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Book Reviews - Romance, Fantasy, Science Fiction - By an Adult for Adults

Dear Committee Members – Life Via Letters of Recommendation By Julie Schumacher

June 14, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Have you ever asked someone to write a letter of recommendation?  Maybe a favorite teacher or neighbor when you wanted a job or a scholarship?  Have you ever wondered just what they said about you?

Wonder no more.  Instead read Dear Committee Members by Julie Schumacher.  The author tells the story of Jay Fitger, Professor of English at a small college in his own words, via letters of recommendation, complaints to the HR department, emails to his ex-wife and ex-girlfriend, letters to friends.

Professor Fitger has much to complain about.  His English department faces severe budget cuts, whacking the English graduate program, living in 3rd rate offices, with a department head borrowed from Sociology.  Fitger wants his current students to survive and thrive and worries about one in particular, Darren Browles.

Mr. Browles wrote a novel, or at least part of a novel, we aren’t really sure.  Although Browles never appears in the book, Fitger writes letter after letter – to his former friends, his ex-wife, his publisher, his agent – in short anyone he can think of who might bring this pseudo-masterpiece to print, or if nothing else, provide Browles with a few bucks.

Meanwhile Fitger’s other students are moving into corporate jobs or temporary work at liquor stores and trailer parks, going on to grad school, selling novels.  We see them all.  Only Browles remains, left behind, unwanted.

 

Characterization

Professor Fitger is the star of course and we learn much about him.  He’s in his mid/late 40s, balding, a bit fussy, a bit bitter, sarcastic, with distant memories of being just a bit more radical, a bit more successful.  He’s also lonely and prone to sabotage himself and any relationships.

He writes his letters with as much honesty and kindness as the student deserves.  One girl was desperate for a letter and her advisor was gone so she turned to Fitger whom she had seen around campus – after all he was in the building and almost no one else was.  Fitger wrote a charming letter, praising the student’s enterprise and determination while accurately describing how he was roped into writing the recommendation.

The book is full of funny comments like these, interspersed with heartfelt pleas to help Browles and to his ex-wife and girlfriend to please like him again.  We don’t see Fitger in his home, only his office, while he reminiscenses about his mistakes, how he included too much reality in his one successful novel, so much that his wife could not tell what parts were fiction and dumped him.  He remains on good terms with people right until he can’t help but do something to sabotage the friendship, for example, copying the entire university staff on an email to his girlfriend.

The setting is mostly inside Fitger’s mind with sharp descriptions of the falling-down academic building with its non-working plumbing.  We get a glimpse of cutthroat academic life where all new hires are non-tenure track adjuncts who live on air, pennies and dreams.  Fitger remembers it didn’t use to be like that and it drives him to write scathing letters to the dean.

I think I would like Fitger in small doses, preferably with a glass of wine.

Summary

Dear Committee Members is funny, poignant.  I recommend it to you without reservation!

5 Stars

Filed Under: Families Tagged With: Book Review, Not Fantasy or Science Fiction

Maeve Binchy A Week In Winter – Meet Interesting People

April 29, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Maeve Binchy died shortly after finishing A Week In Winter, a series of character vignettes connected by a holiday week in a refurbished house on the west coast of Ireland.  We follow the hotel’s owner, her employees, and the guests who come for her opening week.

Owner Chicky Starr starts the novel.  She is the girl who fell in love foolishly and followed her guy to New York where he eventually dumped her.  Chicky was determined to not crawl home – her family was horrified that she left to live with a man without marriage – and made a life for herself in New York.  In fact Chicky made two lives, one the real situation, a pastry chef and boardinghouse worker, and the other her fantasy life full of love with her husband Walter (the guy who dumped her) and their fun on the town.  Eventually she goes back home to Stoneybridge, buys the Stone House from Miss Sheedy and sets out to make it as a hotelier.

Chicky is determined, interested in people without wanting to pry or volunteer advice, hard working, careful with money.  She is living a lie, having told everyone that “husband Walter” died in a car accident, but it doesn’t seem to bother her.  It’s as though she managed to disconnect herself from the years in America and build something brand new, albeit on a shaky foundation.

Mrs. Binchly does a grand job letting us see the people behind the names.  We read about their friends and backgrounds, the people they loved and those they disappointed.  The guests range from an American movie star to an icy school mistress to a married couple that makes their days bright by winning contests.

The Walls won their week as second prize in contest where first prize was a week in Paris.  They spent the time before the trip and the first day or so lamenting their lost Paris week.  They didn’t feel like enjoying their week until they learned the first prize winners were having a miserable week, with none of the promised Parisian delights and an unpleasant stay in a 3rd rate room in the prize hotel.  Then they decided they won a worthy prize, relaxed and enjoyed Stone House.

The author’s genius was in making the people come to life with a series of small, gentle stories that show them both for good and ill.  Some of the characters have dubious moral backgrounds, but all are shown in a kind, warm-hearted light.  In fact the only character shown with no redeeming qualities is the school mistress, who is so self-closed that we never get beyond her rigor.

Overall I enjoyed this.  A A Week In Winter was easy to pick up late in the evening and read about a person or two, then put down until the next evening.  There wasn’t a lot of plot or action among the characters as the action occurred mostly before or after the week’s holiday.  Each character, except Miss Nell Howe, uses the week to come to peace with a situation or to make a life-turning decision.   The book was peaceful and interesting.

4 Stars

Filed Under: Families Tagged With: Book Review, Contemporary

Murder in Missoula – Hunting Down a Serial Killer

April 6, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Murder in Missoula starts off with a bang.  We are with Charles Durbin, loner, dog groomer, obsessed with Marie-Justine, as he sneaks into her home for erotic fantasies.  He has stalked her for weeks, trying to decide whether he prefers her or her best friend Anne.  Now he has decided.

Meanwhile former DEA agent Joe Nicoletti is in town interviewing for a professorship at the university.  Nicoletti is a widower and lonely.  He meets Marie-Justine at a faculty gathering and the two connect immediately.  Durbin sees them together and decides he must make sure that Marie-Justine is his and kills her.

Of course the police find evidence that Nicoletti murdered her, though he is grief-stricken.  He must clear his name and find the real killer before other women die.

What Works

Murder in Missoula is at its best when we follow Durbin through his fantasy love life, but I felt the last third, where we tag along with Nicoletti as he ties Durbin to other murders in Colorado was weaker.  The novel went from the suspenseful stalker to a more traditional whodunit, where Nicoletti uses his intuition, connections and plain old luck to solve the crime.

The novel remained well written even after we took a left turn from the serial killer to the detective, but it lost some of the suspense.

Author Laurence Giliotti did a fine job showing us the real person inside the evil killer, as Durbin interacts with others in a more-or-less normal fashion while he grooms dogs, chats up the realtor (in order to get to the pass key on Marie-Justine’s new house).  Even serial killers need to eat and need an income, so why not groom dogs while you stalk the ladies?  Giliotti intermixed horror with the normal day-to-day, as when Durbin made sure to keep the realtor from seeing his kitchen that recreated Marie-Justine’s.

The police chief Garland is an interesting character as he moves from Nicoletti’s adversary to his ally, from political to professional.  We didn’t see much of Garland, too bad as he could be an interesting lead character.

What Didn’t Work So Well

Nicoletti is more of a stock character than is Durbin.  Obviously smart, well-schooled in handling evil men, not looking for but delighted to find possible love.  He seems more in the book to provide a counter to Durbin, there to fill a role.

Setting was a little weak too.  The action took place in Montana with brief trip to Colorado Springs but there wasn’t anything to tie the story to either locale.  It could have happened anywhere.

Summary

Overall this is a fine novel if you enjoy mysteries with a bit of suspense and like to get inside the mind of a killer.  4 Stars

I received a free copy through NetGalley in expectation of an honest review.

 

Filed Under: Suspense Tagged With: Book Review, Suspense

Front Runner by Felix Francis – A Darker Novel in Dick Francis’ Tradition

April 5, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Felix Francis helped his father, Dick Francis, research several novels, eventually co-authoring four, and assumed full authorship for four more novels after Dick Francis died.  Front Runner uses the same character and plot formulae his father made successful:  Strong male lead physically and morally brave, lonely and wistful about love; villain willing to kill; British horse racing setting; guy meets attractive lady early in the novel; extreme danger.

The author’s genius is that even though the plot is familiar, we get intrigued and have to keep reading.  Francis adds enough twists and false trails that we can’t be sure we spot the villain.  (In fact, I thought it was someone else.)  We can admire the main character and Francis shows him with enough failings to be realistic, not a flat 2D hero type, and the villains are also well done, complete people with good points and bad.

I enjoyed Front Runner but Felix’s novels are darker, with more nuanced heroes, more moral ambiguity than his father’s were.  I can’t read more than one Felix novel every year or so and don’t care to purchase any, but have his dad’s oeuvre on my shelf downstairs.

For example, Jeff Hinkley, investigator for British horse racing authorities, asks matter-of-factly  why someone hadn’t gotten an abortion.  Later he kills a man in self defense.  His father’s heroes managed to win without killing their adversaries and every one of them had a strong sense of hope.  These differences seem small but are part of an overall darker, less engaging mood and less enjoyable sense of place and character.

4 Stars

Filed Under: Suspense Tagged With: Book Review, Suspense

To Catch a Bad Guy by Marie Astor – Fun, Romantic Suspense

February 19, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Both Amazon and Barnes and Noble offer To Catch a Bad Guy (Janet Maple Series Book 1) for free (always an attractive feature) but what caught my attention was the cover.  Who could resist such a cute dog?

Janet Maple has a new job as Assistant General Counsel at Bostoff Securities, working for her old friend and semi-rival Lisa.  Once Janet arrives she quickly wonders why the company hired her.  Lisa herself isn’t busy and Janet has nothing to do.  Then external lawyer Tom Wyman shows up to zip her through Bostoff’s legal structure – which is extraordinarily complex – and Janet begins to wonder just what is going on at Bostoff.

Janet does not want to rock the boat, but being a smart lady recognizes that she, as a lawyer for the brokerage, is on the hook for the firm’s legal actions and discovers the firm is missing client paperwork.  Management tells her to to forget about it, but Janet suspects something is wrong, and with her sense for crooked books honed after years in the New York District Attorney’s office she senses things aren’t quite as rosy as they appear.

Janet quickly finds herself embroiled with the cute IT guy, dodging  Tom Wyman, digging just a bit under the surface, and worried sick about her friend Lisa and Lisa’s fiance.

Overall To Catch A Bad Guy is cute, fun, a fast read that catches your imagination.  The characters are interesting and I felt for Janet once she realized she was in a sticky situation.  Don’t expect deep character building or complex themes but do expect a fun couple of hours.

Author Marie Astor used To Catch a Bad Guy (Janet Maple Series Book 1) to set the stage for a couple of sequels featuring the same characters, the budding romances and have our friends take care of the bad guys.  I enjoyed To Catch a Bad Guy enough that I purchased two of the follow up novels.

Filed Under: Suspense Tagged With: Contemporary, Romance Novels, Suspense

Old Money – Outdoors, Mystery and Suspense in Mississippi by Bobby Cole

February 12, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Old Money combines an old plot line, the search for missing cash, with new twists.  Jake Crosby is our hero, but instead of the usual private investigator or detective, Jake is a game warden charged with enforcing Mississippi’s game laws not with handling stolen cash or murderous siblings.

Jake and his partner Virgil are called in to help the local sheriff investigate who assaulted a doctor in the woods after a day hunting and left him nearly dead.  This assault happens early in the novel and we circle back to it only later.

Respected federal judge Rothbone asks Jake to keep an eye on the Bolivar twins whom he suspects of trying to get revenge on him for sentencing their father to prison.  Judge Rothbone has an ulterior motive for keeping tabs on the twins.  He knows they are searching for their father’s reputed $3MM of fraudulent money and he would like some of it to pay for his wife’s grey market kidney transplant.

Jake and Virgil enlist help to bug the Bolivar twins’ home and discover that the twins are trying to sell a helmet from the De Soto expedition back in the 1500s that they claim their dad found on federal property.  The helmet is a fake and the twins are just trying to scam the buyer but Jake and Virgil don’t realize this and are pursuing the case because it’s illegal to take artifacts from federal property.  The FBI is interested in the sale because the buyer will use his own counterfeit cash to pay for it.

Plot

We have 6 players:  The two Bolivar twins (who are not above scamming each other), their dad’s old cellmate whom they suspect knows where the cash is, the wanna be helmet buyer, the FBI, the judge and our two game wardens.

The side scams complicate the plot and make the book more interesting, especially when we readers know that Jake and Virgil are hot on the track of basically nothing and meanwhile the judge has set Jake up to spy for him and the twins plan to murder their father’s old cellmate once he tells them where the money is.

The Judge subplot felt the weakest and could have been edited out to make a tighter, faster paced book. Cole added it to give Judge Rothbone rationale to point Jake at the Bolivar twins but the original cover story – that the Judge feared retaliation – was reason enough.  The Judge’s family problems didn’t add anything to the story.

The pace is fairly slow initially and accelerates the last 20% of the book with a super fast finish that mostly ties up the loose ends.  The good guys win and the bad guys don’t.

Pacing

I remember my 10th grade English teacher telling me to show, not describe, and it’s hard.  Unfortunately author Bobby Cole describes far too much.  The novel would be better is Cole replaced the descriptions of what the characters think and feel with actions that shows us those thoughts and feelings.

For example, Jake’s wife Morgan worries about the family finances.  Cole shows Morgan with her checkbook trying to pay bills and thinking of cost cutting she can do.  Then he gives us four paragraphs describing the situation and and Morgan’s worries about Jake’s career change from stockbroker to game warden.  We could have seen the tension with a short scene between the two of them.

I wonder whether Cole would have needed much less description if he had shrunk the plot.

Characters

Jake, Virgil and the ex-cellmate are the best done characters.  We can feel Jake’s ambition to make good as a game warden, to protect the wildlife and serve the outdoors.  Cole lets us see Jake’s chagrin when he discovers that game wardens get caught up in plenty of non-wildlife situations, including helping people cope with the weather.  It’s easy to see why Jake gets excited when he thinks he’s on the track of artifacts looted from federal land.

Virgil is coasting through his career but he isn’t dead wood and he too wants to serve the countryside and people.

The ex-cellmate is interesting because he’s an authentic con man himself, recognizes the twins want to get the secrets out of him then kill him, but decides to gamble on finding the cash himself.  Cole got the balance nicely between the con artist’s risk vs. reward equations.

The Bolivar twins are left as nasty enigmas without any positive qualities and the judge feels lifeless.

Overall

I didn’t realize Old Money (A Jake Crosby Thriller Book 3) was part of a series until several pages into the book.  I don’t think it affected my enjoyment of the story since Cole gives us plenty of look backs to set up the plot and people.

While I won’t be looking for more books by Cole or more of the Jake Crosby novels, this was a decent read.  Kudos to Cole for creating an unusual setting and characters.

For myself, 3 stars.  For someone more fond of mystery and suspense, 4 stars.

I received an advanced E book through NetGalley in expectation of an honest review.

Filed Under: Suspense Tagged With: Book Review, Mystery

Creepy Scary Snoopiness – The God’s Eye View by Barry Eisler

January 29, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

The God’s Eye View starts off mild, then builds suspense at the same time we start caring about the characters.

Evie Gallagher like any mother, wants to take care of her young son, Dash.  Dash is deaf and Evie is divorced, with her ex-husband only peripherally involved so Evie needs her job.  Evie is good at her work and enjoys the technical challenges and the trust and access to her boss, Anders.  Evie’s job?  She’s an analyst at the NSA and her boss is the director.

Anders is also fanatical about building complete surveillance, complete information access on everybody and complete ability to track and monitor everyone.  He’s amoral and manipulative and sees everything he does as good for the country.  In other words he is one scary, creepy menace.

The Plot

Evie keeps her head down and does her job developing a tracking system that leads her to discover a high up NSA stationed in Turkey has contacted a “subversive” journalist.  Evie reports that contact to Anders and also asks him whether her report about a CIA analyst in contact with a different “subversive” had anything to do with the analyst’s reported suicide the next day.  Anders denies it, but she can’t quite trust him – but she does not want to suspect him.

The plot builds from here.  Anders calls in his favorite nasty guys to take down the two men in Turkey, but one of the take downs, meant to be a straightforward kidnapping/murder, backfires when the kidnappers go public with their captive.  Meanwhile Anders discovers that the high NSA official, now dead, very likely knew of his pet project, God’s Eye.  Anders goes into high gear to stomp out any possibility of his project becoming public.

The book moves fast.  Evie is smart and connects the dots all too soon for Anders who orders her death.  Unfortunately for him, one of his nasty guys, Manus, has fallen for Evie and protects her.  Anders spins out of control, not caring who or how many people he has to kill in order to protect his big secrets.

The end is satisfying but not conclusive.  Big Brother is still out there, just a bit less virulent.

Characters

The people are well done, especially the main antagonists, Evie and Ander.  Eisler shows how someone like Anders, a decorated veteran, patriot, dedicated to serving his country, could go so far into the dark side.  Evie is easy to understand.  She’s smart, she enjoys being good at her work, she loves her son and needs the best job she can get in order to send him to the special school.  The two nasties are less detailed, sufficient for the story.

Backstory

The God’s Eye View is darn scary.  We know we don’t get the full story in the news and we know we can’t trust the government to be the shining city on the hill we all hope it to be.  Author Barry Eisler uses headlines and the fallout from the Eric Snowden affair to craft an excellent story.  With luck it will help us all question what we read and see.

Overall I’d give The God’s Eye View 4 stars.  Very well done, reasonably enjoyable and scary as heck.

Filed Under: Suspense Tagged With: Book Review, Contemporary, Suspense

Dear County Agent Guy – Dairy Farmer Wisdom and Wit – Jerry Nelson

January 27, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Jerry Nelson says he got his start as a humor columnist when he sent a letter to the county agent asking for help removing cattails, ducks and tourists from his flooded field one wet North Dakota spring.  The agent suggested he try writing a column for farm magazines.  Jerry was successful and now with Dear County Agent Guy: Calf Pulling, Husband Training, and Other Curious Dispatches from a Midwestern Dairy Farmer we non farm magazine readers can enjoy the his work too.

Jerry Nelson writes simply and from himself and the result is a series of funny articles that read from the heart, not at all contrived.  His columns range from memories growing up, courting his wife, suggesting his wife’s obstetrician use a calf puller on the slow-to-arrive oldest child and thoughts about raising kids, thrift and farming.  I enjoyed them.

The columns are funny because Nelson finds humor in simple, every day things.  He is not mean nor contemptuous nor snide nor sarcastic.  There is a wide streak of potty humor with a couple stories about changing diapers, handling manure, not bathing and using the side of the barn as a convenient substitute for the indoor bathroom.  Even though I’m not crazy about potty humor the stories were in good fun and a couple of the jokes were pretty funny.

Nelson never preaches or comes across as advising people on how to run their lives, or to save money or to enjoy the outdoors and friends and family.  Nonetheless it’s obvious that these virtues are among the reasons he is happy and if anyone wants to emulate him, well, they got a few good suggestions.

Dear County Agent Guy will appeal to anyone who enjoys the outdoors, not just farmers.  Nelson explains the farming background with minimal detail, enough to clarify what he’s talking about but not so much that we readers feel we need to become dairy farmers to enjoy his work.

I received an advance copy through NetGalley in expectation of an honest review.  The E book could use some copy editing to clean up the format.  The overall writing needs little editing – for one thing these were taken from magazine columns and for another Nelson’s style is good and his sentences, spelling and such are already readable.

Overall I would give this 4 stars.

Filed Under: Humor Tagged With: Book Review, Contemporary, Humor

Bubba and the 12 Deadly Days of Christmas – Is This Funny?

January 12, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Bubba and the 12 Deadly Days of Christmas was on BookBub and sounded funny so I got it.  It’s one of those books that tries so hard to be funny you lose track of the story until you reach the end and think “Is that all there was?”   The plot is ridiculous.

Bubba Snoddy, grown son of the current Snoddy matriarch, lives at home with his mother in the decrepit Snoddy mansion near a small Texas town.  Bubba’s cousins from Louisiana are visiting with an eye to appropriating anything in the house that may have value.  Bubba wants to date gorgeous sheriff deputy Willodean but lacks courage to ask her out.  Oh, then he finds a corpse dressed in the Santa suit in the city’s Christmas display.

Of course the local police chief assumes Bubba is the murderer, arrests him with a concussion, then spends the rest of the novel chasing around for clues to prove Bubba killed the Santa, the older lady, assaulted the sheriff and is after Bubba’s mother.  Everything ends up tied neatly with a bow at the end except the chief still thinks that if Bubba didn’t commit this murder he’ll surely commit one next week.

The book could have been so much more.  The interplay with the covetous cousins and their 10 year old active, intelligent son Brownie was fun to read and could have been the focus of the story instead of a nonsensical murder rampage.  Bubba reveals a more complicated character during the book than the one-dimensional redneck he seems initially.  Had author C. L. Beville spent more time on the family and less on too-neat murders it could have been a good book.

I noticed the reviewers on Amazon mostly liked the novel with under 10% giving it low marks.  I would give it 2 or 3 stars; it wasn’t good enough that I want to read more Bubba books, but it wasn’t so bad that I stopped midway.  It’s a fast read with some funny scenes interspersed with bad word plays and incredibly stupid-acting police and villains.  I’m not a fan of making fun of people who talk funny or believe and act differently and didn’t enjoy the redneck cliches.

Filed Under: Humor Tagged With: Book Review, Not So Good

Five Days in May by Ninnie Hammon. How Do You Face Your Last Days?

January 10, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

We’ve all read about terminally ill people and how they face death; we may have known friends or family who bravely lived their last days on earth, knowing they were their last days. Five Days in May: A Novel by Ninnie Hammon brings us Princess, a barely educated woman facing death in 5 days via the electric chair.

Five Days in May is set in Oklahoma in the early 1960s, before DNA evidence, before women would be believed when they said rape or molestation or assault.  With an enormous tornado fast coming we have four people whose lives mingle:

Jonah whose beloved wife Maggie has advanced dementia.  Maggie swears and smears excrement all over and has become violent.  Jonah has a prescription for sleeping pills he intends to use to over-sedate Maggie in what he sees as an act of love, not murder.

Mac MacIntosh is a successful pastor whose wife died and now his faith is dead too.  He contemplates suicide or resigning from the ministry.

Joy MacIntosh is Mac’s daughter, 16, pregnant and scared.  She decides to get an abortion.  Joy is adopted but doesn’t know it.

Princess, aka Emily Prentiss, not quite 30, convicted of murdering her toddler sister and sentenced to death.

Princess asks for a minister and the prison warden asks Mac to step in.  Princess is barely literate but gifted to know things she should have no way to know.  Things like Joy’s pregnancy, an accident in a guard’s family.

The novel walks us through all four people’s pain and with the tornado of the century bearing down on them, how they each respond.  Princess has a deep secret which Mac manages to figure out, but he has time to save only one person, not two, before the tornado hits.  Will he choose Joy and Joy’s unborn child, or Princess?

Jonah could leave Maggie outside for the tornado but risks his own life to bring her in.

Gift for Character

Ninnie Hammon is incredible at building real people, not characters in a novel.  The people act as you would expect them, even Princess who faces her imminent death with peace.

Hammon’s gift for people extends to the other characters:  The villain, Princess’ supposed step father, is bigoted, ignorant, nasty and as mean as a person can be.  He too is believable.  We can visualize the minor characters such as the warden, prison guards, Joy’s despicable boyfriend because they too are people, not words on a page.

Be Aware

Some of the characters, especially the stepfather, are truly despicable, with cruel vocabulary and thoughts.  The plot is a bit contrived and we can see the twist coming.

Summary

Five Days In May is not an easy read.  Mac, Joy and Jonah hurt so much it is hard to read about them – you will feel right alongside – and the whole murder and execution tale is difficult.  The stepfather is horrible, another person who it is painful to watch and listen to.

Nonetheless it is 5 stars.

 

Filed Under: Suspense Tagged With: Book Review

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