Thursday, May 26, 2022

Indian Horse

 Fiction by Richard Wagamese


Saul Indian Horse was born in the wilds of northern Ontario, a member of the Ojibway tribe. But in the 1940's through the early 1960's, the Canadian government sanctioned institutionalization of native children like Saul, forcibly removing them from their families and placing them in residential schools to "civilize" them. So poor Saul becomes a victim of this terrible system and ends up a homeless alcoholic in adulthood.

In this story, Saul traces his history to try to heal himself. It's a really sad book.

Wednesday, May 25, 2022

The Last She

 Audible Original Fiction by H.J. Nelson


Three years ago a terrible plague wiped out almost everyone on earth, starting with all the females. There are some surviving men, almost all under thirty, many of whom are banding together in clans for survival.

But for some unknown reason, there is one young woman still alive, hence the title. Ara has been living in the forest with her father, avoiding all the groups of men, because of course they are dangerous to her. Until she is left alone and gets captured....

The story started out really good and I liked the characters a lot at first. As it went on, however, things got more and more implausible. Maybe because this book is aimed at the YA market, particularly at young women, it shied away from realistically portraying how very dark a future that this scenario would make. 

This author would have us believe that these scarred men --who had seen the collapse of civilization and endured the death of almost everyone they had loved-- would greet the discovery of a surviving woman with awe and hope, and treat Ara kindly and respectfully. I highly doubt this. 

Plus Ara herself was a difficult character; she vacillated between tough-girl and damsel-in-distress with dizzying rapidity, and she just kept making poor decisions that managed to get other people --but never herself!-- killed.

I'm giving this a thumbs-up for generally holding my attention, but when I got to the end I was ready to be done with these unrealistic characters. Then I realized that the author was setting up for a sequel! No thanks...


I also listened to recently by audible originals: Young Rich Widows

Monday, May 23, 2022

My Year of Rest and Relaxation

 Fiction by Ottessa Moshfegh


This novel was in a list of books recommended to me as funny. It was not at all funny. 

Literally the plot involves a girl who decides to sleep for an entire year, because she's so depressed. She finds a mildly unethical psychiatrist to prescribe a wide array of drugs to knock her unconscious and help her stay that way as long as possible. I'm mystified by what is meant to be amusing about this.

I did read the whole book in hopes that it would get better....

Saturday, May 21, 2022

Who is Maud Dixon?

 Fiction by Alexandra Andrews

The answer to the titular question is: a pseudonym for the author of Mississippi Foxtrot, the best-selling novel of the year. But only her agent knows for sure who "Maud Dixon" really is.

Meanwhile, Florence Darrow is an assistant in a publishing house --not the lucky one who publishes Maud-- but what she really wants to do is write novels. (Just like every other assistant at the publishing house, actually.) Can Florence figure out how to get herself published, and maybe become as famous as Maud Dixon? Maybe...

Obviously Florence will be meeting up with Maud somehow, but how it happens is unexpected. This was an interesting story with a few surprises!

Thursday, May 19, 2022

The Drowning Kind

 Fiction by Jennifer McMahon


Lexie and Jackie are sisters who spend every childhood summer at their grandmother's house in small-town New Hampshire. Gram has a beautiful historic home with a natural pool fed by and underground spring, and she's lived there all her life. In fact, Gram never leaves her home; she's an agoraphobic. Then after the girls grow up, Gram decides to leave her house to Lexie alone, creating a jealous estrangement between the girls. 

But the house may be a burden as well as a gift; the natural springs on the property is said to be haunted and has a spooky history. The story unfolds with Jackie and Lexie in the present day and a woman called Ethel in 1929. Is there something supernatural about the springs?

I liked the characters in this book, but it was awfully creepy. I didn't like the ending.

I also read by this author: The Winter People


Wednesday, May 18, 2022

The People We Keep

 Fiction by Allison Larkin

It's 1994, and sixteen-year-old April lives in a motorhome in the woods in Little River, New York. Her father lives with his girlfriend across town. So, nobody much cares when she drops out of high school and eventually runs away, beginning a nomadic life singing in bars.

This was a good story, and I really liked April's character. I didn't love a lot of her choices though.

And I really don't love categorizing a book from the 1990's as 'historical fiction'...

Tuesday, May 17, 2022

The Secret Adversary

 Fiction by Agatha Christie


This is the second book Agatha Christie ever wrote. It’s sort of a spy mystery, set just after the First World War. I’ve read it before, but apparently I had never reviewed it here in my blog. So I just re-read it, on audiobook.

It’s still a great book, a hundred years later!


I also read recently by this author: Destination Unknown 

Monday, May 16, 2022

The Locked Door

 Fiction by Freida McFadden 

Nora is a grown woman and a successful doctor. But no one knows that she was the daughter of the famous serial killer, “The Handyman.” He had been nicknamed that by the press because all of his victims’ bodies had been discovered with their hands removed, and he has been in prison since Nora was eleven.

But now new corpses are showing up, all young women with their hands missing. And all of them are former patients of Nora’s….

This was an exciting thriller with a surprise!


I also read recently by this author: The Surrogate Mother 

I also read recently by Amazon Prime Kindle: The Prince and the Troll

Sunday, May 15, 2022

Young Rich Widows

Amazon Original Fiction by Kimberly Belle, Jayne Fargo, Cate Holohan, and Vanessa Lillie


It's 1984 and a group of four New York City law partners board a plane together. They plan to close a deal before the office Christmas party that evening, but the plane goes down in the ocean and they never arrive. The partners each leave behind a widow, but that's not all. They also leave a load of trouble in their wake, and it's up to the four ladies to deal with it.

This was a fun little performance piece that was very exciting to listen to. I recommend it!

I also listened to recently by audible originals:  Once More Upon a Time

Saturday, May 14, 2022

Girl A

 Fiction by Abigail Dean


This book! Interesting, exciting… but DARK.

“House of Horrors” is the headline. A group of siblings who were abused, starved, and held captive by their narcissistic father and ineffectual mother are rescued and become a media sensation. Their names are withheld; they are called: Girl A, Girl B, and Girl C; Boy A, Boy B, Boy C, Boy D and Boy E.

This story focuses on Girl A, as indicated by the title, but it’s about all of the siblings. How did they survive? How can they recover? Will they ever be normal?



Thursday, May 12, 2022

Did I Say You Could Go

 Fiction by Melanie Gideon


Ruth and Gemma have been best friends since their daughters(Marley and Bee) started kindergarten together. Both women are single mothers with only daughters, so they have a lot in common. But as Marley and Bee get older, the friendship cools a bit.

But more is going on than just friends drifting apart. This story keeps you guessing!






Monday, May 9, 2022

Those Who Are Saved

 Fiction by Alexis Landau


Vera and Michel had lived in France for more than twenty years, although both were born in Russia. Their daughter Lucie had been born in Paris and the family fully considered themselves French. However, when the Nazis took over in 1940, all foreign residents were ordered into internment camps, and Vera, Michel, and five year old Luice were technically foreigners. Worse, they were also Jews. 

Vera and Michel make the decision to report to the internment camp alone and leave Lucie with her French nanny Agnes, a woman they know and trust. They figure that if anything happens, Agnes can take Lucie to her family home in the country, where Lucie will just be one of many little French children on the estate. They just can’t bear to bring their beloved daughter to the dirty camp, and they think the internment will only be temporary anyways. Of course they are wrong, and this separation will stretch out for years.

This book made me think a lot about what I would do in this situation. With the benefit of hindsight of course, we know that any measure taken to save your child from capture by Nazis is the correct choice. But people could not know that then, and Vera is absolutely tortured by guilt at leaving Lucie behind.

I liked this book a lot.

Sunday, May 8, 2022

The Good Girls

Subtitled: An Ordinary Killing 

Nonfiction by Sonia Faleiro

Two girls, aged 16 and 14, were found hanging from a tree in rural India. Were they murdered? Did they commit suicide? Was it some kind of honor killing? The police sure won’t figure it out; they either are too corrupt or too incompetent. This book tries to present all the facts without giving any opinions. 

I really tried to like this book but in the end I just couldn’t. Maybe I’m not smart enough to appreciate it, but I don’t like all the technical detail coupled with absolutely no conclusions.

Friday, May 6, 2022

Left

 Audible Original Fiction by Tamar Ossawski


At the beginning of this story, Therese packs up and leaves her mother’s house with her daughters Frannie and Matilda. She goes to her friend Leah’s and abruptly leaves again the next day, taking only Matilda with her. 

The sisters are understandably shocked and devastated by this. Why has Frannie been abandoned? Why did Therese choose Matilda to keep? Who is Leah anyways? No explanations are given to the children. 

The characters in this story, especially the two girls, were well drawn and believable. The story itself, however, left something to be desired. 

The entire plot was nothing but an extended version of “I-can’t-tell-the -truth-or-the-story-will-end-here-syndrome”**, that annoying plot device that plagues many a romance novel. Therese (or Leah) could have told the girls in about two sentences what was going on, instead of traumatizing them with inexplicable silence and secrets. The whole book was ruined by this set of unnecessary dramatics. 

I also listened to recently by Audible Originals: One More Upon a Time

**I-Can't-Tell-The -Truth-Or-The-Story-Will-End-Here Syndrome

(Most recently occurred in The Friend Zone by Abby Jiminez)

This shows up in romances quite a bit, in which a main character withholds some vital piece of information form his/her love interest for flimsy reasons, making it obvious that the author is using the device to further complicate the plot and lengthen the story.

Tuesday, May 3, 2022

The Secret Wife of Aaron Burr

 Fiction by Susan Holloway Scott 


The title of this book is interesting, and also it is pretty appropriate to the story. Aaron Burr, that infamous American revolutionary, did marry an enslaved woman and have two children with her who bore his name. But almost nothing is known about her.

Mary Emmons Burr was born around 1760 in India, came in childhood to America as a slave, and died a free black woman in 1835. What happened in between? This story is a fascinating novelization of a her life.

Sunday, May 1, 2022

Hide Your Eyes

 Fiction by Alison Gaylin


This was a fun story about a preschool teacher called Samantha who gets herself mixed up in a murder mystery, and meets a handsome policeman too.

I also read recently by this author: Never Look Back