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Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Dead Man's Folly by Agatha Christie 230 pages

Ariadne Oliver, the well-known mystery authoress, calls her friend Poirot to come assist with a murder hunt she's planning.  The planning is all done, but she has a foreboding that something is just not right.  She says it's as though she's being pointed to add things to her hunt that wouldn't have been there otherwise.  Poirot comes to the village, meets the cast of characters (the residents of the house) and prepares to enjoy himself at the fete.  Everything seems to be going as planned until the play murder hunt turns into the real thing.  Now Poirot has to sort out what matters and what doesn't to solve a very sinister and devious string of murders.  I listened to this classic by Agatha Christie.  It was read by David Suchet, who plays Poirot in the A&E adaptations of these novels.  It was very enjoyable.

Old Souls: Compelling Evidence From Children Who Remember Past Lives by Tom Shroder. 253 pages


I am not one for reading any books about the paranormal as I generally find it all unverifiable bunkum, but this title crossed my desk as a possible donation to the collection, and in looking at the writing style and decent reviews by legitimate sources such as the Chicago Tribune, I was intrigued.
The author, Tom Shroder, is an award-winning journalist, and more important a skeptic when it comes to anything otherworldly; he comes down solidly on the side of the scientific method and the need of proof and duplication. Given that, he was also intrigued by a report about a physician and psychiatrist Ian Stevenson, who has spent the last 37 years investigating children from all over the world, who, from the first moment they can talk, insist they are someone else. These are not vague recollections but specific details of who they believe they really are and it is usually a person who died in a horrific way just minutes, weeks but sometimes years before the child was born.
     Usually the child is so insistent the family will try to find out about the person and visit the family. This is where things get very strange and not easily dismissed. The author Shroder, travels with Stephenson as he revisits some of the cases. Stephenson, too, is looking for some kind of verification – all he knows is that the stories are very similar and compelling. Is it reincarnation? Is it some sort of memory transmutation; is it all lies that imaginative children tell? It’s a good read that will leave you also wondering what exactly is going on.

 This book is being added to the Downtown collection.

Monday, December 30, 2013

The Signature of All Things by Elizabeth Gilbert. 488 pages


Elizabeth Gilbert, famous for her bestseller “Eat Pray Love” has hit another one out of the ballpark with this new novel. “Eat” was autobiography, and “Signature” is historical fiction, but under Gilbert’s pen, the characters are so well drawn, you’d swear it was biography.
The story centers on Alma Whitacker, the fiercely intelligent only daughter of Henry Whitacker, a young  man born to poverty, who pulls himself up by his wits to become the richest man in Philadelphia during the 1800s. Alma, homeschooled by her equally intelligent Dutch mother, is fluent in seven languages at a young age but her passion is her lifelong study of mosses. Her academic achievement becomes intertwined with romance, exotic adventures and rivalry with an adopted sister. Gilbert not only writes remarkable prose within a tight storyline, but also offers great quotes such as this one from Henry Whitacker commenting to Alma about marriage: “Poorly matched pairings are as thick as flies in this world.” A feast of a book.

Christmas Bliss by Mary Kay Andrews, 294 pages

Christmas Bliss by Mary Kay Andrews is the fourth title in her Savannah series.  I'm always a fan of Mary Kay Andrews and I was happy to have my hold come up for this book a few days before Christmas.

Weezie & BeBe are back!  This time with a wedding (Weezie's) and a baby on the way (BeBe's.)  Weezie's down to the last week of wedding planning and her fiance, star chef Daniel Stipanek is in New York City working as a celebrity chef.  When Weezie sees a society photo of Daniel and his new boss out on the town, she starts to get suspicious and decides to surprise her fiance with a quick trip north.

BeBe is just a few weeks away from the birth of her first child with Harry.  Harry would love to marry BeBe, but BeBe's been burned by marriage before and isn't ready for all that again.  Things get even more complicated when BeBe discovers that her ex-husband (so she thought) never filed their divorce papers.  8 months pregnant and completely stressed out, BeBe decides to hunt down her ex herself and make sure those papers are filed ASAP.

No spoilers here, but I will mention that everything in this story gets wrapped up quite nicely, with a pretty little bow.  A little too quickly for me though.  Weezie & BeBe are usually partners in crime, and this story had them separated almost the whole time.  It was definitely not my favorite in the Savannah series.  That said, if there are more Savannah stories to come, I'm sure I'll still read them!

Saturday, December 28, 2013

The All-Girl Filling Station's Last Reunion by Fannie Flagg, 347 pages

Fannie Flagg, where have you been all my life? I laughed, I cried, I enjoyed every word. You are a wonderful storyteller and I promise to go back and catch up on your previous books!

The All-Girl Filling Station's Last Reunion is the story of Mrs. Earl Poole, Jr., otherwise known as Sookie, and her odyssey to find herself in present day Alabama. It is also the story of women pilots in World War II, called WASPs, specifically three sisters from Pulaski, Wisconsin. The stories intersect in a wonderful way. I'm recommending this book to everyone.

Friday, December 27, 2013

These Few Precious Days by Christopher Andersen 336 pages




Ostensibly this book is about the deep love between Jack and Jackie Kennedy in the final year of Jack's life.  However, the first 280 pages or so chronicle Jack's womanizing during his time in office, as much as it chronicles their marriage and his number of dalliances is so high and so varied, it is hard to think this man was true to his wife in any conception of the word.  The team of men who surrounded him and helped him to meet with the many women, and conceal their trysts, is amazing.  It is also amazing that he had time to run the country, with all his hobnobbing and partying and traveling here and there.  Several times reference is made to the fact that Jackie Kennedy was aware of JFK's philandering but that as long as she did not suffer public humiliation, she was willing to put up with it.

One of the author's tactics is to use conversation in his retelling of these stories.  That technique is always disconcerting to me when the actual encounters took place so long ago.

Considering the high level of security that presidents and their families now endure, it is interesting to read about the many travels of this famous couple, both in the United States and and abroad, during JFK's presidency.  

The author contends that the death of their son, Patrick, in August 1963, dealt a decisive blow to the marriage and was what started the couple moving back towards each other.   As with most Kennedy biographies, any conclusions are conjecture.  This was interesting to read, but still left many questions unanswered. 


Friday, December 20, 2013

To Hell on a Fast Horse by Mark Lee Gardner, 336 pages

The complete title of this book is To Hell on a Fast Horse: Billy the Kid, Pat Garrett, and the Epic Chase to Justice in the Old West.

I'm not a fan of westerns, but Mark Lee Gardner recently visited the East Hills Library and put on a great show where he sang and spoke about his newest book which is about Jesse James.  Even though reading about the American West is not my favorite thing, it is one of my favorite places to visit.  Somehow, that was a good enough reason for me to read this book.

I recommend this book to anyone who is into the "Old West."  Probably everyone knows about Billy the Kid.  Pat Garrett was the lawman who shot and killed him.  This book provides lots of details on both their lives and life in general in the 1870s-early 1900s in New Mexico.  After reading this book I am very happy to be alive in 21st century Missouri!

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

A Place at the Table by Susan Rebecca White 336 pages




This is a well written book with lots of juicy descriptions of food, food preparation, food consumption, etc.  There are three main characters, Alice, Bobby and Amelia and yes, their stories are connected and interweave with each other, but I was disappointed with the choppy way the author made this happen.  All three of these characters finds themselves at odds with some part of where they came from and who they were expected to become.  All three of them eventually settle in New York City and food eventually brings them together.

The story begins with Alice and is set in the 1920s in North Carolina.  From there it jumps to another era and we follow Bobby for a good part of the book.  He eventually ends up in New York City and the story concludes in the 1980s.  Amelia has a very minor role in Bobby's story and then the last small part of the book follows her and her troubled marriage.

I would still recommend this book because the writing is good and there is a lot of good descriptive narrative, but I felt that the transitions made by the author were disruptive rather than seamless.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

The Liberator by Victoria Scott 352 pages


This is the second book in the Dante Walker Trilogy. In the first book, The Collector, Dante Walker is a collector of souls for the Boss Man (aka, Lucifer). He was given the mission to collect Charlie Cooper’s soul. The thing that Dante had not expected was falling for Charlie. After collecting Charlie’s soul, Dante “dies” trying to protect Charlie from Rector, another collector. After waking up in a hospital bed, Dante finds out that he is now a liberator for the Big Guy (aka, God).

In The Liberator, Dante is given the assignment of collecting Aspen Lockhart’s soul for heaven. To complete this assignment, Dante must leave Charlie to go to Colorado, something he is not looking forward to. After meeting Aspen, Dante realizes that Aspen is a female version of him. Parties, booze, and breaking rules.

Soon after Charlie and company arrive to Colorado, Aspen learns the truth about Dante and how he was sent to collect her soul. Aspen believes that her soul cannot be saved but when Dante decides to retrieve Charlie’s soul from hell, Aspen volunteers to go with him saying that she was meant to help. As Dante and Aspen venture into hell, they try to avoid other collectors and demons. However, one doesn’t make it out while the other learns of their destiny.


Friday, December 13, 2013

Travels with Epicurus: A Journey to a Greek Island in Search of a Fulfilled Life by Daniel Klein. 162 Pages




I was drawn to this book because I like Epicurus. Most people think of the Epicurean life as one full of binge drinking, slatherings of rich food and an orgy or two…or three. But the Greek philosopher is not a bit like that. He is all about what really makes us happy and it’s seldom sex and a bottle of tequila.


Daniel Klein, a 73-year-old American philosopher, decides to go to Hydra, a Greek island devoid of cars –and in this silence, contemplates the suggestions from Epicurus and other philosophers about what might be the most satisfying way to live when you get old. He watches how the old Greek men pass their days and compares their lives to the old American men he knows.

Klein is honest in his assessments of old age and does mine some nuggets of wisdom from the old ones, wisdom worth heading. Thankfully, it is not face lifts and Viagra.  
(This title was requested through Interlibrary Loan)

Thursday, December 12, 2013

I'd Know You Anywhere by Laura Lippman, 400 pages

This is the first Laura Lippman book I've read, but it won't be the last.  I found this book to be subtly suspenseful and a compelling read.

Elizabeth Lerner was 15 when she was kidnapped and held for six weeks by Walter Bowman, a serial rapist and murderer.  Eliza Benedict, as she is now known, is happily married with two children.  No one except her husband, her parents and her sister know what happened to her when she was 15.

Out of the blue Eliza receives a letter from Walter, who is only weeks away from execution.  He wants to talk to Eliza . . .

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

The Affairs of Others by Amy Grace Loyd 291 pages




Being a landlord has never appealed to me but the main character in this book, Celia Cassill, is a landlord of a unique 4 apartment dwelling in Brooklyn, and she seems to make it work.  Celia is a young widow who is still struggling with the circumstances surrounding her husband's death five years ago.  She lives on the ground floor of her building. The other three apartments are occupied by tenants she has picked for their ability to respect boundaries and privacy.

When one tenant asks to sublet to a friend named Hope, Celia has to reexamine her rules, but decides to say yes.  The result brings Celia to question herself and the life she has been leading and to open up to the struggles and difficulties faced by her tenants and other people her tenants bring into her life.  

The building itself is described over the course of the book and is almost an extra character.  My favorite tenant is a retired ferry boat captain who rents the top floor because he can see a slice of the harbor.  Celia's relationship with him is charming and protective.  I enjoyed this book and expect it will be one I will think about for a long time.


An Angel for Christmas by Heather Graham 330 pages


I was looking for something that would lift my Christmas spirit, be light and quick and still have an okay enough storyline to keep me reading until the end.  An Angel for Christmas by Heather Graham was just the right book.  Was it predictable?  Yes.  Did it have moments that made me roll my eyes?  Yes.  But was it a fun read?  Yes.

Morwenna MacDougal (can you believe that name?...first eye roll) and her two brothers and parents are all gathering for Christmas.  Morwenna has a big city job, brother Shayne is a recently divorced doctor (this comes in handy later) and the youngest brother, Bobbie is "try to find himself" and has dropped out of college again.  They all travel to the family cabin in the Blue Ridge Mountains where their family goes every Christmas. 

Then there is Gabe and Luke.  Gabe is the cop and Luke is the bad guy.  Of course!  Gabe is chasing Luke through the.....you guessed it!  Blue Ridge Mountains and manages to get away.  Gabe is hurt and is found and cared for by Morwenna and her family.  He worms his way into their hearts and settles in for a nice Christmas at the cabin. 

Woe!  Wait!  There is still that bad Luke running around in the woods.  What will happens when he decides that he needs to find Gabe and finish him off to truly get away with his crimes?  The suspense is killing you, isn't it?  Well, read An Angel for Christmas and find out if the MacDougal family has a happy Christmas after all.  Does Bobbie find himself?  Is Shayne really as divorced as he thinks he is?  Does Morwenna find love or is her big city/fast paced job too alluring to give up? And is that bad boy Luke served justice? 

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Deadline by Sandra Brown (large print) 673 pages





Sandra Brown has done it again!  Because of her I have lost sleep, I just did not want to put this book down.  Dawson Scott is an award winning journalist. He has recently returned to the States after covering the war in Afghanistan, embedded with the troops, and is suffering from PTSD, having horrible recurring nightmares.  His new editor and nemesis orders him to cover some fluff piece, but instead, he is guided by his godfather, who is also a FBI agent, to cover a trial involving a story that began 40 years ago.  That was when FBI Agent Headly narrowly missed capturing anarchist Carl Wingert. Now, there is a murder trial involving Wingert's biological son, Jeremy Wesson.  Is Jeremy really dead?  How is Carl involved in this?  Will Dawson help bring closure to this 40-year-old story?  Will he lose his heart and gain a family in the process?  Read and find out!  You will not regret it.

Inferno by Dan Brown 299 pages



I must confess I did not read all of this book.  I posted it as 299 pages because that is where I gave up.  It actually has 461 pages. Those of you really interested in art history and architecture will love this book.  The author gets a bit wordy on these subjects to the point where I personally, felt as if I  was reading a text book.  I am sure this book will make a great movie and I can just see Tom Hanks in the recurring role of Professor Langdon.  I just gave up and went on to read something else.

Takedown Twenty by Janet Evanovich , 320 pages

The early Stephanie Plum books by Janet Evanovich were laugh-out-loud funny. Now I occasionally chuckle as I'm reading, or in this case, listening to the book. Never heard of Stephanie Plum? She's a bond enforcement agent, or does her klutzy best to be one.

All the characters we're familiar with are in Take Down Twenty. Stephanie, her boyfriend Joe Morelli, her crush Ranger, side kick Lula, cousin and boss Vinny, Grandma Mazur and Stephanie's parents. It's another crazy caper with Stephanie struggling to bring in the bad guys who have jumped bail. Joe's Grandma Bella is back putting the Evil Eye on Stephanie once again. I would be remiss if I didn't mention the giraffe.

No one who reads the series will be surprised to know that everything works out in the end. Need an afternoon escape? Don't want to think too much? Read this book. There's a lot of stress during the holiday season and all that can go away for a few hours. I had a long drive and this was a great companion book for the drive. I could pay attention to the road and listen to the book at the same time. Sometimes I don't actually want to think too hard and a Janet Evanovich book is just the ticket.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Calling Me Home by Julie Kibler 325 pages

This was a beautiful novel.  It was recommended to me by a patron, and I owe her big for it!  The story is told in present time and flashback.  Initially we meet Dorrie, a black woman in her 30's, and Isabelle, a white woman in her late 80's.  Dorrie is Isabelle's hair stylist, but over the years they have become very good friends.  Isabelle actually feels like Dorrie is a daughter to her.  One day Isabelle asks Dorrie if she'll drive her from Texas to Ohio.  Dorrie, being a single mother and business owner, realizes that it must be very important for Isabelle to ask her to do this, so she works it out.  Along the long drive, the two women discover that they really didn't know as much about one another as they had taken for granted.  Isabelle fills Dorrie in on her youth in a very segregated town.  This book has a lot of heartache in it, but it is absolutely beautiful.  I think the only thing I didn't like about it was when the author was trying to write in Dorrie's voice. That felt a little forced at times.  I definitely recommend this book to just about anyone.  I don't usually go for this genre...whatever it may be, but I loved this book!

Let's Explore Diabetes With Owls by David Sedaris 275 pages

David Sedaris is one of the funniest authors out there.  All of his works are mostly autobiographical, with the exception of his goofy fake stories/letters from uptight white women.  David's pieces draw largely on his experiences growing up with his family.  Lately, he has been writing more about living abroad, but we still get lots of hilarious peaks into his childhood and formative years.  If you have never read nor listened to a David Sedaris book, I highly recommend Me Talk Pretty One Day, as it remains my favorite of all of his books.  Trust me, you will not be disappointed by any of his works.  Let's Explore Diabetes With Owls didn't have me shaking with laughter as much as some of his others, but it was definitely funny!  Also, I have always listened to him read his own books.  I think there is something charming about him, and listening to how he tells his stories has always appealed more to me.  Other people I know don't like his voice and prefer to read his stuff.  I think they're missing out, but you can be the judge.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013


The Hour I First Believed by Wally Lamb, 752 pages

I loved I Know This Much Is True. Wally wrote that in 1998? That long ago? Well, anyway. I loved it. I don't think I caught the significance of some of the mental and social ills he wrote about then. Looking back, he was prophetic in some ways.

Lamb attributes his enormous writing success to Oprah including She’s Come Undone in her famous Book Club list in 1996. (all hail wikipedia) Before I succumbed to her list (it took librarians a while to get on board with idea that someone famous, and not a librarian, could prescribe a reading list for the entire United States, and beyond, I guess) and read I Know This Much Is True in 1998, I'd never been taken and turned around in circles until I landed in a heap of depression before like I was with that book.

Wally still writes with that sense that he knows you and that he's telling you his story over a cup of coffee at the local greasy spoon. And I expected this to be a sad story, but it wasn't as sad as it was difficult to stay with it. This time, he is Caelum Quirk. teacher, and his wife, Maureen, school nurse, is the tragedy, or so it seems, until he finds more and more out about his own family’s past.

Caelum tells about his family whose historical farm is near a fictional town of Three Rivers, Connecticut which has a correctional institution for women on it and his third wife’s tragic misfortune of being in the library at the Columbine shootings.

The prison was the result of his great-grandmother’s fight to equalize rights for women and provide incarcerated women with decent prison accommodations around the time of the American Civil War. In real life, Wally teaches a writing class for women at a correctional institution. It seemed as if I could pick out characters in the story that might be patterned after some of the women he might meet in a prison setting.

Lamb is truly gifted in the way he vividly describes the setting and the characters. When I mentioned to two friends that I was listening to Lamb's CD, they groaned. They said, "Oh why? He's so depressing." Something I happen to like, I guess.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Just One Evil Act by Elizabeth George, 736 pages

This is the 18th book in the Inspector Lynley series by Elizabeth George.  I didn't love this one, but I did want to finish it.  The story is long and convoluted and involves action in both England and Italy. One frustrating aspect of the book is that there is quite a bit of Italian dialog.  Sometimes Elizabeth George lets us know what was said and sometimes she doesn't.  Geesh!

For those who have read the series, this book focuses mostly on Scotland Yard Detective Sargeant Barbara Havers, her neighbor Professor Taymullah Azhar and his daughter Hadiyyah.  The book picks up right where "Believing the Lie" (#17) ended.  Barbara pretty much goes wild in this book, first helping Azhar find Hidiyyah and then struggling to protect him when he runs amuck with the law.  I just found it difficult to believe as a reader that Barbara would go so far. 

Inspector Thomas Lynley is here too and it is nice to see him putting his life back together.  (No spoilers here about what happened previously.) 

I also enjoyed a new character, Chief Inspector Salvatore Lo Bianco, who is based in Italy but I hope he gets the opportunity to interact with Lynley and Havers in future books.

Saturday, November 30, 2013

The Girl of Fire and Thorns by Rae Carson 423 pages

I literally just finished reading this book and I am still undecided about it.  It was not my kind of book, but it was compelling from beginning to end.  The focus is on a young woman, Elisa, 16 years old when we meet her on her wedding day, who has been chosen as the bearer of the Godstone.  The Godstone is literally a gem that was placed in her navel by God when she was a baby.  The author did a really unusual thing...made the heroine a chunky lass and drew a lot of attention to it.  Her body changes as much as her spirit, maturity and wisdom throughout the story.  The author has a message there, too.  In fact, there's even a note from the author at the end that is definitely worth reading regarding a different kind of glass ceiling that women face not only from men, but from other women.  Elisa learns to be a leader and finds strength she never imagined she could possess.  I definitely recommend this book to younger readers, it's a Truman award nominee this year, even though I have no interest in carrying on with the series.

Champagne for one by Rex Stout 205 pages

This Nero Wolfe mystery begins with Archie Goodwin going to a swanky party as a favor to a friend.  The catch at the party is that it is an annual event held for just a few unmarried mothers who availed themselves of Grantham House, an institution set up to assist women in that particular need.  While there, one of the young women warns him that another girl has cyanide in her purse and has threatened to kill herself in the past.  Archie is on high alert and watches like a hawk...as the girl dies.  He knows for a fact it was not suicide, because he was watching and certain she did not poison her drink.  If it had been anyone else, perhaps it would have been dismissed, but Wolfe, Cramer and the homicide department know better than to doubt Archie's powers of observation.  Now the question is, who would have wanted to kill her and how could they do it when the champagne was being poured and delivered randomly to everyone?  If anyone can figure it out, it will be the genius, Wolfe, but only with the assistance of Archie.

Read by Michael Prichard and wonderful, as always!

Fer-de-lance by Rex Stout 285 pages

This is the first book in the Nero Wolfe series.  It's a great introduction to the characters and is a really spectacular mystery, too.  We get to meet Wolfe, Archie and Fritz, not to mention Saul, Orrie and Fred in one of the most confusing mysteries Wolfe ever had to tackle.  When a young woman hires Wolfe to find her brother, no one can see the connection between the death of this "nobody" and the death of a major player on the social scene.  No one, except Wolfe, of course.  I'm not going to give anything away in this one, the twists and turns are too good to miss.  Archie's voice was already well-tuned, even though this was the first ride with him and Wolfe.

This is read by Michael Prichard (who would want to listen to Nero Wolfe books read by anyone else?) and is a really great story.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Variant by Robison Wells 376 pages

Wow, this was a weird one.  Really interesting story, though.  I had trouble putting it down.  A young man who has bounced from foster family to foster family his whole life finally wins a scholarship to a very exclusive private school.  The catch?  Once he gets there, he discovers it's more of a prison than a school.  The other students have separated themselves into factions, but they all follow the basic rules of the school.  The alternative is death, so it's not entirely unbelievable that they would.  There are no adults anywhere...ever.  Cameras watch the students' every move.  The students have jobs for which they are paid in points and then allowed to shop the school's catalog, but there appears to be no rhyme nor reason for some of the punishments that are meted out at random.  Are they being tested?  Are they being trained?  Nothing makes sense here, but Benson Fisher is determined to get out...or die trying.  This is a nominee for the Truman Award this year and is a great book for 6th graders and up. 

Crossing the Tracks by Barbara Stuber 258 Pages


Crossing the Tracks by Barbara Stuber interested me because it takes places during the 1920's in Kansas and Missouri.  Most of the story takes place in Wellsford, Missouri.  Iris is 15 years old and lives with her father in Kansas.  Her mother died when she was very young.  Her father recently became engaged and has plans of moving his bootery to Kansas City, Missouri with his new wife.  Iris assumed that she would be moving to Kansas City too.  She soon learns that her father has found her a job working for a small town doctor who needs help caring for his elderly mother.  Iris is sent off to live in Wellsford, Missouri, leaving the only home and friends she has ever known.  Iris struggles with feeling of abandonment and betrayal by her father.  What Iris learns while living with Dr. Nesbitt and his mother are invaluable.  Life is hard and unfair for Iris and when tragedy strikes again she soon experiences warmth and understanding like she has never known. 

The Circle by Dave Eggers 491 pages



This book is a must read for anyone (me!) who is concerned with our lack of privacy and with the direction that technology is taking us toward becoming a "big brother" society.  The premise is that Mae Holland goes to work at an internet company and is soon equipped with a device which gives millions of viewers complete access to her every move, with the exception of a 3 minute span when she can turn the device off when she has a bathroom moment. 

The Circle is able to track it's members even to the extent that what is on their pantry shelves is known so that the company store will automatically restock when supplies are low.  Mae's ex-boyfriend, Mercer, refers to this control as "central tracking".  He also makes a good point of how social media has "elevated gossip, hearsay and conjecture to the level of valid, mainstream communication".

Needless to say, Mercer is against the tools the Circlers use, and tries to distance himself from Mae, who relentlessly pursues him, trying to convince him of the usefulness of the tools.  At one point Mercer writes in a letter that soon there will be two groups of people, those who live under the surveillance dome and those who will try to live apart from it.

Eggers' A Hologram for the King was an excellent book, a light hearted look at the world in which technology is taking over our lives.  The Circle is downright scary.  I think it describes the inevitable result of what our society will look like once transparency and lack of all privacy are the norm.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

A Dog Walks into a Nursing Home: Lessons in Good Life from an Unlikely Teacher by Sue Halpern 310 pages


I highly recommend this book to everyone, not just dog lovers.  I thought this would be a book about therapy dogs with cute stories about how they interact with patients.  And it is...but it is so much more.  The author takes us on a philosophical journey throught the lives of the people in this home, their current form of live, not how they lived before they ended up in a nursing home.  She states repeatedly that all nursing homes are not like this one.  This is a community nursing home in a small town with lots of support.  Lots of volunteers, lots of activities and lots of caring staff.  She repeatedly states it is nothing like the horror stories you often hear. However, it is not easy.  The residents, while they are not well, are still very much alive.  Sometimes all it takes is someone, even someone with a wagging tail and bushy eyebrows, to bring out their personalities.  Each chapter in the book covers a virture:  Restraint, Faith, Hope, Charity/Love, Fortitude and Prudence.  She quotes theologians like Augustine and Aquinas and ancient philosophers like Plato and Aristotle.  This is a very inspirational book, one that bears reading again.  I would like to quote a few of the last lines, "I didn't expect to start thinking about virtue by following my dog into a nursing home--who would?  But it was hard to butt up against mortality and not be reminded, week after week, that though you were rich in life, you had a good chance of squandering your inheritance, so maybe you'd better start thinking about how not to do that." Just be sure to have your tissues handy!

Monday, November 25, 2013

Sycamore Row by John Grisham 464 pages






Welcome back, Jake!  Yes, Jake Brigance is back and involved in another controversial trial. Seth Hubbard is a sick old man.  Dying of cancer, he meticulously plans his funeral and burial.  Then he locks himself in his office, produces a legal, handwritten will leaving 5% to his church, 5% to his long lost brother and 90% to his black maid, cutting out his children.  He also writes a letter to Jake, directing him to enforce his will at all costs. The next day, Sunday, he goes to church, chats with the preacher, then hangs himself.  Let the fireworks begin!  Why, OH! Why?  Why would Seth leave so much to Lettie Lang?  Seth has his reasons but you will have to read the book to find out what they  are. In the mean time, enjoy reading about the inner workings of the legal system in rural Mississippi!
A great legal thriller!

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides. 406 pages

The Marriage Plot



I loved Eugenides’ book “Middlesex.” It was so rich in character development and detail. I was absolutely convinced that the writer had to be an hermaphrodite because his insight was so convincingly drawn. Nope, he’s an unambiguous male. Expecting the same depth of writing for the “Marriage Plot” I was slightly disappointed. But it could be that the angst of the college dating years tend to no longer hold interest for me. And that is a major thread of the book. The heroine, Madeleine, is going to grad school to study the 18th century novel with particular interest in how the marriage plot plays out in the likes of Bronte and Austen. The plots don’t differ. Eugenides takes that plot and applies it to dating and marriage of the 1980s in the aftermath of women’s rights. Madeleine is the test case and as she navigates life between two men, we understand what has changed, and what has stayed exactly the same.

LIfe on the Mississippi by Mark Twain. 527 Pages


If you live anywhere near the Missouri/Mississippi River, you have to read the Mark Twain classic. I had only put it off for 36 years. I suppose I thought it would be heavy and possibly a bit dry for a female not in the least interested in steamboats. I was wrong. Even the minutia of how to navigate a steamboat down the river, in Twain’s hands, is light, funny, informative and woven with the most enchanting local stories. Colorful characters come and go; riverside towns sleep, then rouse to sounds of the riverboat, then sleep again. The river is forever changing itself and 21 years after Twain quits being a steamboat captain and comes back as a passenger, the river has become unrecognizable to him.  Even the types of people he was used to seeing on the river, are no longer part of the scene.
It’s the early 1800’s and Twain describes that world in vivid color, but the reader also begins to realize, that it’s life as we know it, too; humans are humans and change is both embraced and lamented.

The Final Deduction by Rex Stout 140 pages

There's been a kidnapping.  The wife of the victim comes to Nero Wolfe for help getting her husband back alive.  However, things go from weird to worse when murders start popping up around everyone involved.  It's going to take some heavy thinking to puzzle this one out, but they don't come much heavier than Wolfe.  Archie Goodwin is there to do the legwork, leaving the genius brain to deal with his own schedule.  As always, this was a fun audio book.  Goodwin's voice is perfectly conveyed by Michael Prichard's reading.  I highly recommend all of these audio books to anyone who loves a great detective story!

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Storm Front by John Sandford 376 pages



This is a Virgil Flowers novel. Sandford fans will know him as "That f--ing Flowers". Flowers is a investigator for the Minnesota BCA and reports to Lucas Davenport, another of Sandford's recurring characters. In this novel, Virgil is on the trail of an Indiana Jones type character. An ancient artifact has been smuggled out of Israel by a local preacher/archeologist.  Virgil tries to track down the criminal, but complicating the matter are all the other characters wanting to buy or retrieve the artifact including a Mossad agent, a collector from Texas,  and a local red neck with 5 kids by 5 different men who is trying to seduce Flowers.  It doesn't take much effort. At one point in this book, Davenport comments that he is confused by all the different characters after this artifact. Me too, Lucas. Too many characters!

Monday, November 18, 2013

Sycamore Row by John Grisham, 464 pages

John Grisham has written another fun legal thriller.  I stopped reading him for several years because I got tired of the same old story, but I picked him up again a few stories ago with "The Litigators."  Boy, was that one fun!  "The Racketeer" his next one, was just okay in my opinion but I wasn't ready to put him aside again.  I'm glad I didn't.

In "Sycamore Row"  Grisham brings back Jake Brigance, the young lawyer portrayed in "A Time to Kill."  It's 1988, about three years after that trial and Jake is still struggling to put his life back together and make it as one of the many lawyers in the small Mississippi town of Clanton.  No criminal case this time.  In this story a man writes a will the day before he kills himself and names Jake to defend the handwritten will.  The will cuts out his kids and leaves the bulk of his 24 million dollar estate to his black maid.

When I started the book I wondered if the story would keep my attention all the way through . . .um, yeah, no problem there! 

The True Story of Hansel and Gretel: A Novel of War and Survival by Louise Murphy 320 pages

I got to read this book again because it is a selection for the library book clubs this year.  I love this retelling of the Hansel and Gretel fairytale.  The elements are all there: Hansel and Gretel, the stepmother who forces their father to leave them in the forest, the bread crumbs, the witch and even the oven.

Oh but it is so different too.  This is a story of two Jewish children in Poland during World War II.  The stepmother forces their father to leave them in the forest so they have a chance to survive as all four are fleeing from the Nazis.  The witch is Magda, who is part gypsy, and has avoided being sent away to the camps by the Nazis.  She takes in the children and fights to protect them.

This is a beautiful, sad, uplifting, horrifying, wonderful tale of what we humans do so wrong and so right.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Trust Your Eyes by Linwood Barclay 498 pages





















A patron recommended this book to me.  She said it was a real page turner and she could not put it down.  Well, for me, not so much.  I really had a hard time getting into this book.  It seems like the enitre 1st part of the book is spent explaining Whirl360, a computer program that allows you to see street views of any city in the world.  Thomas, is a schizophrenic, who is obsessed with this program.  It is his goal to memorize every city in the world.  It is his belief that one day a virues will wipe out all computer images and maps, there will be no paper maps left, as we are dependent on the computer. The government will need him to reconstruct the maps of the world, and in the meantime, if a CIA agent is lost in a city, they can call on Thomas to rescue them! While memorizing the streets of New York, he notices an image in a window.  What is that?  It looks like a woman being suffocated by a bag over her head!   He convines his brother, Ray, to travel to New York, find this apartment, and solve the mystery of this image.  Talk about your proverbial can of worms!  Little did they know that by flashing around this one image, they would be putting their lives at risk.  I will admit, that about the middle of the book, I did get caught up in the drama of how these brothers would survive with a very efficient, ice pick/plastic bag wielding assassin after them. Lots of twists and turns in this story.

The Whole Enchilada by Diane Mott Davidson, 384 pages

Diane Mott Davidson writes culinary mysteries featuring caterer Goldy Schulz.  The books always include recipes and before starting to read, I tend to look at the recipes and think, "that looks good but hard to make."  By the end of the book, I always convince myself to copy at least one or two of the recipes because they sound so darned good when described in the book.

This is not great literary fiction.  I always get a bit frustrated while reading this series because I think no way would life happen that way.  If as many people died around me, as died around Goldy Schulz I would be looking for a new line of work, or I would be in jail.

But notice I said I always . . . when I read this series.  I complain, but I keep reading them when they come out.  They are a decent escape and sometimes that's good enough.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

The Girl of Fire and Thorns by Rae Carson 432 pages

This book is not my usual cup of tea and if it was not on the Truman reading list, I might not have read it. However, I cannot say I did not like it. Many things happened in this book. It contains magic, a little romance, and some conflict.

Elisa, princess of Orovalle, is not your normal princess, she was chosen by God to carry a Godstone. Every 100 years a new bearer is chosen to fulfill a service in the name of God. After Elisa marries Alejandro and is swept to his kingdom in Joya d’Arena, she must keep their marriage a secret, as well as her Godstone. When a group of revolutionaries learn of Elisa’s Godstone, they decide to kidnap her, as they believe that she can save their people.

I recommend this book for children in 8th grade and up, based on some of the topics in the book.  

Nine Inches by Tom Perrotta 246 pages



Great jacket photograph, eh?
 
Like many people I used to be a fiction snob and would not read short stories, or would avoid them, if at all possible.  I have changed my tune in the last few years and am glad that I did because I have read a few collections which have really paid off.  One collection I really liked was Both Ways is the Only Way I Want It, by Maile Meloy.
 
In Nine Inches, I found another collection that I enjoyed.  Tom Perrotta is at his best when he writes about the lives of high school students, their parents and teachers.  Election stood out as one of the best books about that subject.  The short stories in NIne Inches are all good except the one about baseball.  For some reason, that is a subject I have no interest in delving into (sorry, Grandpa G.), no matter how well written the story.
 
Lots of the characters in these stories are just plain sad, but even the saddest are not without hope and charm.  Some will argue that there is no resolution to some of the dilemmas faced by the characters, but isn't that what life is all about?  Just trying to keep on keeping on?

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Immortal City by Scott Speer 384 pages

Maddy Montgomery doesn’t understand what the big deal is with Angels. It’s all anyone wants to talk about. Even Maddy’s best friend Gwen is angelstruck.

Jackson Godspeed is one of the most talked about angels. In just one week, he will be commissioned to be a Guardian Angel. Becoming a Guardian Angel is what all angels strive for, protecting those who can afford it.

When Maddy and Jackson meet, she doesn’t even know what he is. This fascinates Jackson and he just can’t stay away. Maddy gets drawn in to Jackson’s life of glitz, glamour, and murder. A serial killer is mortalizing angels by taking their wings and killing them. Suspicion turns to Jacks, and it is up to Maddy to help save him.

This is not my usual type of book, but I liked this one. This is the first book of the Immortal City Series.