. (I mention that to let you know that reading the first book is not necessarily required in order to enjoy this one.)

In this book, Johnny Merriman is a young man living woodsman-hermit-style on a large plot of land his family owns called the Hush. The Hush is a mixture of Carolina swamp and forest, and it is rumored to be haunted by the spirits of hanged slaves from before the Civil War. For Johnny, the Hush is a magical place whose beauty only he understands.

But now there is a billionaire hunting nut who wants the Hush for himself. How far will Johnny go to keep his beloved land? And what secrets does the Hush really hold?

This was a really good story!

Saturday, December 4, 2021

In a Holidaze

 Fiction by Christina Lauren


Mae is 26 years old and feels a little bit stuck; she’s living back at her mom’s and the job that she thought she would enjoy has turned out to be a drag. But she loves the Christmas holidays, when her family gets together with two other families every year in a cabin in Utah, and so she goes into the holiday in December 20th with high hopes. 

But December 26th she comes away feeling let down, and with the turn of a completely unexplained plot device, she finds herself repeating the whole holiday again, and again, Groundhog-Day style. 

This was a fun and lighthearted story, but a little strange. 

I also read by this author: Twice in a Blue Moon

Friday, December 3, 2021

The Girl Behind the Red Rope

 Fiction by Ted and Rachelle Dekker


Grace and her family have spent the last thirteen years as part of a religious cult who believe that the whole world has been corrupted by Satan, and that only they have been spared. Their group lives in isolation in rural Tennessee, behind a red rope that keeps the evil world at bay. They believe they are safe only as long as they remain behind the rope and carefully follow every rule set by the cult leaders, who claim to have received angelic instruction. But Grace's brother Jamie has begun to wonder if it's safe to venture beyond the rope after all...

This was an exciting story, especially at the beginning, but I felt the symbolism got too heavy-handed and made the story less appealing as it went on. Still, I definitely wanted to finish the story and find out what was really going on.

I also read by one of these authors: Forbidden

Thursday, December 2, 2021

The Color of Magic

Fiction by Terry Pratchett


This was a strange story about a magical place called Discworld, where wizards and monsters and heroes have adventures. But their fates are decided by giant gods playing a game, and every once and a while they can hear the sound of the dice rolling…

I’m pretty sure the author intended this to be kind of Dungeons and Dragons come to life, which is weird but cool. The story was good but not great; I found it a little over complicated and less character driven than I prefer. 


I also read by this author: A Hat Full of Sky

Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Girl Alone

Nonfiction by Cathy Glass


Joss was nine when she discovered that her father had hanged himself in the garage. Now thirteen, angry and defiant, she's been through an aunt and two other foster carers before coming to Cathy Glass. Can Cathy get her in line, or will Joss have to go to a juvenile secure unit?

I also read by this author: Hidden