Thursday, September 01, 2011

Cinderella Deal by Jennifer Crusie

Eccentric Daisy Flattery collects thrift-store furniture, stray cats, and wishes her life were as interesting as the stories she tells.


When her upstairs, uptight, but incredibly gorgeous neighbor Linc Blaise needs a fiancee to clench a position as a history professor in a small-town college, he, against his better judgment, can't think of anyone who could lie better than Daisy Flattery, professional storyteller (and starving artist).

Linc, a workaholic, with his chrome-and-glass furniture and black Porshe has his life just the way he wants it. He finds himself maddened but attracted-against-his-will to Daisy, with her stray cats, cracked Tiffany lamps, and compulsion to embellish her life at faculty gatherings.

When Linc and Daisy conveniently break up after Linc is hired for the position at the college, the chair of Linc's department makes it clear that a fiancee/wife was part of the bargain. Linc is sufficiently compelled to make a temporary "Cinderella Deal" with Daisy that will change them both.

I listened to this on CD and it was highly entertaining.  I've enjoyed other books by Jennifer Crusie but found this more like her older books so wasn't surprised to find it was a Loveswept book.  She makes a nice change of pace from the seriously intense mysteries I sometimes read.  I find her right up there with Janet Evanovich.

Monday, August 29, 2011

Blink & Caution by Tim Wynne-Jones

Blink and Caution are two teenage runaways in Toronto. The story is told in alternating viewpoints, with Blink's segments in a strange second-person present tense.

Blink is getting by day to day by stealing breakfast leftovers from room-service trays in a fancy hotel when he accidentally observes a faked kidnapping of a wealthy CEO. Blink becomes obsessed with the kidnapping he witnessed, and the finds himself drawn the daughter who keeps calling the cell phone he lifted from the hotel room.

Caution is on the run from an abusive and possessive drug-dealer boyfriend when she meets Blink. She sees him purchasing a train ticket and thinks he will be an easy mark, but finds herself strangely drawn to him and to helping him.

To solve the mystery, the teens travel to a remote cabin, where they find that they are in over their heads, and it will take all of their cunning and street smarts to make it out alive.

Very intense teen/adult thriller.  I had read reviews and it looked really interesting and I was not disappointed.  Plus who can not want to read a book jacket with bullet holes.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Virgin of Small Plains by Nancy Pickard

While rounding up newborn calves during a 1987 blizzard, Nathan Shellenberger, sheriff of Small Plains, and his teenage sons, Rex and Patrick, discover the naked frozen body of a beautiful teenage girl. Later, Nathan and Dr. Quentin "Doc" Reynolds bash the girl's face to an unrecognizable pulp, since they know who she is and fear that either Patrick or Rex's best friend, 17-year-old Mitch Newquist, is her killer.

Witnessing this terrible scene is Mitch, hidden in Doc's home office supply closet where he's gone for a condom to use with Abby, Doc's 16-year-old daughter. When Mitch goes home and reports what he found Mitch's father, a judge, forces Mitch to leave town after the boy admits what he saw.  He never says goodbye to anyone include Abby who is told it is her fault that he has left.

It's 17 years later, 1994 and it is still a cold case.  During another blizzard 33-year-old Abby Reynolds is reminded of the mystery and decides to find out who the Virgin really is. The secret begins to peel away when Abby realizes that the stories told about that night don't quite ring true. As she asks the people she loves to return to that time in 1987, Abby fears the murderer might be staring her in the face.


Meanwhile Mitch is back in town and no one knows if they can trust him or not least of all Abby. There are many complicated subplots that almost overshadow the real mystery of who is the virgin and who killed her? But overall an excellent thriller.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Speed of dark by Elizabeth Moon


Lou Arrendale, at first seems kind of a quirky introvert but you quickly realize he is a very functioning autistic 35 year old male. Lou is a bioinformatics specialist who has a gift for pattern analysis and an ability to function well in both "normal" and "autistic" worlds. When the pharmaceutical company he works for recommends that all the autistic employees on staff undergo an experimental procedure that will basically alter their brains, his neatly ordered world shatters.

His man group of friends are the autistics from the company but he also has his Wednesday fencing group and the 2 are starting to overflow together.  All his life he has been taught "act normal, and you will be normal enough"-something that has enabled him to survive, but as he struggles to decide what to do, the violent behavior of a "normal friend" puts him in danger and rocks his faith in the normal world. He struggles to decide whether the treatment will help or destroy his sense of self. Is autism a disease or just another way of being?


This book is very thought provoking as what would you do if you could be normal and how would you deal with the consequences.  This topic is obviously very personal to Moon and it's been interesting as while this book was written over 10 years ago I've been reading new research that discusses this very thing.

I've been a huge fan of Elizabeth Moon since she wrote Sassinak and Generation Warriors with Anne McCaffrey and her Deed of Paksenarrion series.   It's probably been 15 years since I've ready anything by her and I just loved this book.  She does such a wonderful job combining the personal stories with a sci fi twist.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Insatiable by Meg Cabot

TV writer Meena Harper creates fabulous plots for Insatiable, the second-highest-rated soap opera, thanks to her burdensome if lucrative psychic ability to see into the future and determine how people are going to die. And just as Insatiable is switching to a vampire theme to attract a younger demographic, a spate of chilling murders-by-exsanguination grips New York City.

Enter Lucien Antonescu, a sexy, melancholic Romanian history professor/vampire who recognizes that the murders are the work of rogue vampires who have broken away from his order. (Lucien happens to be the son of Vlad the Impaler, whom Bram Stoker gave such a bad rep.) Lucien's opposition: Alaric Wulf, a sympathetic detective from the Palatine Guard, who hopes to use Meena and her prophetic gift to stop the murders and track down Lucien.

It was fun to read a Meg Cabot book that didn't focus on the Princess Diaries but it really wan't much a vampire book either.   But while it was a long pagewise book I was able to read it very easily and quickly.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Seeking who he may devour by Fred Vargas

Chief Inspector Adamsberg mystery

A small mountain community in the French Alps is roused to terror when they awaken each morning to find yet another of their sheep with its throat torn out. One of the villagers thinks it might be a werewolf, and when she's found killed in the same manner, people begin to wonder if she might have been right. Suspicion falls on Massart, a loner living on the edge of town.


The murdered woman's adopted son, one of her shepherds, and her new friend Camille decide to pursue Massart, who has conveniently disappeared. Their ineptness for the task soon becomes painfully obvious, and they summon Commissaire Adamsberg from the city to bring his exceptional powers of intuition to bear on layer upon layer of buried hatred and secrets.

This is my 2nd book from Vargas and it is as different as a series can be.  Yes many of the same characters are in this book but how Adamsberg responds and interacts is very different.  But then the settings are so different and I appreciated that.  I like how Vargas hints at the darkness yet brings a fresh lightness to it as well.  The covers are really creepy but done is a very simple way.  Excellent.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Willoughbys by Lois Lowry

A parody of old-fashioned children's book but also reminiscent of the "Series of Unfortunate Events" series by Lemony Snicket.  Timothy, the oldest of the Willoughby children, makes all the decisions and the youngest, Jane, just wants to be noticed and have a name with more than 1 syllable. Twins Barnaby A and Barnaby B, the middle children, are so alike that their parents can't tell them apart even if they bothered to try and have to share a sweater.  Life is not ideal for these children.

When the youngsters find a beastly baby on their doorstep, they leave it at a rich neighbor's house to get rid of it. The melancholy candy maker tycoon who lives there adopts the baby and his life becomes happy after years of grieving over the death of his wife and son in an avalanche in Switzerland.

Meanwhile, the Willoughby children concoct a plot to get rid of their insufferable parents and turn themselves into orphans by sending them on a dangerous trip. At first the plan seems to have worked as their parents go off on the dangerous trip and do all kinds of dangerous activities but keep sending home postcards describing all the terrible things that happen to everyone but themselves.  To top it all off their parents have put the house on the market to be sold while they are gone.  Their instructions to their children are to pack up all their undies and leave everything else to be sold.  Happily the nanny who comes to take care of them turns out to be just what they need to bring out the best in their personalities.

At the end of the book the 2 storylines intertwine in a satisfying way that leaves everyone happy, except for the Willoughby parents who deserve what they get!

A wonderfully humorous glossary at the end defines old-fashioned words in the story with examples and hints for proper use.   An utter delight.  

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Monsieur Pamplemouse by Michael Bond

Aristide Pamplemousse, formerly of the Suret, is now an undercover restaurant-reviewer for Le Guide, and his current assignment is the renowned Hotel-Restaurant La Lagoustine in St. Castille. Soon, however, Pamplemousse is distracted from the super cuisine by escalating mayhem. He's served a nasty plastic head instead of Poularde de Bresse en Vessie Royale. Someone peppers his leg with a shotgun-blast, tries to run him down with a car, etc. The Mafia? But why? Or are the attacks really aimed, perhaps, at another hotel guest? (There's a wealthy, unfortunate young man with two hooks instead of hands--who fears that he's the real victim.)

The mystery isn't really important as I read for the crazy escapades he gets himself into and love the perspective that Pommes Frites provides.  Pample-mousse foolishly pretends to be a man with two wooden legs; he is virtually raped by the hotelier's wife, who's into sandpaper; he escapes her clutches with help from an inflatable, wooden-legged male sex-doll, and he temporarily loses doggie-sidekick Pommes Frites.  We briefly meet Pamplemousse's wife as she is carted away by a crane that removes the gazebo she was lounging on, Pommes Frites on the pursuit.

I love Monsieur Pamplemouse and have read this book several times but every time I find something fresh and it always makes me laugh out loud.  I was so excited to see a new book in the series that came out in 2010! 

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

My Life as a Book by Janet Tashjian

12 year-old Derek has been identified as a reluctant reader by his teacher and his parents. He likes to read, but doesn't enjoy required materials. He says he prefers having his own adventures (tossing as hand grenades the avocados his mother is saving for dinner, climbing onto the roof with a croquet set to hit wooden balls into the satellite dish) to learning about someone else's life. When his teacher gives the class summer reading and writing assignments, Derek finds a way to distract himself from the task. He discovers an old newspaper clipping about a 17-year-old who drowned, and when he questions his mother about it she won't talk about it.  Of course this makes him obsessed with knowing why they saved this article until his mother finally explains that the teen was babysitting him at the time and died saving him. Derek is determined to learn more about her death and his involvement in it.
 
After one more stunt, his parents decide that he needs to be kept busy so send him to Study Camp where kids go to learn!  There he meets up with one of his least favorite classmates, teacher's pet Carly. But one day after camp they give Carly a ride home he discovers that Carly is really interesting and not just a teachers pet.  She has set up a maze of string to get through to get the prize. 
 
Finally Derek convinces his parents they should go visit his grandmother, who lives close to Martha's Vinyard, so he can find out for himself what really happened when he wsa 2 years old.  But he really discovers is that everyone has a story and while some may not be the real story it is the one that helps them get by.
 
The book takes place from end of school year to the beginning of the new year.  Through out the book there are drawings in the the margins that feature vocabulary words illustrated with cartoons.  While I found the character Derek extremely ADHD and annoying there was something kind of endeering about him and his quest for the truth. 

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Minding Frankie by Maeve Binchy

A Dublin neighborhood full of many of the characters bands together to help a young single father raise his daughter.  Aware she will not survive her baby's birth, fatally ill Stella tells alcoholic loner Noel that he is the father. He doesn't remember having actual sex with Stella and is far from certain he wants or can handle the responsibility. But with the help and encouragement of his cousin Emily, in Dublin on an extended visit from New York, Noel stops drinking and takes custody of baby Frankie after Stella's death at St. Brigid's Hospital.

His transformation from loser to responsible, loving father and his struggle to convince his uptight social worker that he is fit to raise Frankie forms the central plot. But there are many subplots as there often are in Binchy novels.  But she is the queen of connecting everyone together, though in this story it wasn't as far fetched as other books I've read.  Social worker Moira seems like the stereotypical uptight bureaucrat at first, but her loneliness and painful self-awareness of her failure to connect to others become increasingly heart-wrenching. Moira has to overcome an unhappy family situation, as does Lisa, a graphic artist who moves in as Noel's platonic housemate to escape her parents' sham marriage, although she's in her own sham love affair with a flashy restaurateur. Circling everywhere, is cousin Emily, who on a whim comes to visit family she has never met but finds herself a family far more than she ever imagined.

Mave Binchy has this wonderful way of weaving a story together.  But she deals with everyday life including the good and bad - death, birth, addiction that feels believeable yet not too sweet.  Having to read when one of the older characters died from cancer was heart breaking as it is very close to home.  My favorite book by Maeve Binchy will always "Evening Class" but this one was right up there.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Turtle in Paradise by Jennifer L. Holm

Set in summer of 1935, eleven-year-old Turtle is sent to Key West Florida to live with her mother's family whom she has never met.  Her favorite saying is "Life isn't like the movies, and eleven-year-old Turtle is no Shirley Temple." She's smart and tough and has seen enough of the world not to expect a Hollywood ending. After all, it's 1935, and jobs and money and sometimes even dreams are scarce. So when Turtle's mama gets a job housekeeping for a lady who doesn't like kids, Turtle says goodbye without a tear and heads off to Key West, Florida, to stay with relatives she's never met.Unfortunately, Turtle's Mama has neglected to tell Aunt Minnie she's coming, and Turtle gets the stink eye from cousins with monikers like Buddy and Beans. As Turtle soon learns, everything is different in Key West, from the fruit hanging on trees to the scorpions in nightgowns to the ways kids earn money. She can't be part of her cousins' Diaper Gang (no girls allowed), which takes care of fussy babies, but when she finds a treasure map, she hopes she'll be on Easy Street like Little Orphan Annie.

Florida's like nothing Turtle has ever seen. It's hot and strange, full of wild green peeping out between houses, ragtag boy cousins, and secret treasure. Before she knows what's happened, Turtle finds herself coming out of the shell she has spent her life building, and as she does, her world opens up in the most unexpected ways.Full of flavor of Southern Florida and set during the depression this realistic but funny story of a place and time that feels as fresh as when it actually happened.  It makes me want to go to that part of the country and see it for myself.  I found the author's notes particularly interesting as she explains much of the story comes from the stories her grandmother told.






Highly Effective Detective by Richard Yancey
A Teddy Ruzak series

After his mother dies, Teddy Ruzak who has always been an overweight man and just done what was expected of him decides to start his own business. Failing to become a policeman, he's been a security guard for years; now is the time to break out and get into detective work, the reason he was first drawn to law enforcement. Ruzak is an ironic antihero who not only doesn't know much about detecting, but also can't avoid getting suckered by his newly hired assistant (who goes on shopping sprees with his money) or the local deputy (who is too interested in the case of the gosling hit-and-run to be above anyone's suspicion except Ruzak's). The small-town Tennessee setting is both corny and cozy, but not all of the characters here are sweet: in addition to the gosling killer, there's a man with two dead wives and an arsonist.  But how he puts all the pieces together is truly genius.

This was actually a good and believable read as it felt like someone who really didn't know what they were doing opening their own detective agency and somehow making it work.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Case of the missing servant : from the files of Vish Puri, India's "most private investigator"  by Tarquin Hall

Vish Puri, India's Most Private Investigator uses stealth, cunning and above all discretion to help his clients. He holds many accolades including the 1999 Super Sleuth award from the World Federation of Detectives.  But he dearly loves to eat, especially food that is not good for me him as he is called "Chubby" for a reason.  Vish Puri would readily admit that the vast majority of his clients come to him for the mundane purpose of domestic spying.

So when noted Jaipur attorney Ajay Kasliwal hires Most Private Investigations, Ltd. to locate the missing housemaid he's suspected of killing, Puri is ecstatic at the chance for some real detection. Slipping his agent, a Nepalese beauty called Facecream, into the Kasliwal manage to mingle with the servants, Puri has his driver, Handbrake, take him on a tour of the Pink City to see where a simple country girl from Jharkand might hide.

Meanwhile, after an unsuccessful assassination attempt on Puri's life - his Mummy comes to town to find out who is behind the attack.  We learn that Puri's father was a police detective and Mummy used to help advise him on cases.  I enjoyed this side storyline as it gave more depth to the storyline.  I enjoyed the hustle and bustle the story portrayed of modern day India yet kept some of the magic of this exotic place.  Puri was great fun and I had no idea of how corrupt another place could be.  The mystery really wasn't the main focus as it was more about the place and the people.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Bad Day for Sorry by Sophie Littlefield

Stella Hardesty, a widow and survivor of domestic violence, who owns a sewing shop in a sleepy Missouri town.  Thankfully Stella lives in a small town where while people may ignore the problems they know what the problems.  So after Stella gets off after killing her husband in "self-defence" after years of physical and mental abuse.  She needs more than the sewing shop to keep her mind occupied.

Stella believes that she needs to help battered women like she was as a form of redemption for putting up with Ollie much too long and as an avenging angel dispatching retribution on these bullies. Stella keeps an eye on Roy Dean Shaw, ex mean ass husband of gentle mom Chrissy Shaw. When Roy Dean abducts Chrissy's two years old son Tucker, Stella decides this punk needs a permanent lesson in how to treat a lady. She affirms her feelings about this abusive moron when she learns he is part of the stolen auto parts mob. Chrissy, upset with his taking her infant, has had enough. As Sheriff Goat Jones watches Stella with his dreamy eyes, she hopes it is for her body and not her activity as she leads Chrissy into hell as they team up to take care of Roy Dean and his car ring associates to rescue the baby from the mob.

I'm not sure how I heard about this book but the title definitely intrigued me.  But it was a lot more to it than this kind of glib cover suggests.  It appears there is a sequel so I'm looking forward to it.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Twenties Girl by Sophie Kinsella

Lara has always had an overactive imagination. Now she wonders if she is losing her mind. Normal twenty-something girls just don’t get visited by ghosts! But inexplicably, the spirit of Lara’s great aunt Sadie – in the form of a bold, demanding Charleston-dancing girl – has appeared to make one last request: Lara must track down a missing necklace Sadie simply can’t rest without.


Lara’s got enough problems of her own. Her start-up company is floundering, her best friend and business partner has run off to Goa, and she’s just been dumped by the love of her life.

But as Lara spends time with Sadie, life becomes more glamorous and their treasure hunt turns into something intriguing and romantic. Could Sadie’s ghost be the answer to Lara’s problems and can two girls from different times end up learning something special from each other?

Great fun, and reminded me of Topper which was one of my favorite childhood movies and series.  I will say that the reader of the book on CD was able to make the most shrill voice when Sadie would do her yelling to make herself heard moments.  Even I wanted to do what she wanted just so she would shut up! 

Sophie Kinsella really does a good job writting comedic British romances.  If you like ghost stories that aren't scary crossed with Bridget Jones's Diary then this is the right book for you.

Thursday, June 09, 2011

High Commisioner by Jon Cleary



Aussie detective-sergeant Scobie Malone accepts a mission to fly to London to arrest Sir James Quentin, a high level Australian commissioner wanted down under for murder. The High commission is discovered to have been living under an assumed name for over 22 years. He changed his name after his wife was murdered and he was the chief suspect.



But when Malone arrives, he finds that the amiable Quentin is not only the key in groundbreaking peace negotiations, but also the target of an assassin himself.  Malone's superiors give him permission to extend his trip for a week to allow Quentin to finish negotiating the peace conference. 

To even more complicate the situation Malone finds himself liking Quentin and doesn't believe that he really murdered his wife.  But if he didn't then who did?  The majority of the book is Malone trying to figure Quentin out while stopping several assassination attempts.

What drives the story is Malone's personal conflict that he has as a poor average Auggie living in the high end political life and trying to come to terms that while he'll always be a basic guy he does enjoy these finer things.  There are several back stories of the people who are trying to assassinate Quentin and the ending was a complete surprise.   This is set in current events of 1966's where the world is deciding the fate of the Vietnam insurgent.

I'm looking forward to reading others in this intriguing series.

Wednesday, June 01, 2011

Something Missing by Matthew Dicks

Martin is a thief, but a very particular type of thief. He calls his victims clients and spends months studying them before he considers putting them on his list.  But some of these clients he has been stealing from them for years and almost thinks of them as friends. 

Most of what he steals are normal staples - groceries and household supplies, etc.  But he also steals more monetary items such as silver, diamonds, crystal etc. The way he approaches it is almost ingenious as he has a game plan on what he steals from each client.  It depends on what he needs and how much the client has in stock! (he steals towels from two different `clients' to make up his own set) He makes massively lengthy lists, plans and timetables. He is a master at planning, he has every base covered, or does he?

Things start to get complicated when Martin is almost caught in one of his oldest client's home.  He plays cupid with the husband and all his careful planning starts to unravel but it honestly makes him a better person for it.

I read a bookreview about one of Matthew Dicks' newer book and the concept of an OCD thief intrigued me.  I was amazed how much I enjoyed it.  If you are looking for a different type of novel than this is the book for you.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Unfinished Clue by Georgette Heyer

Sir Arthur Billington-Smith is not a nice person: he is arrogant, opinionated, and abusive. His verbal abuse makes life a constant misery for his hapless wife, Fay. One truly awful weekend when Fay is trying to host a house party, Arthur's son and heir, Geoffrey, brings home Lola de Silva, a Mexican cabaret dancer who is wonderfully obtuse, vastly colorful, and totally unsuitable as a future Lady Billington-Smith. Arthur is absolutely incensed and takes his rage out on everyone. Therefore, when he is found stabbed to death in his study later in the day, all those in the house become suspects.

Set during the 1930's - it was written in 1934 it has that feel of an Agatha Christie mystery.  I never really thought of Heyer as being a modern mystery writer as she is known for her Gothic romances. White it was a fun kind of historical look at the time, there was nothing really remarkable or memorable. The cover made it look better than it was for me.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Grave Secrets by Charlaine Harris

After doing a job for the wealthy Joyce family, Harper and Tolliver face their toughest challenge yet: telling super-rigid Aunt Iona, Uncle Hank and their younger half-sisters that they're a couple. It doesn't help that this town is also where they lived as the abused blended family of neglectful junkies, and where Harper's beloved sister Cameron mysteriously vanished. As if their family relations weren't strained enough, Tolliver's creepy dad Matthew appears in town, claiming he wants to mend fences.

At the same time, Harper has been hired by the Joyces to find a missing baby that may be their grandfather's secret love child -- but someone is determined to keep her from finding it. People around her are getting injured, kidnapped and murdered -- even Tolliver has been shot. And as Harper tries to unravel the mysteries from years ago, she realizes that the Joyce family has a long-ago link to her own.

Sadly this seemed to be the conclusion to the series as we finally find out wha thapped to their sister, Cameron.  But it was still a shock plus this was really the only time we got to see other family members and see the real decay.  While her Shakespear series will always be my favorite this has become my 2nd favorite of her and I will miss it.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Death of a Cozy Writer by G.M. Malliet

Adrian Beauclerk-Fisk is a writer of cozy British mysteries, and he's also an absolute beast. Pompous, phony, and cruel to his family, frequently changing his will in favor of whichever of his children has momentarily pleased him (or displeased him the least), he decides to have some real fun by inviting his four children to his wedding. They are aghast of course, seeing a threat to their inheritances, but they all head toward his manor, figuratively attempting to elbow their way into his favor and hopefully talk him out of this marriage to an obvious gold digger. (It takes one to know one!)

Then Sir Adrian drops the bombshell that his marriage is a done deal, that he and Violet are already man and wife and that his will has (yet again) been changed--but he doesn't say how. Shortly thereafter, Sir Adrian's eldest child Ruthven is brutally murdered, and it's not long before he follows his son to the afterlife. Just about everyone has motive to kill one or another of them, so who dunnit?

This felt like one of classic who done it written by Agatha Christie with lots of red hearings and a pretty good twist at the end.  Unfortunately I got rather annoyed by the clever dialog that I felt distracted from a pretty good mystery.  I also didn't feel connected to the main characters - Detective Inspector St. Just and Sergeant Fear as they felt kind of superfiscial.  Maybe I should try another as I believe there are several Malliet has written.  I felt like I should have liked it more than I really did. 
Stalking Susan by Julie Kramer


Two cold cases spark a hot story for flailing TV reporter Riley Spartz. Although she's as driven and fast-driving as any of her competitors, she's been sidelined by more than ratings. Her Minnesota state trooper husband was killed in the line of duty, a tragedy that has caused Spartz to take time off just when she should be renegotiating her contract.

Then a friendly source, an ex-homicide cop, drops a potential story in her lap. It concerns a possible serial killer who has already killed two young women named Susan on the exact same date, one year apart. The problem is, those murders were years ago, and Spartz must dig through databases to see if the killings have continued and if other young women are at risk. The all-important November ratings are coming up, as is the anniversary of the murders, and Spartz must take seriously her contact's hunch--that the killer could be a cop.

I had read a review of this series and it looked fun so thought I would give it a try. It gave a different perspective into TV mysteries as it comes from the point of view of a reporter as well as a network who is looking for next big scoop. Riley has to balance between finding out the truth and getting the ratings needed to keep her job.  We find out what makes her tick as see the death of her husband through her flashbacks.  It gives her an interesting point of view.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Ice Cold Grave by Charlaine Harris


3rd in the series featuring Harper Connelly (who finds dead bodies) and her stepbrother Tolliver

For the past several years six boys of a similar age have gone missing in the town of Doraville, North Carolina. The previous Sheriff seemed to turn a blind eye or even investigate their disappearances, claiming they were probably runaways or suicides. The new sheriff, who was deputy under the old sheriff, has always thought something was wrong. But she has run out of leads and ideas on how to locate the boys. 

Harper is brought into the picture by Twyla, the grandmother of one of the missing boys and is willing to try anything at this point. She convinces the sheriff and the other townspeople to hire and give Harper a chance. It isn't long before Harpers gifts are proven right but instead of one body - 8 total are discovered - all missing boys from the town and local areas.  Now the town has a serial killer on their hands and the truth is even more horrifying than anyone ever imagined.

The story gets even more complicated when Harper is attacked and has to be hospitilized.  Both only want to leave town but are unable to do so until Harper is stable enough to travel.  This is by far the best book of the series.  We see more development between Harper & Tolliver and see how complicated their familiy life is for them.

I've really enjoyed Charlaine Harris' books over the years and this series has been a lot of fun to read.  I find myself liking her non-Sookie Stackhouse books better and hope she continues to write more.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Pride & Prejudice by Nancy Butler, Hugo Petrus, artist ; Alejandro Torres, colorist ; Dave Shapre, letterer ; adapted from the novel by Jane Austen.

Writer Nancy Butler and artist Hugo Petrus capture the essentials of Miss Jane Austen's classic romance in graphic novel format. Inevitably, the storyline has been compressed, and the dialogue was been slightly modernized, but fans should have no problem recognizing the story of the Bennets, the Bingleys, and Mr. Darcy. The best of the dialogue has been preserved while giving us a graphic presentation of a classic. 

I did enjoy this graphic novel version as it captured the essence of what makes this classic timeless and so good.  Hopefully this will bring this story to a new age of readers.

Thursday, May 05, 2011

Attachments by Rainbow Rowell

The story begins with Lincoln feeling like he's somehow trespassing into his co-workers lives as the IT Security Office watchdog. His job requires him to monitor the email going in and out of the newspaper office for red flag warnings issued through the Webfence mail filters. Two non-politically correct co-workers in particular, Jennifer and Beth, catch his attention and he begins to feel as if he knows them. Now understand this was in the late-90's when email was just becoming part of the corporate culture.  I remember when I started in libraries and we had to sign all kinds of documents stating we wouldn't use our email for personal use and it would be monitored. 

Best newsroom pals Beth and Jennifer trade gossip over their romances—Beth with her marriage-phobic boyfriend, Chris, and Jennifer with her baby-mania-stricken husband, Mitch. Lincoln becomes intrigued by their emails and can't stop himself reading them though he neglects to send warnings or report them. Things become interesting when Beth sends an email to Jennifer about 'my cute guy'. It dawns on Lincoln that Beth is talking about him!

Now he has to wrestle with the dilemma of trying to find out what she looks like, where her desk is and feeling like a peeping tom into Beth and Jennifer's lives. This turn of events makes him feel even more disgusted with the progress of his own life, unable to move on after his girlfriend, Sam, broke his heart. His job is boring, his social life consists of playing Dungeons & Dragons on Saturday nights with old college friends and to make matters worse he begins to wonder about his ethics as a result of the email peeping.

You can't help but want to read to the end to find out what really happens to everyone.  Now I read this book because the author is a former Omaha World Herald reporter and my mom was very excited about this book coming out.  I have to say I'm glad that I read it.  I did find it interesting that Rainbow never lists it being Omaha or the paper's name but does list the Indian Hills movie theater that was torn down in 2001.  Reading more about it the Omaha World Herald was one of the driving forces behind it's demolition - this was where Rainbow worked.  I remember seeing many movies in that theater which was a single theater and held 100's of people.   So it brought back those memories.

The book was insightful and funny and made me nostalgic for when I first started using email.

Sunday, May 01, 2011

Obsidian prey by Jayne Castle (aka Jayne Ann Krentz)

This is the sixth installment in Castle/Krentz's Harmony series which has links to Krentz's Arcane society books with psychic abilities and in common ancestors.

The Dores were famous for their luck bad luck, that is and Lyra is a true Dore. Three months ago, she located an ancient amethyst ruin deep in the rain forest on planet Harmony, but she was swindled out of her claim by the CEO of Amber, Inc., Cruz Sweetwater, the man Lyra just happened to be dating at the time.  Though she didn't know it as he used a fake name.  Hence their big breakup.

Now Cruz needs Lyra to help free some of his employees, who have become trapped in the ruin. Cruz is the last person in the world Lyra wants to help, but she isn't about to let five people suffer just because their boss is a jerk. Working with Cruz proves to be a bit difficult, though, once Lyra discovers Cruz believes she is his true love, and that he now wants her back in his life, for good.

I've been reading her books set in Harmony for about 15 years and it was nice to read one that is back to the fun yet somewhat suspenseful romance atmosphere. 
Dark of the Moon by John Sandford

Featuring Virgil Flowers
Headed to rural Bluestem to assist local law enforcement with the seemingly motiveless murder of an elderly couple, Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension investigator Virgil Flowers happens upon a raging house fire on the edge of town. The house's owner, Bill Judd, killed in the blaze, was an elderly recluse who, back in the day, ran an elaborate pyramid scheme and simultaneously bedded half the women in town. He escaped conviction on the fraud charge, and the money was never recovered.

There have been no murders in Bluestem for a half-century, and now there are three in a couple weeks. Virgil is not an advocate of coincidence and so begins digging for a connection between the victims. Complicating matters is his affair with the sister of the local police chief.

Flowers is part of the Sandford's Prey series but not a major characters. It is nice to see him the main focus of this new series.

I listened to this on CD and while I'm not a major fan of John Sandford I do like him for a change of pace.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Gateway by Sharon Sinn

When Daiyu, a St. Louis high school student adopted as a baby from China, lives an ordinary life - she is spending her summer volunteering and getting ready for high school to begin.  Then she purchases the ring, she is transported, not back in time – but to an alternate universe. The universe is a near replica in terms of geography to her home in St. Louis but the buildings and modes of transportation are different and the people all look Chinese, they speak an unknown language (which the ring enables her to understand). Daiyu learns that she has been called upon to complete a mission to send an evil leader back to his own universe. The only problem is that Daiyu likes him and cannot commit to the act.

I enjoyed this teen alternative reality novel.  It wasn't overly complicated but the issues that Daiyu deals with felt very real.  Is she allowed to have free will or is her fate already decided?  She is starting to forget the world she came from but finds her self caring little about that as she is falling in love with Kalen.  Kalen is a native boy who helps Daiyu adapt to this strange place.  But when by fate she actually accomplishes her mission there is little reason for her to stay so will she follow her heart and return to her parents and the world she knows or stay and make a life for herself with Kalen?   

One of my favorite movies is Made in Heaven starring Timothy Hutton and Kelly McGillis and the ending of this book reminded me a lot of this movie.  Not a great teen book but a decent one and maybe it will open a new world to teens who only want to read vampire books.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Beekeeper's Apprentice: or on the Segregation of the Queen by Laurie R. King

Featuring Sherlock Holmes and Mary Russell

In the early years of WW I, 15-year-old American Mary Russell encounters Holmes, retired in Sussex Downs where Conan Doyle left him raising bees. Mary, an orphan rebelling against her guardian aunt's strictures, impresses the sleuth with her intelligence and acumen. Holmes initiates her into the mysteries of detection, allowing her to participate in a few cases when she comes home from her studies at Oxford. The collaboration is ignited by the kidnapping in Wales of Jessica Simpson, daughter of an American senator. The sleuthing duo find signs of the hand of a master criminal, and after Russell rescues the child, attempts are made on their lives (and on Watson's), with evidence piling up that the master criminal is out to get Holmes and all he holds dear. 

Now I know that I am biased as I'm a huge Sherlock Holmes fan and have tried out various series out there that feature Sherlock Holmes but still find this one of my favorite as he seems much more likable.  King does an excellent job of tying in the original stories and then adapting her characters to fill in the gaps.  I've read this one several times and it always seems as fresh as the first time I read it years ago.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by J.K. Rowling

The novel opens with Harry living under the cupboard with aunt and uncle. He has had a mean, depressed life, but has no joy or love for his life. He is basically a male version of Cinderella. Just before his 11th birthday he gets a letter (actually, hundreds) saying he is in fact a wizard. After the Dursleys try to hide him away a giant man, named Hagrid, finds him on his birthday and takes him to a new and wondrous life. As he goes through platform 9 and 3/4 he meets Ron and Hermione who will be his best friends.  He also meets Malfoy who will be one of his greatest foes.

Before he goes to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, Harry, along with his new friend the giant Hagrid, go to Diagon Alley, a magical bazaar. Harry discovers that he is really famous among wizards for conquering an evil Wizard named Vo - um - He Who Must Not Be Named. Along the way, we learn that Voldemort is after a magical artifact called the Sorcerer's Stone (which was, unfortunately, changed from the UK original title of Philosopher's Stone" in all other regions). 

In this novel we get the first ever glimpses of Hogwarts, Voldemort, Quidditch, Dumbledore, Severus Snape, muggles, the Forbidden Forest, the Invisibility Cloak, and any other number of thins Rowling's magical confectionery of an imagination has cooked up for us.
I remember reading this book in early 1999 and being amazed by how fun it was to read and incredulous that the Phoenix library had to import a British edition for us to read.  I've have read this book so many times and especially love hearing it read by Jim Dale.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

No Good Deeds by Laura Lippman

Tess's boyfriend, Edgar "Crow" Ransome, brings home for the night a homeless teenager, Lloyd, who slashed Crow's tires outside a Baltimore soup kitchen. During dinner Tess suspects that Lloyd has information regarding the recent murder of Assistant U.S. Attorney Gregory Youssef.  After peeling the story out of Lloyd Tess gives his story, sans name, to the local paper, so the authorities will get it secondhand.

this causes a ripple affect as suddenly a fellow street kid of Lloyd's is murdered and it causes Lloyd to panic as only he knows the connection.  Tess starts to get visits from a sinister trio of law enforcement agents avid to know her source. Crow decides that it would be in Lloyd's best interest for them both to disappear and flees with Lloyd while Tess suffers growing pressure, including the threat of federal jail time.

We read the story as it goes back and forth between Tess & Crow with a couple of side chapters from 2 of the bad guys. Tess is one of my favorite series and I always relish her books.  This story wasn't particularily complicated as it focused more on how choosing your path can really affect one's future.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

666 Park Avenue by Gabriella Pierce

It seems like magic when Jane Boyle finds herself falling in love with fabulously wealthy American Malcolm Doran.  After just a month he proposes and she accepts and decides to move to New York to be with him and his family.  But before she can leave she takes him to meet her superstitious, overprotective grandmother.  Jane is an orphan raised in the rural Alsace region of France by her grandmother and she moved to Paris to study architecture. When they find her grandmother deceased Jane isn't really upset as she was not close to her grandmother but upon getting ready for the funneral finds an envelope with her name on it that contain a mysterious letter from her grandmother and a silver ring that changes everything.

Jane discovers that she has magical powers and that she's a witch from a long line of witches!  She decides to continue her plan of going to New York and marring Malcolm.  But when she meets Malcolm's family, one of the oldest and most powerful in New York, she discovers that nothing is as it seems and starts to question if her love of Malcolm is even real.  She quickly discovers that her magic will be useless against them, especially Malcolm's very intimidating mother, Lynne. But as her wedding day gets closer, Jane discovers that there's more to the Dorans than she thought, and her magic might be the only thing that will save her.

Fun, light read that gave another element to a supernatural romance.  I did like how the ending was left open and felt much more real than I expected as Jane has to decide to either go on her own or run away with Malcolm.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Devotion of Suspect X by Keigo Higashino; translated by Alexander O. Smith with Elye J. Alexander

Meticulous high-school math teacher Ishigami frequents the modest box-lunch shop Benten-tei because of his crush on Yasuko Hanaoka, a young mother who works there. Yonazawa and his wife Sayoko, who manage the shop, speculate regularly about Ishigami's visits, but Yasuko seems oblivious to his attention. Although she and her daughter Misato are Ishigami's apartment building neighbors, they've never spoken outside of the shop.

But when divorcee Yasuko Hanaoka is forced to kill her abusive ex-husband in defense of her daughter, Ishigami offers his help to dispose of the body and provide an alibi based on "perfect defense based on perfect logic," his plot to save her from arrest. As the police investigation proceeds, Ishigami isolated world is broken as detective Kusanagi reports going to college with him.  He mentions this to physicist Manabu Yukawa while playing chess and this prompts Yukawa to reconnect with Ishigami. Thus begins a intrigute cat and mouse dance.

Meanwhile Yasuko's past comes in the form of wealthy Mr. Kudo who used to visit her when she worked at a bar.  He has found her at her new job and works at winning Yasuko's heart but will her conscience to Yukawa allow herself to fall in love? 

As the police chip away at the alibi, it is slowly revealed that the math genius' devotion to Yasuko is based not only on love but also on the purity of committing the perfect crime. Yasuko has to remain a pawn to the math teacher's plan, but she wonders how long and how far he will go.

Higashino won Japan's Naoki Prize for Best Novel with this stunning thriller about miscarried human devotion, a bestseller in Japan.  Wow, was this an intense book.  Reminds of the Alfred Hitchcock movies where you just didn't know where the story would take you.  The ending chapters kept me guessing and had me gasping as the real story unfolded.  I think this may be one of the best books I've read so far this year.