Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Season of the Dragonflies by Sarah Creech

Season of the Dragonflies by Sarah Creech

Lenore Incorporated has been a family run business for three generations.  Always helmed by a Lenore woman it is time for a new Lenore to take over, but matriarch and CEO Willow Lenore is hesitant to allow her daughter Mya take the reins.  Mya is an excellent perfumer, dedicated to the business, with amazing ideas, but Willow is concerned that her impulsive nature will hurt the business.  

Lenore Incorporated makes perfume for a select number of hand-picked clients.  A flower brought back from Borneo by the company founder is the secret ingredient in the perfume that changes the body chemistry of its users making the chosen excel in their professions.  Fortuitously, Lucia, Mya’s calmer and more focused sister, returns home after her marriage and plans to be an actress don’t pan out as she had hoped.   Lucia is hoping to recharge and plan the next phase in her life but she returns to a company in crisis: a client contract horribly executed and the rare family flowers devastatingly ill.  Can the crop, and the Lenore family and business, be saved?

Fans of magical realism by Sarah Addison Allen and Alice Hoffman will find plenty to like here.  But know that this is a bit darker than Allen’s southern fiction, although all ends on a relatively high note.

The Monogram Murders: The New Hercule Poirot Mystery by Sophie Hannah

The Monogram Murders: The New Hercule Poirot Mystery by Sophie Hannah

Hercule Poirot is back!  The Christie estate has allowed well-known mystery author Sophie Hannah to write a new novel featuring the eccentric Belgian detective and his little grey cells.  In this outing Poirot is relaxing in England when he is asked to help with an intriguing case by a friend at Scotland Yard. 

Three people are murdered in a nice hotel; their bodies are staged similarly and they all died of poisoning.  The three murdered guests arrived separately but somehow the cases must be related right?  Red herring, after red herring after (assumedly) small details are related and Poirot (naturally) puts it all together at a large gathering of all the suspects in the hotel dining room at the conclusion of the mystery.  As with all Poirot books written by Christie the facts are all there, we just don’t see things the way the detective sees them.

The story takes place in 1929, way before Poirot’s demise in the final book Christie wrote in the series.  It’s like having a coffee with an old friend.  Hannah does a wonderful job bringing Hercule to the page and fans of the books and television series will find an enjoyable mystery here.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Lock In by John Scalzi

Lock In by John Scalzi

It is the not so distant future and Haden’s Syndrome has swept through the world.  The 1% that did not die from the disease which claimed the lives of 400 million people are now “Locked In.”  These people are aware of the world around them but have no control over their bodies.  Neural nets (technology designed to work directly with the human brain) have allowed those with Haden’s to operate Threeps – think C3PO and you get the concept – a robotic manifestation so those with Haden’s can be productive members of society, thinking and doing work, while their paralyzed bodies remain cared for elsewhere.  Chris Shane, himself a Haden, just started work as an FBI Agent.  And with Haden’s Rights being the hot topic of the day it looks like his first week at work will be extremely interesting to say the least.

Scalzi, best known for the hilarious and mind-boggling Redshirts, put a lot of thought into Haden’s Syndrome and how effected individuals interact and live their lives.  The science sounds good, and it’s not too complex, so those that feel they don’t enjoy science fiction will probably still enjoy it because the ethics the book brings up are really neat. 

Looking for something different?  This is a fun, thought provoking, yet quick, read.

Mean Streak by Sandra Brown

Mean Streak by Sandra Brown

Dr. Emory Charbonneau is a marathon runner and she decides to run a high altitude mountain trail in the Carolinas as part of her training.  She gets off to a great start, but shortly into her run disaster strikes.  Emory awakens in a strange bed looking into the eyes of a man who is not her husband.  Apparently she fell while running, hit her head on a rock, and is now suffering from a very bad concussion.  While she is thankful that this man rescued her and brought her in before the freezing temperatures of evening, she desperately wants to return home.  But her savior does not have a phone and refuses to drive her down the fogbound mountain.  As her time there goes on she begins to wonder if her rescuer actually caused her injury and is possibly keeping her captive.

I don’t think I’ll ruin anything by pointing out that Brown excels at writing gripping romantic suspense.  So you know there is a love story here (and two people stuck in a cabin in the middle of nowhere kind of gives away how the romance will blossom) and that things are most likely not what they seem.  There are a lot of twists and turns in the plot that will keep you guessing.  A great choice on audio, the reader is really good at the different voices, especially the redneck brothers that become central to the plot.

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver

We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver

This was the last author I needed to read for my project (reading all the 154 bestselling authors my library system gets automatically from our distributor).  This is the best known of all Shriver’s novels so I figured it would be a good pick.  I definitely ended my project on a high note, albeit a deeply disturbing one.

The novel is told in a series of letters Eva writes to her estranged husband about her life now that their son Kevin killed a number of people on that Thursday, the day he killed eleven people.  In her letters she reflects on her past, present and future, but it is the view into the past and how she felt about her firstborn child that is the crux of her writings.  She wasn’t really sure about having a child, and Kevin was hard for her to accept.  She knew from the very beginning that there was something wrong, “off” in a way, about her boy.  Her husband refused to acknowledge it, in fact berated her for her misgivings about Kevin.  And Kevin, naturally, pushes them apart.  To help out her marriage, she hopes, she gets pregnant again with wonderful little Celia.  This happy, cautious, little girl is the opposite of her brother in so many ways.  But what is it about his family life that pushes Kevin to murder his classmates at age fifteen like so many other school murderers?  Or was Kevin just born with the capacity and will to kill?

Eva is not a perfect person.  She has many faults as a wife and mother.  But her honesty in her retelling of the not so great things she did and thought in her life really brings us into her mind and helps the reader puzzle out alongside her what could have happened with Kevin to make him the person he is.  Gripping, disturbing and thought provoking this is a hard read but one that makes you think.

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

The Traitor’s Wife by Allison Pataki

The Traitor’s Wife by Allison Pataki

Benedict Arnold’s wife Peggy is the titular wife and if you believe Pataki the force behind Arnold’s treasonous ways.  Frankly, if I was married to her I would have asked for a post far, far away from her, but Arnold was from all accounts (fictitious and real) smitten with the lady.

The narrator is Clara Belle, ladies maid to Miss Peggy Shippen of Philadelphia, daughter of Judge Shippen a prominent and neutral party during the American Revolution.  Peggy is not as neutral as her father.  She revels in the galas and balls hosted by the British officers and is in love with one in particular, until the rebels are upon the city and he retreats with the rest of the British army and breaks her heart.  But Peggy is not a girl to be kept down, or out of new gowns.  She instantly finds a new man, the best of the lot of rebels, one General Arnold.  The rest as they say is history.

Clara is a smart and resourceful young woman who grows into her post and becomes an accomplished and staunch revolutionary.  Pataki takes a lot of liberties with the story (including the creation of Clara) but she points all truths and untruths out in the afterward.  I’m glad she chose Clara as the narrator; a steady mind was needed because Peggy is truly a force to be reckoned with.  Frankly, I felt a little bad for Benedict Arnold after reading this book both for his treatment by the revolutionary army (financially anyway) and for being married to Peggy.

The Spies of Warsaw by Alan Furst

The Spies of Warsaw by Alan Furst

The French military attaché to Poland in the late 1930s is actually running spies on the side and through his side business discovering information which could be crucial to France’s strategy when war, which seems inevitable, breaks out.  If only those in power would listen to the intelligence he has gathered.

This was a well-written but frustrating spy novel.  I enjoyed getting the how-it-may-have-went behind the scenes perspective, especially knowing how things turned out.  The main character is convinced that Germany is going to simply go around the Maginot Line (through the Ardennes in Belgium) with a huge amount of tanks.  The powers that be refuse to believe such nonsense despite the growing intelligence pointing towards the route of attack.  We all know what happens and watching this one man’s frustration build, and rightly so, was the source of my frustration, but in a good way.  I felt for him, and France and Poland, knowing what was right around the corner.

An interesting way and time period in which to write a spy novel, and I would read another when I need my spying fix!