"A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies. A man who never reads lives only once." Jojen - A Dance With Dragons
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
Finished: The Last Mile (Baldacci) The second book in the Amos Decker series, and another pretty good page-turner. In the first book about Amos Decker, Memory Man, we found out that Decker was an ex cop whose family had been brutally murdered. There were times when he himself was the suspect, but with the help of his perfect memory, and new friends, reporter Alex Jamison and FBI agent, Ross Bogart, Decker uncovered the true killer. Decker is a unique person, as he has suffered from both synesthesia (seeing numbers, etc. in colors) and hyperthymesia (he remembers every detail of every thing that he ever sees) ever since being hit with an extremely hard tackle in his one and only professional football game years ago. In the second book, Decker has accepted a job with Ross Bogart's new FBI special task force working on cold cases. Alex Jamison, the feisty female reporter has also been asked to join the task force. The case that captures Decker's attention is that of Melvin Mars, a man who has been on death row in Texas for killing his parents for the past twenty years. It is the day of Melvin's execution when, at the last minute, another death row inmate in another prison confesses to the crime! Melvin is pardoned and released, but until the authorities are convinced that the other inmate is telling the truth, he risks a chance of going back to prison. So, Melvin ends up working closely with Decker and company to figure out why the other inmate confessed, and eventually that he's not telling the truth. Once they figure that out, then Melvin is truly in danger of going back to prison, so a race ensues to find out why the other inmate lied and WHY there is someone out there who wants Melvin out of prison so badly. A story with lots of twists and turns is uncovered, including Melvin's father not really being dead after all (but his mother still is), and his father not even really being his father, but a hit man. At the time of their deaths, his mother and father had escaped some bad people and laid low. However, when Melvin was graduating from college as a star running back slated to go in the first five picks of the draft, then ESPN had done a story about him, and his parents' faces had been shown on television. The story goes so far as to be about Melvin's father and some of his close friends being responsible for a couple of bombings of black churches in the 1960's resulting in several deaths, including children. Melvin's father had been a racist, but after the bombings, had fallen in love with a beautiful black woman, Melvin's mother. He had stolen the evidence that the other friends had arrogantly kept of the bombings and kept it in a safety deposit box. All these years later, Melvin's faux father comes forward to Decker when he realizes that the bad guys will now come after Melvin, thinking he might know where the evidence is. He's still a nasty piece of work, but he does end up giving his life for Decker and Melvin in the end...as well as killing the old friends of his, one now a powerful congressman, and one a billionaire business man, responsible for all the trouble to begin with. In the process of the story, Decker and Melvin, two people with practically no one close to them in their lives, become friends! I hope that Melvin shows up in the next Amos Decker book. :-)
Thursday, March 9, 2017
Finished: Sugar Street (Mahfouz) The final book in The Cairo Trilogy about the family of Egyptian patriarch al-Sayyid Ahmad Abd al-Jawad. When the book starts, it's been five years since the happenings in the second book. Time has taken a toll on both al-Sayyid Ahmad, his wife, Amina, and their children, Yasin, Kamal, Khadija and Aisha. Amina and al-Sayyid are both aging, and al-Sayyid's heart is getting weaker and weaker. He still sees his same group of old friends, but when together, they lament how some of their friends have died...some being confined to their beds for months before doing so. The larger than life al-Sayyid does not want this fate for himself. However, he does end up confined to bed, the last of his friends to survive. Towards the end of the book, as the fingers of WWII reach into Egypt, he dies after surviving a frantic air raid. His heartbroken children and wife are with him as he dies and cannot believe the strong, vibrant, albeit severe, husband and father they knew is gone. Sadly, youngest daughter, Aisha's two young sons and husband did succumb to the typhoid fever they contracted at the end of the second book, and she has lived despondently back in her parents' home with her beautiful, teenage daughter, Na'ima since the tragedy, a haggard version of the beauty she used to be. Yasin, the oldest son, is still married to Zanuba and they have children Ridwan and Karima. As the years pass in this book, Ridwan gets his law degree and goes to work in a rather influential position in the government. Ridwan realizes that he is gay as a teenager and has a relationship with an older man, never explicitly detailed, but certainly implied. His cousins, Abd al-Muni'm and Ahmad, the sons of Khadija, are about his same age, and are as different from him as they are from each other. Abd al-Muni'm also gets his law degree and is devoutly religious and Ahmad is not a believer, but becomes a Socialist. The three cousins spend many hours debating the different politics of the day, though I must admit that my brain just can't wrap around all the Egyptian politics, kings, and different groups that want to show dissent. Abd al-Muni'm marries his cousin, Na'ima at a very young age, mostly to reconcile his carnal desires with his faith. Tragically, Na'ima dies in childbirth with their first child. Her death, of course, throws Aisha into an even bigger emotional turmoil. A few years later, Abd al-Muni'm remarries...this time to his cousin Karima, Ridwan's sister! Ahmad marries as well, an independent woman who works at the socialist magazine he writes for. Neither marriage is happy for very long as both sons are arrested during the trying times in Egypt for protesting against their government, just both in different ways. Khadija, al-Sayyid's oldest daughter, still rules the roost over her husband and two boys....until, as mentioned, the boys grow older and start developing their very own paths, neither of which represent the old ways that Khadija grew up with. She's despondent when her boys are sent to await a trial which they all feel will never come. Kamal, the youngest son of al-Sayyid and Amina, did follow his philosophical path and become a very respected teacher. He still struggles with questions of faith and morality and mostly whether or not he should surrender his freedom and shackle himself to a wife and children for the rest of his life....or continue his lonely existence, all the while being able to think all he wants, write all he wants and debate all he wants. He still spends far too much time in his own head. He does end up getting one chance at love when he's 36 years old, but talks himself out of it and remains the bachelor that he is. At the end of the book, Amina, their mother, finally passes away. Kamal, Khadija, Aisha, and Yasin, her stepson, are all bereaved and don't know how life or the house on Palace Walk will ever be the same. A pretty good book, but again, it delved far too deep into the politics of the time for me. I might try and read about those times to understand them better at some point, but for now, I would say what I got from the book was more about the personal relationships of the various family members with each other and their loved ones.
Friday, March 3, 2017
Finished: The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Stevenson) A much shorter book than I thought it would be! All I really knew about the story was what I've occasionally seen on television, and then the plot line of the stage show, which included a love interest I believe. Anyway, there was no woman in this story! There was just Dr. Jekyll, who apparently battled with his two different selves all his life. His true personality was good and carefree and mirthful. However, he felt like he should hide that personality and be reserved, holding his head up high and severe as his "station" would have him do. So, as he grew older, he wrestled more and more with the demons of men having two personalities within themselves. He wondered if he could create a chemical solution that would take one of the personalities out...and he finally did. Sadly, the person who prevailed was the evil side of him, who became known as Edward Hyde. Edward Hyde had no conscience and partook of very seedy behavior, catering to Jekyll's darker side which wanted to explore the base pleasures of life. When Hyde actually took an even crueler form by injuring a child, and then beating an innocent man to death, Jekyll decided to give up taking his solution. It was too late, however. Now, Jekyll was becoming Hyde without even taking the potion! It was becoming harder and harder for him to go back to being the kind Jekyll. Finally, with no other option, Jekyll kills himself while he's Hyde. All of this comes to light through letters written to Jekyll's lawyer and good friend, Mr. Utterson. He tells the tale, including his own interactions with both Jekyll and Hyde, and then also the information he finally gets from Jekyll himself in the form of a letter. Interesting book, kept my attention, but not my favorite by far.
Wednesday, March 1, 2017
Finished: End of Watch (King) The final book in the trilogy that began with Mr. Mercedes, the eerie book that began with psychopath Brady Hartsfield purposely running a stolen Mercedes into an early morning, financially desperate crowd standing in line for a job fair. Mr. Mercedes introduced us to retired cop Bill Hodges, who along with his quirky sidekicks, Holly and Jerome, figured out who Brady was, and then managed to stop him before he blew up a concert hall full of preteens gathered to see a popular boy band in concert...included in the crowd, Jerome's young sister, Barbara. Though they stopped him, they unfortunately didn't kill him...but left him so brain damaged that he's been in a semi-comatose state for the past six years in a brain institute. In the second book, Finders Keepers, Brady is not the focus of the story, but is living the life of a virtual vegetable in the institute while Hodges, Holly and Jerome cement their bond and investigative skills helping out the family of one of the job fair victims. By the time we get to End of Watch, Jerome is off building houses in Arizona with Habitat for Humanity and Hodges and Holly have opened their own detective agency, aptly called Finders Keepers! Bill has also just found out he's got very advanced pancreatic cancer, and his bad health is definitely showing. Holly is distraught, as Bill and Jerome are her only true friends in life. As for Brady, his brain has actually been in tact for a long, long time. He's just been hiding it so he won't be prosecuted for the job fair murders. Hodges has visited him several times over the years and let him know that he KNOWS Brady is really in there and faking it. Then, things get a little whacky...Brady begins to be able to move things in his room through telekinesis. We meet Dr. Babineau, Brady's unethical doctor who has been injecting Brady with an illegal drug for years, in hopes of reversing his brain damage and bringing him back. Whether because of the drug or because of Brady's stubborn will, he has come back and with these powers of telekinesis and more! When a janitor brings an old hand held Gameboy type game called Zappit into his room one day, Brady sees the janitor go into a trance watching the screen. Somehow Brady is able to put himself into the janitor's body while he's in the trance! When he finds out he's able to do this, he quickly begins using both the janitor and the doctor as bodies for his dangerous plan. Every time he goes into their bodies, he eats away a little bit more of their own memories, etc. So, Brady's big plan is to buy all the now discontinued Zappits left at their company, reprogram them, and get them sent out to teenagers. He wants to cause a suicide epidemic by using the Zappit game to get into the teenager's heads and convince them they're worthless and that they should end their lives! His plan is made all the more evil by the fact that all the teenagers who are getting the devices are the kids who were at the boy band concert six years before...those kids who he was kept from killing then! He almost succeeds when he gets inside Barbara's head as she watches her game. She convinces herself she wants to kill herself with Brady's voice guiding her. She steps in front of a huge truck, but is saved at the last minute by a boy she was talking to on the corner! The Zappit is smashed, and Barbara suffers only a broken leg. She immediately contacts Hodges and Holly and they are quickly on the case! As crazy as it seems, they figure out that somehow Brady is putting himself in other people's bodies and doing diabolical things!! Jerome comes home from Arizona to see his sister, and then to help Bill and Holly once again get the better of Brady! Brady is now fully ensconced in Dr. Babineau's body, even having killed Babineau's wife. As Dr. Babineau, Brady goes into his own room and kills off his own body so no one will suspect him. However, Hodges and company DO figure it out! With Bill nearly passing out from pain, he and Brady have one final confrontation, with Holly and Jerome also jumping in to help save the day! Brady is finally killed as Dr. Babineau and is gone forever. ( I think he's gone forever...since this was the last of the trilogy. I suppose he could have "jumped" into someone else at the last minute, but he didn't have a Zappit in his hands to do so when he died.) Anyway, eight months later, Holly and Jerome meet at Bill's grave. He has, in fact, succumbed to his pancreatic cancer. Thus ends the Bill Hodges (and hopefully the Brady Hartsfield) story! It's not my favorite of the Stephen King books, and my least favorite of this trilogy, because of the far out suspension of belief we are supposed to have that Brady can go into other people's bodies. I guess that's typical King though? And, still...it was a page-turner. :-)
Wednesday, February 22, 2017
Finished: Eye of the Needle (Follet) Another very good page turning book by Follet, and he wrote it when he was only 27!! It's a story based on a set of real life events that took place in World War II...the deception used by the Allies to trick the Germans into thinkng that the coming assault by the Allies (one whose success or failure would alter the outcome of the war) was going to take place in Calais and not in Normandy! I didn't know about this history so even though the book was fiction, it was based on real life events that were fascinating. Apparently the U.S and Great Britain staged a huge fake army, complete with troop barracks and cardboard fighter airplanes, that when reconnaissed from the air by the enemy would look like a huge military presence was building closer to Calais than Normandy. That trickery, along with carefully faked and "intercepted" messages stating the Allies' intentions did, in fact, end up tricking Hitler, keeping him from sending the necessary troops to defeat the Allied troops landing at Normandy. In Eye of the Needle there are three main characters: Faber, Lucy and Professor Percy Godliman. Faber is a cold-hearted, dangerous, methodical spy for the Germans who has been ensconced in England. His mission is to find out whether there really is such a huge military presence headed to Calais, or whether it's a ruse, and report back to Hitler himself. None of the American or British intelligence members have ever seen his face. He is known simply as Die Nadel (the Needle) because of the stiletto knife he uses to kill. Hitler's entire decision about where to place his troops rides on Faber getting the info and then making a rendezvous with a German submarine off the coast of Aberdeen, Scotland. Percy, the professor, is a retired British agent with MI5 and is one of the best. He's called back into service to work with Scotland Yard's young lieutenant Fred Boggs. Together they stay right on the tail of Faber, who HAS now acquired photos of the sham barracks and airplanes. As they close in on The Needle, the normally unflappable spy makes two mistakes. First, he takes a fishing boat out in a stormy, raging North Sea to try and rendezvous with the submarine. Second, when he crashes, near death on Storm Island, ten miles out to sea he develops an uncharacteristic soft spot for one of its four inhabitants, Lucy Rose. Lucy and her husband live on the island with their three year old son, Jo. Married only four years before and unknowingly pregnant before their wedding day, Lucy lives with her cold, distant, sometimes cruel husband, David, who suffered the loss of both legs on their wedding day in a horrific car accident. He had been all set to leave to be a fighter pilot in the British air force the next day. His life shattered, his father sends him and his family to recuperate in one of the two cabins on Storm Island. David develops great upper body strength, learns to drive his special made jeep and befriends and works with the only other island inhabitant, old Tom, the sheephearder, whose purpose on the island is to operate the one radio and be a first lookout for any enemy activity that may threaten Scotland. When Faber stumbles to Lucy and David's cabin door, there is an instant attraction between them since Lucy has neither been loved or made love to by her husband in four years. Lucy nurses Faber back to health, and he cleverly finds out that there are only four people he'll have to deal with on the island a woman, a cripple, a toddler and an old man....an old man who has the only radio...one Faber will use to call the submarine and transmit his info to Hitler. Faber seduces Lucy but ends up developing that soft spot for her so he doesn't kill her He does end up killing David and old Tom. When Lucy figures out what's going on, she actually seduces Faber one last time and while he's sleeping afterward, takes Jo and her husbands liaded gunsm and high tails it to old Tom's cabin. She finds Tom dead, but she also find a the radio! She can only manage to get off an SAS before Faber, who has now figured out that she's on to him, makes his way there too kill her and send his message. The SOS does manage to alert Percy and Lt. Boggs who rally the coast guard and helicopters. Until they arrive, though Lucy is on her own! She manages to keep Faber at bay with the guns and an ax...even chopping off some of his fingers. When he finally gets the best of her, he dashes upstairs to send his message. Tough as nails Lucy unscrews the kitchen light bulb and puts her hand in the socket, shorting the whole house and causing herself to pass out. She's also prevented Faber from contacting his submarine. He comes downstairs ready to kill her but he can't....he finds her to be too extraordinary. He decides instead to run for the cliffs, make his way down and swim for the submarine. However, Lucy follows and throws a huge rock at him causing him to lose his balance and crash to his death on the rocks below! Lucy has killed the infamous Die Nadel!!! Of course, then all the help arrives. The MI5 sends a fake message to Hitler from Die Nadel telling him that reports of a huge presence near Calais are true, and the rest is truly history! :-) A really good book!
Saturday, February 18, 2017
Finished: The Moon is Down (Steinbeck) A short, but very discerning book about the rigors of war on both the invaders and the invaded when a coastal town in an unnamed Northern European country is forcefully occupied by troops from another unnamed country. Steinbeck wrote this story, while he was heavily supporting the Allies in World War II, as a piece of propaganda for the Allies. Though the countries aren't named, the invaded town is in the thinly veiled country of Norway which was occupied by the Germans in WWII. The invaders never refer to Hitler, but refer to "the Leader". The coastal town is important for the fishing industry, but more importantly, it is a coal mining town. The Leader has sent down orders that the coal mine must be confiscated, railways built, and the coal shipped to their army for use. I don't really feel like writing a huge recap with all the characters because the book is still resonating very deeply with me. The colonel who is responsible for the attack is a war veteran from World War I, so he's seen the travesty of his army being slaughtered, driven back in the snow, and defeated by Russia...yet he's still not willing to learn from any mistakes. Or, he just realizes that no matter what he already learned, he has no choice but to follow orders. His mindset, and the mindset of his men (and apparently The Leader) seems to be that if you cut off the head of the snake, the rest of the townspeople will fall into line. As they occupy the mayor's mansion, the colonel tries to use the mayor as a person who must deal out the punishment to his own town so that it's easier coming from someone they know rather than the aggressor. The mayor tries to explain that he's not an all-powerful person...that he was elected by the people and is, in essence, "the people" himself. One towns person is killed when he accidentally kills an officer while defending himself in the coal mine, and he is executed as a lesson. The colonel thinks this will quell the townspeople, but it only serves to make them a stronger unit as they subtly begin doing things to rebel and compromise the coal mining process. The months drag on and the mayor and the colonel have several meaningful talks, but the colonel's hands are tied and he never fully grasps that free people will prevail and win out over the ones trying to force them into servitude. At the end, the colonel listens to the advice of the one towns person who had been the spy and traitor in the beginning, making sure the town's security forces of a mere twelve men were out at a festival in their honor far from town on invasion day. This store owner tells the colonel that the only solution is to threaten the people, who are definitely hampering the invading army's progress, with the death of their highly respected mayor. So, though he is afraid of dying at the end, the mayor does get a message out that the people should prevail and keep showing resistance. He can't make the colonel understand that killing him will not weaken the people, but strengthen them and that more leaders will rise up from the multitude of men. It's just a very interesting and sad look at war...especially at the townspeople on one side and the enlisted men on the other, who are really nothing more than townspeople from their OWN towns thrown into the war like so many others. Not all are the officers with the mindset of the men who follow and revere the Leader. I really have enjoyed all the Steinbeck books I've read, as depressing as many of them are, they just dig deep and make you think about how things realistically were and sometimes still are today.
Thursday, February 16, 2017
Finished: Far From The Madding Crowd (Hardy) Another Hardy classic, and this one with a happy ending...eventually. A headstrong, beautiful young woman, Bathsheba Everdene, inherits her uncle's farm in England and decides to run it by herself rather than be dependent on a man to do so. She's not full of herself or manipulative, but she most definitely has three different men in love with her. Early on, before she inherits the farm, she's at work helping a different aunt on a different farm when she meets neighboring farmer, Gabriel Oak. He has invested all his money in the sheep he keeps, and is doing just fine. He is, at that time, higher ranking in society than Bathsheba. Gabriel and Bathsheba share a brief closeness, and she runs from her feelings and leaves her aunt's farm...soon after that she inherit her other uncle's farm. In their brief encounter, Gabriel falls in love with Bathsheba, but can do nothing about it when she leaves. Sadly, Gabriel's entire investment is lost, and thus his farm, when an inexperienced sheep herding dog leads all his sheep over a cliff to their deaths! Gabriel is then forced to travel from town to town looking for work. When he ends up in Bathsheba's town, he ends up saving her farm crops from a fire without even knowing it's her farm. She hires him on immediately to be her shepherd, but it's a very lowly job compared to what he once was. She doesn't acknowledge their prior closeness, but does come to depend on his advice, honesty, dependability, and friendship. Gabriel's a good man and does all he can to help Bathsheba to succeed in the farming and sheep raising field of mostly men. And, despite still being in love with Bathsheba, Gabriel even goes so far as to give her advice to marry Farmer Boldwood when he comes courting, because Boldwood is in love with Bathsheba and with his neighboring farm, would provide Bathsheba security and a good future. Boldwood borders on craziness in his love for Bathsheba, though, and she doesn't really return his feelings. She promises to think about his marriage proposal while he's away for six weeks....but, of course, while Boldwood is away, the dashing Sergeant Troy comes to town and turns Bathsheba's head. Unfortunately, Sergeant Troy is not a nice guy. He's already responsible for wooing Bathsheba's uncle's maid, Fanny, to the point where Fanny left her job and followed Troy's regiment, giving herself in every way to Troy. Troy dumps Fanny, as he truly has no respect for women. He woos Bathsheba and convinces her to marry him, against the solid advice of Gabriel, who is one of only two people who knows that Troy compromised Fanny's reputation and then left her. Bathsheba, with hearts in her eyes, though, falls completely for Troy and marries him. She comes to regret it soon enough when he doesn't care nearly as much about the farm as she does. He resigns his commission in the British military and would rather spend his time drinking with the boys and going off to gamble away Bathsheba's money at the horse races. When Boldwood returns to town and realizes that Troy has swooped in and taken his soon to be fiance, he's devastated. Of course, Bathsheba tries to tell him that she never promised him she'd marry him, but he's still very affected. One day, Bathsheba and Troy meet a very sick and fragile Fanny on the road. Bathsheba has no idea who the woman is, but Troy begs Fanny to meet him the next day in the next town over. Sadly, Fanny is in terrible shape. She makes it to the town, but dies, along with her newly born baby. Bathsheba finds out what Fanny meant to Troy and they have a huge fight. Troy leaves the farm and is presumed dead when his clothes are found by the shore of a treacherous whirlpool spot near the ocean. We couldn't possibly be so lucky for him to be dead though. No, a fishing boat picks him up. Instead of going home to Bathsheba, though, Troy stays gone for several weeks and makes ends meet. He doesn't love Bathsheba any more and he's afraid if he goes back, he'll be legally responsible for her failing farm...or the farm he assumes must now be failing because he's not there. In fact, Bathsheba doesn't truly believe that Troy is dead, but she keeps her farm going with the able help of Gabriel, who is now also doing most of the work on Boldwood's farm, since Boldwood is still a bit despondent. Boldwood gets it into his head, though, that once six years has passed and Troy is truly considered legally dead, that Bathsheba will marry him. He begs, pleads, and guilts Bathsheba into saying she'll give him an answer by Christmas as to whether she'll become his betrothed in six years. It's pretty strange! Boldwood holds a huge Christmas party where he plans to put a ring on Bathsheba's finger. He's practically just forced her to say yes she'll marry him in six years (even though she does not love him at all, but feels she owes him) when who should crash the party but Sergeant Troy!! He's Alive! He has seen that Bathsheba has been successful on the farm and decided to go back and live off her money rather than live hand to mouth. When he grabs Bathsheba and insists that his wife come back with him to the farm, Bathsheba has a momentary female moment and screams. When she screams, Boldwood, thinking her harmed, grabs a gun and kills Troy. Boldwood's men prevent him from then killing himself, but he goes to town and turns himself in at the prison. Gabriel, as usual, is there as a rock for Bathsheba. He is actually given control of Boldwood's farm by Boldwood, who is sentenced to life in prison, so Gabriel comes back up in the world from hard work and honesty. However, Gabriel still loves Bathsheba and thinks that she would never love him, especially after what she's been through. When he tells Bathsheba that he's going to leave and make his way in America, she gets terribly upset and asks why he would desert her. He says he knows she would never have agreed to a life with him, even though she's always known he loves her. She says, but you never asked, did you? So...they have this admission of loving each other and get quietly married with the farm men that work for Bathsheba very thrilled for the both of them. A happy ending! Yay! I was so worried that Bathsheba was going to be pregnant by Troy and die or be raped by Boldwood or something. She ended up being a good, hardworking person who got the good, hardworking guy in the end! I really enjoy Hardy's writing. He's very descriptive in setting up his nature scenes and environment and slowly letting you get to know the supporting characters as well as the main characters. A good book!
Saturday, February 11, 2017
Finished: Palace of Desire (Mahfouz) The second book in the Cairo Trilogy, the family saga written by Naguib Mahfouz, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature. The story of tyrannical Egyptian patriarch, al-Sayyid Ahmad abd al-Jawad, his dutiful wife, and their five children continues five years after the first book and the tragic death of middle son and aspiring law student, Fahmy. Though al-Sayyid Ahmad swore off his drinking, womanizing, and carousing with friends for an entire year after Fahmy's death, he is now back to his old ways, once again going out every night, only to come home in the middle of the night and expect his wife, Amina, to help him get undressed, wash his feet, etc. And, as he did with his old habits, al-Sayyid Ahmad falls in love with a prostitute much younger than himself, going so far as to buy her a houseboat to live on. When she insists that he marry her and have two wives, al-Sayyid Ahmad draws the line and says no. The prostitute then dumps him and goes after his already married oldest son, Yasin. Yasin is much like his father. He falls in love more with the pursuit of women, and then tires of them after a few weeks. Unfortunately, he's on his second marriage and tired of his second wife right after the honeymoon, so when pursued by the prostitute, Zanuba, who wants to be a "real lady", he actually cheats on his second wife with her, divorces his second wife and marries Zanuba. Meanwhile, the years since Fahmy's death have been hard on his mother, Amina. There isn't much story for her, but she's a shell of who she used to be. Youngest son, Kamal, who was only twelve in the first book, is now seventeen and graduating from school, having successfully completed the exams to allow him to continue on with university study. His father wants him to be a lawyer at the very least, but Kamal is the dreamy-eyed romantic and wants to study literature and philosophy, which means going to the Teacher's College instead of the prestigious Law School. Much of the story is spent on Kamal's idealism and his unrequited love for his best friend's sister. For awhile, you think maybe he has a chance, but it ends up she was just using him to make the true person she wanted to propose to her jealous. With Kamal we get the most inner turmoil and reflection with his almost every thought being written by the author before Kamal speaks, usually saying the opposite of his deep, tortured thoughts. The two sisters, Aisha and Khadija, are both still married to the older men (brothers) they were married off to in the first book. Aisha is still the beautiful non-wave making sister, and she now has three young children, a daughter and two sons. Khadija is still the outspoken force she always was and is at constant odds with her mother-in-law who wants to tell her what to do. Khadija now has two young boys. The book is very well written and stays on the verge of delving into the political climate of the time in Egypt. Kamal and his friends have many lengthy political discussions, but not so lengthy that you lose interest. It's hard not to care about the more sympathetic characters. I'm not really so attached to the father or the older brother, since I can't stand their behavior...even if it was typical,"expected" and condoned behavior at that time in that country. As the book was winding down, I was in the process of deciding if I wanted to read book three when a cruel cliffhanger was tossed in at the end. :-( We were left with Aisha's husband and two young sons clinging to life from a typhoid outbreak, while the rest of the grandchildren stayed at al-Sayyid and Amina's house. I have a feeling the next book will take another jump and we will have lost those beings. :-(
Monday, February 6, 2017
Finished: Right Behind You (Gardner) The latest book by one of two authors whose every book I read! In this one, Gardner brings back the married duo of detective Rainie Connor and FBI profiler, Pierce Quincy. The very first book I ever read of Lisa Gardner's years ago involved a crime where Rainie and Quincy met and worked together. Several books later, they ended up married. I love the characters, love the books, and love that they are set on the Oregon coast! In this one, Rainie and Quincy are about to adopt their 13 year old foster daughter, Sharlah, who they took in three years before. Sharlah was only five when her abusive father stabbed her alcoholic mother with a butcher knife and watched as her father then tried to chase down her beloved, protective nine year old brother, Telly. Handing Telly a baseball bat, she then watched as her brother beat their father to death out of self-defense. Blacking out in the process, Telly also accidentally hit Sharlah and broke her arm. When authorities finally got involved, both kids were kept apart "for their own good" and put in separate foster homes. Having finally ended up with Rainie and Quincy, Sharlah hasn't seen Telly in eight years, when his face appears on a surveillance camera showing that he is the number one suspect in the deaths of a convenience store worker, another customer, and as the police soon discover, his two foster parents, great people who had taken him under their wing and were teaching the seventeen year old all about life skills, about caring about other people, about being part of a family. Could Telly really have murdered the only adults to ever have taken an interest in him? And, when Sharlah goes looking for Telly, will he still love his little sister or is she in danger? Another great, page-turning book, again set on the Oregon coast! :-)
Wednesday, February 1, 2017
Finished: Lonesome Dove (McMurtry) A great, sprawling, epic of a book, a Pulitzer Prize winner, with characters that you instantly love or hate, who you root for and against...a book that I savored and hated to see end. Lonesome Dove is the story about two famous ex-Texas Rangers, best friends, Woodrow Call and Augustus McRae, who decide to leave the ranch they've settled on in Texas after retiring from the Rangers, to drive hundreds of head of cattle all the way to the unexplored Montana, just on the word of another ex-partner of theirs, Jake Spoon. Jake, who is mostly a self-centered, gambling, lady's man, convinces Call that he should be the first person to drive cattle and horses up through the dangerous Comanche country, and other Indian territories to Montana and make a mint settling the first horse and cattle ranch. Once Call gets the idea in his head, there's no stopping him. Even his best friend and partner of 40 years, Gus, can't get him to see reason. Gus would rather stay in Lonesome Dove and drink whiskey on the porch and visit the one prostitute in town, the beautiful, sweet and young Lorena. However, Gus isn't about to let Call go off and have this adventure on his own, so he agrees to go and take their motley crew of cowhands from the Hat Creek Cattle Company, Call and Gus' livery company. The crew consists of Pea-Eye, who has traveled with the Captain, as Call is known, for years and is loyal and a great cowhand, but very dumb; Deets, Call's right-hand man and superior tracker, a black man who can smell weather and trouble coming a few days out; Bolivar, the Mexican cook; Dish Boggett, the most talented cowboy of the hands, a young man who is hopelessly in love with Lorena; and Newt Dobbs, a teenage boy who has been raised by Call and Gus since his mother, another prostitute named Maggie, and apparently the only woman Call has ever been with, died. Everybody but Newt knows that Newt is Call's son by Maggie, but Call is stubborn and refuses to admit that he didn't do the right thing and stay with Maggie, who loved him. He'd rather never acknowledge Newt than admit being mistaken or weak. Then, there's also the good-looking Jake Spoon. The minute he rides into town and sees Lorena, he falls for her and she for him. The men are used to Lorena never talking much and just doing her business but suddenly she's animated and happy. Jake throws a wrench into Call's plans by insisting that he bring Lorena along on the arduous cattle drive. Call hates this idea, but he also hates to lose Jake as a cowhand. Too much happens to be able to recap the entire book. The gang takes on a few more cowhands, and a few tragedies happen along the way....including the death of one of the young Irish immigrant cowhands as he crosses the very first river they come to and he accidentally rides into a nest of water moccasins and is bitten to death. :-( The biggest tragedy early on is when Jake selfishly rides into town to gamble, leaving Lorena alone in their tent allowing the evil Blue Duck, a half Indian, half Mexican bandit, to kidnap Lorena. He mercilessly drags her across the terrain and sells her first to some other Indians, who constantly abuse her, and then to a couple of trappers who abuse her the same way. By the time Gus comes to the rescue (because Jake is too selfish and cowardly to go after her), Lorena is just a former shell of herself, is half dead, can no longer speak and clings to Gus for dear life for the rest of the cattle drive. He nurses her back to health, but she becomes very dependent on him. Meanwhile, Dish is doing an excellent job driving the cattle, but he is jealous of Gus and Lorena's closeness and he's still head over heels in love with Lorena. And, Newt is learning all about the hardships of living on the land and being at the back of the cattle drive. Other characters come into the story and cross paths with either Gus or Call. The "girl that got away" from Gus, Clara, who turned down his marriage proposal only to marry a "boring" horse-trader, now lives on a ranch in Nebraska. Her husband lies comatose in their house after being kicked in the head by a horse. Clara is raising her two young girls after losing all three of her sons as young boys. Over in Arkansas, we meet sheriff July Johnson. He's been married a short time to Elmira, who is in love with another man and has a ten-year old son, Joe, from yet another man. Elmira is tired of being married to July, even though it's only been a few months. When July's brother is accidentally shot by a gambler, his sister-in-law insists that July chase the culprit to Texas. It ends up, the culprit is none other than Jake Spoon! So, they are all destined to meet up. Elmira insists that July take little Joe with him. When he does, she leaves town in search of the man she loves, Dee Boot. Out on the road July meets up with Gus as he is out to rescue Lorena. He goes with Gus to help out, and doesn't even pull his gun before Gus has gunned down all the men but Blue Duck, who escapes. When July gets back to camp, Blue Duck has killed little Joe and the deputy sheriff who'd been traveling with them. :-( July feels terribly guilty. Elmira takes up with a couple of buffalo hunters who are traveling the direction she wants to go to try and find Dee boot. What she had never told July was that she is pregnant with his child. She ends up at Clara's ranch in Nebraska about to give birth!! She nearly dies giving birth, and then up and leaves the baby, a boy, with Clara and continues her search for Dee. Eventually, after learning through a letter that his wife has left him while he's away, July quits chasing Jake Spoon and starts going after Elmira. July makes his way to Clara's and Clara puts two and two together and realizes that July is the father of the baby she now loves. When July realizes that Elmira truly wants nothing to do with him or their baby, he stays on at the ranch and helps Clara out with duties and her girls. Gosh, so much happens in this book. Sadly, the gang ends up losing Deets, the first major character to die. Call insists that they keep going north. He's determined to make it to Montana, but not before Gus insists on stopping in Nebraska to see Clara, his long lost love. Despite possible jealousy, Clara takes to Lorena like a daughter, and Lorena takes to the "normal" life. Gus and Clara share some memories, and Gus reunites with July Johnson, who is still working there. Clara tells Gus that the trail is no place for Lorena and invites her to stay on with them. Lorena, much to both Gus' and her own surprise, says yes. The Hat Creek gang continues on and has made it into Montana when Gus and Pea Eye ride ahead scouting one day. A small band of Indians catch them by surprise and shoot Gus with a couple of arrows to the leg. Gus sends Pea Eye back to fetch Call, and when the Indians finally leave, he sets out for the closest town. By the time he gets there, his leg is black and must come off. By the time Call gets to the town, the doctor tells him that Gus will die if the second leg doesn't come off as well but Gus refuses. He makes Call promise to deliver letters to Clara and Lorena and to take his body back to Texas to be buried. Call agrees to the promises, and then loses his best friend, the irascible Gus. Call puts Gus on ice until winter is done, and heads back to the herd. They keep driving even further north until Call is finally satisfied with their location. He then enlists the cowhands to build a log cabin, corrals, etc. When spring comes, he wants badly to tell Newt that he's proud of him and how he has turned into a fine horseman....and that he's his son. Instead, Call, the man of few words and fewer emotions, gives Newt his famous mare, Hellbitch, his gun, and his father's pocket watch. He does everything but say the words that Newt is his son. Of course, by now both Gus and Clara had told Newt that Call was his father, so Call's refusal to be able to say it just confuses Newt. Call leaves to take Gus' body back to Texas and has his own misadventures along the way. He nearly dies, but finally makes it to the spot where Gus wanted to be buried, and then back to the run down ranch house of the Hat Creek gang in Lonesome Dove. I see that there is a sequel to Lonesome Dove and I'm pretty sure I'm going to have to read it! Larry McMurtry is truly in a class of his own in developing characters and making the reader really feel for them! He is responsible, after all, for my favorite movie of all time, Terms of Endearment! I see more McMurtry in my future. :-)
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