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Wednesday, February 23, 2022

 Finished: The Overnight Guest (Gudenkauf) A pretty good page-turner about a triple homicide that happened on a farm twenty years earlier, leaving twelve year old Josie without her parents or brother. The story is told in the present day time and in the twenty years past time...and is also told by a third viewpoint, that of a little girl who is apparently being held captive with her mother in a basement and has been all her life. There are lots of twists and turns, while the current day crime author, Wylie, who is staying at the remote farm cabin where it all went down, is trying to finish her latest book. With a huge snow storm hitting, Wylie heads out to load up her firewood and finds a small child nearly frozen to death in the snow and takes him into the cabin to warm him up. When he wakes up, he is terribly uncommunicative and frightened and some of the twists start falling into place, but not necessarily how you think they will. :-) 

Wednesday, February 16, 2022

Finished: Black Cake (Wilkerson) One of those books that I truly enjoyed, whose characters I want to sit with awhile, so I'm going to be very lazy and paste the Amazon blurb here. I will say that I really loved the friendship of Covey and Bunny as they grew up on their Caribbean island, learning to long distance swim and always having each other's backs. I love that the book is really Covey's story, but we also get enough of Bunny's, Byron's, Benny's and Marble's stories to grow attached and, more importantly, attach them all together. And, of course, I'd love to taste that black cake!! :-) 

From Amazon:

We can’t choose what we inherit. But can we choose who we become?


In present-day California, Eleanor Bennett’s death leaves behind a puzzling inheritance for her two children, Byron and Benny: a traditional Caribbean black cake, made from a family recipe with a long history, and a voice recording. In her message, Eleanor shares a tumultuous story about a headstrong young swimmer who escapes her island home under suspicion of murder. The heartbreaking tale Eleanor unfolds, the secrets she still holds back, and the mystery of a long-lost child, challenge everything the siblings thought they knew about their lineage, and themselves.

Can Byron and Benny reclaim their once-close relationship, piece together Eleanor’s true history, and fulfill her final request to “share the black cake when the time is right”? Will their mother’s revelations bring them back together or leave them feeling more lost than ever?

Charmaine Wilkerson’s debut novel is a story of how the inheritance of betrayals, secrets, memories, and even names, can shape relationships and history. Deeply evocative and beautifully written, Black Cake is an extraordinary journey through the life of a family changed forever by the choices of its matriarch. 



Tuesday, February 8, 2022

 Finished: The White Ship (Spencer) Historical non-fiction telling of the tragic sinking of the White Ship, the ship in King Henry I's royal fleet that was carrying his only legitimate son and heir to the throne, seventeen year old William, when it crashed into a rock soon after setting sail from Normandy heading back home to England, killing everyone aboard except a butcher. The story begins with William's grandfather, William the Conqueror and his successful conquest of the English crown. Having four sons among his children, Henry was the fourth son with little chance of becoming king. We read the complicated history of all the sons and the deaths and wars that finally lead to Henry's chance to grab the throne and become King Henry I. King Henry has one daughter and one son with his wife (and at least twenty illegitimate children). After suffering the trials of being one of four brothers battling for the same lands and crown all his life, he decides one legitimate son and heir is plenty, and does not press his wife to have more children. Henry prepares his son to become the king and has already announced William as the heir to the throne when the tragedy strikes. After a successful campaign in Normandy, Henry and all his noblemen and knights, along with much of the younger generation of those nobleman, peers of William's, prepare to set sail back home to England. King Henry goes ahead on the first ship, while many of his faithful noblemen and almost all of that younger generation, board a different ship, the White Ship, a few hours later in the dark. The crash is harrowing, and as told by the the surviving butcher, William was spirited off in a lifeboat by his guards, and was headed to shore when he insisted they turn back for one of his step-sisters who was screaming for his help. When the boat turned back, it was quickly overtaken by panicking people trying to climb aboard and capsized with all aboard perishing. King Henry goes into a terrible grief, but also realizes the precarious situation the future of his crown is in. Henry's wife, Matilda of Scotland, had died two years prior, so Henry marries as quickly as possible to try and produce another male heir. His attempts prove to be futile. In the last years of his life he takes oaths from all his trusted nobleman that they will support his next choice for the throne, his daughter, also called Matilda. When King Henry finally does die, the years following his death 1135-1153 become known as the Anarchy, as Matilda goes to war with Henry's nephew, Stephen of Blois, for the thrown. After years of bloody war, Stephen's unimpressive turn as king, and Matilda's various unsuccessful rallies for the thrown, a peace pact is finally reached between Stephen and Matilda assuring that Matilda's son, Henry, will become Stephen's official heir to the thrown, his own son having already died. So, with the crowning of King Henry II, the book comes to a close as the House of the Plantagenets is ushered into England. It's a very well told story if you like the historical telling of England's royal history by the piecing together of accounts from many witnesses and historians from the time. :-)

Friday, February 4, 2022

 Finished: His and Hers (Feeney) A page-turning whodunnit told in alternating chapters from the viewpoint of Anna, a reporter who lives in London and has been subbing for the anchor at her BBC station for the last two years, and the viewpoint of Jack, a detective who has gone back to his small hometown in England after a divorce two years prior. Oh, and Anna is Jack's ex-wife. They were happily married with a three month old daughter when they lost her to a tragic "cot death" while Anna's mother was babysitting. Their marriage could not survive the tragedy. When a woman is murdered in Jack's hometown, which, of course, turns out to also be Anna's hometown the story turns into a wild ride as we hear everything from their two viewpoints and as they both at one point or another become suspects. When another woman turns up dead, we begin to hear about the history between all the characters going back to high school, and it's a doozy. Oh, did I tell you that in the midst of the His and Hers chapters we also have chapters from the killer's viewpoint? We just don't know who that killer is until the very end! So many twists and turns in this book. I loved it and will say no more about it to avoid spoilers. :-) 

Saturday, January 29, 2022

 Finished: The Mercies (Hargrave) A very good, chilling story based on real life events off the small coastal town of Vardo in the northernmost territory of Norway known as Finnmark. In 1617 a sudden, deadly storm breaks out on the seas, just outside the harbor of Vardo, killing all 40 of the men who lived in the town. Every woman in Vardo loses a husband, father, son or betrothed as the merciless storm takes them all down. Twenty year old Maren watches in shock, along with the other towns-women, as her father, her brother and her betrothed all go down with their boats. The women barely know what to do with their grief, much less how to survive in this world where the men had always provided the food and shelter. One brave woman, Kirsten, rallies the other women and tells them they must take over the duties of the men if they want to eat, to survive. Though the district has sent a male clergyman to guide them, he is very passive and doesn't believe the women should go out in fish, but depend on God's will for survival. Several of the women, Maren included, go with Kirsten as they catch fish enough for the town on their first outing, and continue to provide food for everyone...even those women who believe that by doing so they are close to performing sorcery. There is a divided belief in the town: those who believe in God and religiously attend the kirke (church), and those who believe more in the natural spirits of nature, for example, calling upon runes to bring a safe wind for their fishermen. Maren's sister-in-law, Dinna, is one of those women. She is from a group of people known as the Sami, and she is looked down upon by the other women as unholy. She has lost her husband, Maren's brother, in the storm and has just given birth to his son. She is a strong woman, but in despair without her husband. Still, she refuses to attend the kirke or to bond with the other women of the town. The women have begun to have a rhythm of survival and self-reliance when a commissioner is assigned to their town. He is to come and be the voice of reason and law. His name is Absalom Cornet and he brings with him a young Norwegian wife, Ursa, who he has just recently married and barely knows. Ursa is ripped from the only home she's ever known, and from her very ill sister and widowed father because her father thinks this will be a good marriage for her, and specifically, because he thinks it will bring the highborn family some much needed financial assistance since his own inadequate business dealings have left them nearly broke. As actually happened in the 1600's in Norway, Commissioner Cornet is really being sent to Vardo on a witch hunt. King Christian IV, having not much influence in the worldwide politics, set his sights on "cleaning up" his own country, starting with what he considered to be the untamed territory of Finnmark in the north. As the commissioner begins to wield his religious influence and power, the town's women further divide with the religious zealots reduced to actually accusing neighbors they have known all their lives of witchcraft. Maren and Kirsten are already close friends, but Maren worries for Kirsten's safety, and that of her sister-in-law, as the noose tightens around the necks of  "those who are named" by others. Ursa befriends Maren and they strike up a very deep bond, one that neither of them saw coming. They are comforted by each other and protective of each other. When Ursa tells Maren that Dinna has been "named" to her husband, Maren rushes to warn Dinna, and she escapes in the night with her young son just hours before Absalom and his men come for her. That doesn't slow him down, though. His next stop is Kirsten's house. :-( Maren insists on going to speak on behalf of Kirsten, but Ursa begs her not to, saying there is nothing that can stop the mob now and if she speaks on her behalf, she will endanger herself. It's an awful time of terror and disbelief for everyone in the town, to have not only lost their families, but to now be losing all control of their own lives. The book is so well written and the characters so vivid. I was emotionally attached to Kirsten and Maren and Ursa, and I was in horror of the women who had the ear of the commissioner and turned on the other women so easily. The book has a tragic ending as Kirsten and another woman are burned alive. Maren and Ursa have finally discovered a love they never knew could exist in each other, but then Maren is "named" and must flee the town. Before she can flee, Absalom realizes what is between his wife and Maren and, enraged, he storms to Maren's house and begins to drown Maren in a tub. Ursa hits him over the head (more the once lol) with a stone rolling pin and kills him! Ursa begs to go with Maren, but she convinces her to go home and report her husband missing the next morning. When they finally find him dead at Maren's, she will be long gone and will assume that Maren killed him. Ursa, now a widow, would be free to go home to her father and sister as she has truly always wanted. Though they have found love with each other, Ursa and Maren will be separated, but safe to live on. 

Thursday, January 27, 2022

 Finished: These Silent Woods (Grant) For eight years a father and daughter have lived alone in a remote cabin in the Appalachian Mountains. Cooper takes his daughter there when she's just an infant after his wife dies and her parents, an influential judge and his wealthy wife, try to take Finch away from him by invoking the PTSD he has struggled with since ending his 4th tour in Afghanistan. Cooper realizes that his inlaws will win and he will lose his daughter, so he takes drastic, illegal measures which then requires him to hide away with Finch for as long as he can. The only person who knows where Cooper and Finch are is Cooper's best friend and Army mate, Jake, who owns the cabin, and whose life Cooper saved in Afghanistan. Jake comes once a year and delivers groceries and supplies so that Cooper and Finch don't have to go into town to the store and risk being recognized. In addition, a mysterious, crusty man, Scotland, who lives nearby in the wilderness also knows that Cooper and Finch are there. Scotland always shows up so quietly that Cooper never sees him coming, but Scotland lets Cooper know that he knows what he's running from with clippings from the newspaper. However, Scotland adores Finch and so would really do whatever he can to protect them both, not expose them. Finch is smart as a whip and reads all the books in the cabin. She's an excellent little outdoors-woman, and an passionate animal lover. She and Cooper also have a signal and a plan for hiding in case any strangers drive up to the cabin. When Jake fails to arrive promptly on December 14, his designated annual date to come, Cooper fears the worst...that Jake has finally succumbed to the horrific injuries he suffered in Afghanistan. When Jake's sister, Marie, arrives with instructions from Jake to please fill the supply list and take it to the cabin, Cooper's and Finch's fears are realized. They are devastated at the loss of their friend, and quickly grow attached to Marie, and she to them. When an actual tragedy occurs with a teenager from the town and her body is discovered in the woods too close to the cabin, everything turns upside down. Soon the authorities are scouring the woods to figure out what happened to her. The prose in the book is beautifully written as we learn more and more about each character the further the story goes. We flashback to Cooper's time in Afghanistan when Jake is nearly mortally wounded but Cooper saves his life. Cooper feels terribly guilty and when the PTSD sets in once he's back home and he draws a gun in a diner, when he thinks he sees to "bad guys" come in the door, the town who has hailed him as a hero since he's been home, is now afraid of him. When Cindy, the girl he feels is way above his station, actually loves him back and they begin to live together when she becomes pregnant and her aforementioned parents won't accept the relationship, Cooper is the happiest he's ever been. Tragically, when Finch is 4 months old, Cindy grabs his arm when he's driving one day so he'll avoid a deer that has run into the road, and the car rolls, killing Cindy. Marie, is a lonely soul who discovers that her husband of several years has cheated on her, so they are newly divorced when she meets Cooper and Finch. She's not quite ready for another relationship, but as things turn dire with the search for the town girl, she and Cooper bond even closer and do end up together. And, we find out that Scotland, who Cooper is suspicious of for the eight years he knows them, is such a loner because he lost his own wife and daughter in a car accident when he was driving. He makes a huge sacrifice at the end of the story so Cooper and Finch can be safely together without having to look over their shoulders for the rest of their lives. I kept waiting for some huge revelation because the book was touted as a thriller, but what it really was was the story of four broken people and an amazing little girl, all trying to make the best of their lives given the hands they were dealt. 

Sunday, January 23, 2022

 Finished: Labyrinth (Mosse) In 2005, during an archaeological in the Pyrenees Mountains in France, a volunteer named Alice uncovers a hidden cave which contains a mysterious labyrinth, two graves, an ancient ring, and a pouch that is thought to have contained one of the three sacred books (The Book of Words, The Book of Numbers, and The Book of Potions). The startling discovery leads Alice on a dangerous adventure where she meets all the descendants of the people who have been looking for the books for centuries. Some want them for good, and some want them for nefarious reasons. The books, when used together, hold hieroglyphic codes that will apparently lead to the Holy Grail. Alice is also haunted by vivid dreams that take her back to another place and time where she is almost reliving the experiences of another person. In 1209, seventeen year old Alais, the daughter of the right hand man of the viscount of the same area in France, is on an adventure of her own. The Crusades have begun. The "host", army, created by the Catholic priests and the wealthy landowners, has been created to rid the world of all the religious heretics. As the wars move closer to her town, Carcassonne, Alais is told by her father of the three books, their importance, and how he is one of five official keepers of the books. He's got the Book of Words in his possession and he knows who safeguards the other two. He fears the books will be lost in the wars so Alais volunteers to be the next generation of guardians for The Book of Words. The story goes back and forth between current day and the 1200's as both Alice and Alais, obviously distant relatives, take their dangerous journeys to either find and protect (in present day) or hide and protect (centuries ago) the books. In the end, we find out who wins the ultimate battle of the good guys or the bad guys, who the skeletons in the cave belonged to, and the location of the missing book from the cave. A really good book given to me by my son for Christmas. He knows how to pick a good story for me! :-) 

Friday, January 14, 2022

 Finished: 56 Days (Howard) A very good, page-turning book about two Dubliners who meet in a food mart line just days before the country goes into lockdown due to the first round of Covid. They have two dates before the announcement and they spontaneously decide to move in together for the two week lockdown. What better way to get to know each other? Ciera is 25 and seems to be very unsure of herself. Oliver, 29, is more outgoing, but is guarded for his own reasons. One of them is hiding a murderous past! What transpires during the lockdown is told from their perspectives counting down from 56 days prior to the present day, AND from the perspective of a detective who is called to the scene of an apartment where a body is found decomposing. Not just an apartment...the one they were sharing. The story is fast-paced with information revealed at each turn. One huge twist caught me by surprise in the end, just when I thought I'd figured things out. :-) Also, having the story occur during the pandemic was very surreal, but also very interesting to see it spelled out in story form...exactly what we all went through at the beginning, and many continue to go through even now. Great book!! 

Monday, January 10, 2022

 Finished: Never (Follett) A haunting story about just how easy it would be for World War III to begin with the launching of nuclear weapons. A myriad of characters are intertwined in the story in various parts of the world, trying to prevent the "smaller" skirmishes that could potentially lead to nuclear war. Tamara is a CIA agent stationed in Chad, along with her French counterpart, Tab. Their current mission is to keep track of their American spy, Abdul, who is trying to infiltrate the jihadists in north Africa to determine the hiding place of the current number one terrorist. Abdul sets off on a bus full of terrified local citizens who have put their trust in an unscrupulous man who has promised to smuggle them to the Mediterranean where they then hope to flee to Europe. On this dangerous journey, not only does Abdul track a shipment of cocaine that they assume is headed to the jihadist leader, he also falls for the newly widowed local mother, Kiah who, with her toddler son, has put all her trust in the people smuggler. Tamara and Tab must also  deal with mounting tensions between Chad and Sudan. Meanwhile, China's top spy and close presidential advisor, Chang Kai, is embroiled in his own political doings, mainly trying to keep the old guard of the communist Chinese at bay, as they constantly want to use their nuclear weapons at the slightest provocation. Kai is in contact with fellow spies in America, North Korea and South Korea as he is constantly stomping out fires and making more neutral, yet firm, suggestions for the president to follow. China is committed to North Korea and the United States is committed to South Korea. Any invasion of either of those countries by the other would almost require the two super powers to get involved, and then lead to the more dangerous war between them. So, of course, a rebel group begins to take over the bases in North Korea that host North Korea's nuclear weapons. Emboldened by that success, the South Korean president takes advantage and launches her own attack on North Korea. Meanwhile, in America, President Pauline Green is also trying her hardest to prevent the next World War. She's even-minded, but tough, as she tries to make the best decisions. When the rebels in North Korea send a nuclear missile to level a city in Japan, President Green finally has to retaliate despite a promise to China not to get American fire power involved in the war between North and South Korea. As the book progresses, the story shows how America goes from DEFCON 5 all the way to DEFCON 1. President Green uses nuclear weapons to wipe out all the remaining nuclear bases in North Korea, which prompts China to retaliate by sending a nuclear bomb to Hawaii. The books ends there before we actually see the total devastation of the human race. One of the few brights spots is that Abdul, Kiah and her son make it to France where they become a family, for whatever amount of time the world has left. :-( It's not my favorite Follett book, but did keep me reading until the end, thinking surely all those characters were going to prevent the nuclear war, and leaving me pretty shocked when they didn't. 

Friday, December 17, 2021

 Finished: We Have Always Lived In A Castle (Jackson) Eighteen year old Mary Katherine (Merricat) to her family, her twenty-something sister, Constance, and their Uncle Julian live in Blackwood, one of the old family estates in a small village. Six  years earlier the Blackwoods were one of the rich, upper echelon of the village with a massive estate and prestige. Until, one night the entire family was poisoned at dinner...the father, the mother, the aunt, the uncle and the 10 year old brother. The entire family died of arsenic poisoning, except for Uncle Julian, who didn't get enough of the poison, eldest daughter Constance, who cooked all the meals for the family and 12 year old Merricat, who'd been sent to bed without dinner for acting up. Six years later Merricat and Constance are town pariahs. Constance had been immediately arrested and tried, but found innocent of killing her family. Even though found innocent, though, the people of the village were all convinced she'd done it. Constance remained a recluse at home, her only joys working in her vast garden and cooking all the meals for their now small family of three. This left Merricat to walk into town once a week for the groceries and errands where she was mercilessly bullied by the children AND the adults of the town. It's truly very shameful the way all the adults treat her and other adults just laugh. No one stickes up for her. Merricat bravely makes this trip every week so that Constance doesn't have to go and face anyone in town. Merricat is very strange, with a wild imagination, beliefs that she can protect the boundaries of their home by burying different things in the ground, and she's very attached to Constance. When a cousin, Charles, comes knocking on the door, their very structured, odd existence is thrown completely out of whack, with dire consequences. And, we find out who poisoned the family. This was such an eerie book, but I couldn't put it down. I had to keep reading to see what would happen next, and when it was over, I wanted to know the backstory of what led up to the poisoning!!