Thursday, August 21, 2025

The Flatshare

 Fiction by Beth O'Leary

Tiffany Moore is desperate to find a new place to live in order to get away from her terrible ex-boyfriend, but she really doesn’t have enough money for anything decent, especially in London. She ends up signing on to a strange flat sharing agreement with a man called Leon, wherein she gets the flat’s single bedroom on nights and weekends, and he occupies it on weekdays from eight am to six pm. 

Theoretically the two of them will never see each other. But the reader can guess that they definitely will …

This was a lovely little straight romance with great characters. I will look for more by this author!

ONE AND A HALF THUMBS UP

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Corpies

 Fiction by Drew Hayes


I'd call this a parallel novel in the "Super-Powered" book series. (see below for the last one of those)

In this book, Owen Daniels (whose sons Herschel and Roy are main characters in the Super-Powered novels) decides to come out of his self-imposed exile and rejoin the world of superheroes. But after so long out of the game, the only team who is willing to take him is a group of Corpies, supers who offer services for corporate hire.

As I would expect from this author, this was a really good story.


I also read recently by this author: Super Powereds Year Four

Monday, August 18, 2025

The Choice: Embrace the Possible

 Nonfiction by Dr. Edith Eva Eger


In 1942 Dr. Eger was a Jewish teenager in a town on the border of Czechoslovakia and Austria. Her father was a talented tailor and her mother and two sisters were accomplished musicians. Then suddenly the Nazis were in power and the family was shipped to Auschwitz. In 1980 Dr. Eger is a respected psychologist in El Paso, Texas. This book is about what happened to her in between.

It's a very moving story and also she has practical advice about overcoming trauma.

Saturday, August 16, 2025

Postern of Fate

 Fiction by Agatha Christie



In this book a pair of over-seventy-year-olds try to solve a mystery almost as old as they are. They take a long time to do it, and the journey is not very interesting. It is probably the worst Agatha Christie book I have read. Still, Mrs. Christie's books are usually so good that I'll give it the benefit of the doubt.

I also read recently by this author: By the Pricking of My Thumbs

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

The Thicket

 Fiction by Noelle Ihli


The Thicket is a Halloween attraction in an Iowa cornfield; they have a corn maze, carnival rides, and "haunted" cabins. But what happens if a real-life killer uses the haunted area as his hunting ground?

This is an exciting story that's basically a horror movie in book form.

 I also read by this author: Ask for Andrea

Monday, August 11, 2025

Behind Her Eyes

 Fiction by Sarah Pinborough


Louise is a single mother and a medical receptionist who meets a cute guy in a bar one night  and feels an instant attraction. Then it turns out that the cute guy is David, the new doctor at her work, and he's married. THEN she makes friends with his wife Adele and generally gets way too involved with both of them. 

These are weird and unpleasant people, but the story is definitely exciting. There are some unexpected elements that stretch belief, but the twist ending is a real surprise!



Saturday, August 9, 2025

Always Watching

 Fiction by Chevy Stevens


When Dr. Nadine Lavoy meets a new patient called Heather in the psychiatric ward where she works, she hopes to help the young woman heal after a failed suicide attempt. But then she discovers that Heather has been traumatized by a local "healing center" that sounds an awful lot like a cult. What's more, the cult leader sounds way too much like Aaron Quinn, a man who led a commune that Nadine's own family had briefly joined when she was a teenager. But it couldn't be the same guy, could it?

This was an exciting thriller from several years ago and I will look for more by this author.

Friday, August 8, 2025

Please Don't Lie

 Fiction by Christina Baker Kline and Anne Burt


Hayley has experienced a lot of tragedy in the past year or so: her parents died and her younger sister Jenna subsequently killed herself. Then a "true-crime" podcaster got the story and claimed to have evidence that it was Jenna who had set the fire that killed her parents, possibly while strung out on drugs. Hayley is wracked with guilt and anxiety for not helping avoid any of this tragedy, and in this vulnerable state she meets a handsome man called Brandon.

Swept off her feet, Hayley marries Brandon and moves out to the remote mountain town of Crystal River, New York, with him to use her inheritance restoring his family property. But what does she really know about Brandon? And can she trust him?

This was a pretty good thriller with some surprises. 

It doesn't seem like the same style I've read from the first co-author before, so I think probably the second co-author did the actual writing. This is a NEW book that I got on pre-release from Amazon Prime "First Reads;" it actually releases on September 1st.


I also read from Amazon Prime "First Reads": Those Empty Eyes
I also read by (one of) these authors: The Exiles

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

A Mouthful of Air

 Fiction by Amy Koppelman


At the beginning of his story, Julie Davis is a pretty young mother of an almost-one-year-old son. She's going about her day in 1997 New York City, trying to tell herself that everything is okay. The problem is, she's just recently emerged from a private mental hospital after a serious suicide attempt a month ago, and she is really REALLY not okay. Her mental state will not improve when she visits the gynecologist the next day and discovers she is pregnant again.

This novel is an affecting and believable portrait of a woman suffering from severe depression. It's hard to read. There was a movie starring Amanda Seyfried, and I would imagine that watching her beautiful face experiencing this much emotional pain would be particularly sad.

It's well written but way too despondently bleak. And the ending is not happy either...


Monday, August 4, 2025

Speak Softly, She Can Hear

 Fiction by Pam Lewis


In 1965 Carole and her friend Naomi, a pair of private-girls'-school seniors, go on a spring break trip to Stowe, Vermont, together. They tell their parents --that is, they tell Carole's parents; Naomi's self-absorbed father and stepmother barely notice her absence-- that they are learning to ski. Really, however, they are on a mission to lose their virginities before they graduate with a guy named Eddie. YES they are planning on BOTH doing it with him. Wait, what?

This is a really weird premise to me, but since Carole is slightly overweight and insecure, and Naomi is an unconventional thrill-seeker, I guess it's possible. Then something very bad happens that will affect them forever, and Carole spends most of the rest of the book trying to get away from Naomi and Eddie in order to forget it.

This is a pretty good character story with a great ending. I don't think the title fits the book at all, however. The title suggests a completely different kind of story. It's not a creepy suspense tale, or even a mystery novel. I think I'd call it What Happened in Stowe, or something like that.

Not that anyone asked my opinion...

Saturday, August 2, 2025

The Devil's Arithmetic

 Fiction by Jane Yolen


In this classic story, Hannah, a young Jewish girl in the early 1990's, is kind of dreading Passover. She's bored by all the history her parents and grandparents seem hung up on. But then she's mysteriously transported back in time to take the place of a girl her own age in 1942 Poland...

This was a well-written story that would really help a young person understand the Holocaust.

Friday, August 1, 2025

Secrets to the Grave

 Fiction by Tami Hoag


This is book two in the "Oak Knoll Series" (see below for the first one). It begins with a woman brutally murdered in her kitchen beside her four-year-old daughter. The child is alive, but just barely. It's up to Detective Tony Mendez to find out who is responsible for this terrible crime, but this time his mentor Vince Leone has retired from the FBI and will be available to help full-time. 

This was an exciting mystery with a surprise ending.


I also read recently by this author: Deeper than the Dead

A Well-Trained Wife

 Nonfiction by Tia Levings


I couldn't get interested in this one.