Audible Original Fiction by John Scalzi
This was a hysterically funny little story about an office full of aliens.
I also read recently by this author: When the Moon Hits Your Eye
I also listened to recently by Audible Originals: The Authorities
Audible Original Fiction by John Scalzi
This was a hysterically funny little story about an office full of aliens.
I also listened to recently by Audible Originals: The Authorities
Fiction by Jennifer Hartmann
Cora and her sister's fiancé Dean have a cute banter-y relationship that makes people think they might be into each other, but they insist they aren't. After all, he's her sister's fiancé! But then they get kidnapped together, and there's no doubt they will fall in LURVE immediately. But what about the sister?!
The author categorizes her writing style as angsty romance, and that's very accurate. So this book is definitely a straight romance with quite a bit of heterosexual S-E-X. That's not really my style in general, but it wasn't a bad novel, I guess...
Audible Original Fiction by Scott Meyer
Sinclair Rutherford is new to the Seattle police force, but he's sharp. He hopes to become a homicide detective, but for now, as a rookie, he has to settle for being needled and hazed by the current detectives. But then he gets a lucky break and is noticed by someone important... or is it so lucky after all? Time will tell.
This was a hilarious and exciting story with great characters. I highly recommend it!
I also read recently by this author: That's Not Right
Fiction by Anna Pitoniak
Violet and Stella have been best friends since the first day of college. Stella is the "fun" friend, a free spirited rich girl that everyone likes, and Violet is the responsible one who makes sure that Stella's antics don't get them into any real trouble. It's a great partnership, but after graduation, the cracks between them begin to show. Although they still need each other in many ways, they are starting to resent it. Neither is ready to break away from the other just yet, but the reader can sense a crisis coming...
This was an exciting story with well-written, if not always likeable, characters.
Fiction by Daniel Kraus
Seventeen-year-old Jay Gardiner's father Mick recently drowned himself in the Monastery Bay, and Jay can't seem to get over it. Mick was actually a terrible person, but he was also something of a beloved local legend, known for his diving prowess and colorful personality. Since he and Jay had been estranged for over a year when he died, everyone in town knows that Mick died alone, and that it's all Jay's fault. (Or at least that's how Jay perceives things.)
Jay gets it into his head that the only way to honor his father's memory, and win back the respect of the town, is to recover Mick's remains from the dangerous depths of the bay. This is a truly bad idea, especially as Jay plans to go alone. But he's a seventeen-year-old kid, so he does it anyway.
This story is about Jay making that dive, and about all the disturbing memories of Mick that drive him there. It's unpleasant, and then it veers into unbelievable. I did not like this book.
Fiction by Cristina Alger
FBI agent Nell Flynn comes back to her hometown when her father Martin dies; she's already on an administrative leave after shooting a suspect, so she has time. When she arrives, she gets interested in the last case her father, a homicide detective, was investigating: a murdered girl whose death might be related to another similar case the year before. As she learns more, however, Nell begins to suspect that her father may have been involved in the case as more than an investigator...
This book had an okay plot but I didn't really like it. It was hard to get interested in and the characters weren't very compelling.
Fiction by John Marrs
In a futuristic Britain, the divide between rich and poor becomes ever-wider, and government control over individuals grows stronger and stronger, as the line between private corporations and public entities blurs. In this installment of the story, couples who can't have biological children compete on reality TV for the opportunity to have AI kids.
Wait, what? Just accept the premise. It's the dystopian future!
This book is listed as #3 in the "Dark Future Series," which includes The One, The Marriage Act, The Passengers, and The Minders. I have read all of these and I think they have the order wrong; this one is more like number four or five. But that's not important, I guess.
The important thing is that this book was really good, especially in audiobook form with the different narrators.
Fiction by David Ellis
At the beginning of this book, Lauren Betancourt is murdered in her expensive Grace Park, Illinois, home. It's Halloween night, and to all appearances, she was killed by the man she was having a secret affair with. But is that really what happened?
This was an exciting thriller with several surprises. Most of the characters were truly awful people...
Fiction by Charlie Donlea
There's an elite high school in Indiana called Westmont Prep, where parents who can pay for it send their high-achieving (or problem) kids. The school boasts a 100% university graduation rate, and prides itself on excellence and discipline. But there's a secret society inside the student body that the school administration pretends not to see, and one night an initiation in the nearby forest gets out of hand. Two students end up dead and a teacher is accused of murder.
But there are many who don't think the teacher was guilty. One year later a true-crime podcaster tries to find out what really happened in the woods at Westmont Prep.
This was an exciting mystery, but just a little over-the-top in believability. I did like the characters.
I also read recently by this author: Don't Believe It
Fiction by Matt Ruff
Jane Charlotte has been arrested for murder, and she's being interviewed by a psychiatrist when she makes some startling claims. Jane says she's been employed by a worldwide organization who is tasked with fighting evil by identifying and removing it. Specifically, Jane claims to be an assassin for the unnamed organization; she says she kills Bad Monkeys, that is, people who are deemed irredeemably evil and dangerous to others.
This is an interesting beginning, and the book starts out really good. Unfortunately there are so many unbelievable plot twists, and Jane is such an unreliable narrator, that I ended up unsure at the end of the story what had really happened. The novel gave me a bad case of I-Can-No-Longer-Suspend-My-Disbelief-Syndrome.**
**I-Can-No-Longer-Suspend-My-Disbelief-Syndrome:
Fiction by Steve Cavanagh
Attorney Eddie Flynn has a strict policy: he will only defend clients that he genuinely thinks are innocent. In this story, he's given the opportunity to gain a major paycheck by defending Bobby Solomon, a Hollywood star accused of murdering his wife and her bodyguard, but he needs to be convinced that Bobby is truly not guilty, and the actor is definitely lying about something.
And then there's the crazy guy who has infiltrated the jury, who may be the real killer....
This was an exciting thriller with several surprises. I will look for more by this author; this is apparently #3 in the Eddie Flynn series.
Nonfiction by Shari Franke
Family vlogger Ruby Franke was big news a couple of years ago when she and her best friend Jodi Hildebrand were convicted of neglecting and abusing Ruby's four minor children. No charges were brought up concerning the two oldest kids, Shari and Chad, because the two of them had already left home.
In this story Shari tells her own story of how Ruby's abuse of her children started long before she met up with Jodi, and how the support and validation Jodi gave her escalated everything exponentially.
This was an honest memoir and very interesting, but it was also extremely sad.
Fiction by Marshall Karp
Maggie Dunn is at the top of her game at forty-three years old. She's happily married to a doctor, the mother of teenaged twins, a successful lawyer, AND the mayor of her small town. But then she receives the news that she only has a few months left to live...
This was an amazingly good story with several surprises!
Nonfiction by Lisa Brennan-Jobs
Lisa is the daughter of Steve Jobs and his high school girlfriend Chrisann Brennan, but she was raised in her early years exclusively by her mother. Steve Jobs refused to acknowledge paternity, until the state of California sued him for back child support (to reimburse them for the food stamps and welfare Chrisann had been forced to apply for in order to support his daughter.)
Even after DNA test had proven that he was indeed Lisa's father, Steve continued to deny her for many years. He gave her little scraps of attention as she longed for his approval. At the same time, her mother loved her, but was emotionally unstable and chronically poor.
This was a very interesting memoir; it gives the reader a clear picture of Lisa and her parents. I didn't love it, since everyone was kind of unpleasant...
Fiction by M.R. Carey
This was a very interesting story, set in a 12th century England where magic is real. It’s imaginative and has great characters.
I also read recently by this author: The Boy on the Bridge