Tuesday, August 22, 2023

The Wishing Game by Meg Shaffer (2023)

 

Debut author Meg Shaffer has written a truly entertaining book about the power of reading and hope. Lucy Hart, a teacher’s aide, knows what it is like to grow up with parents who don’t love her. She sought and found solace in the Clock Island books authored by Jack Masterson, excerpts of which appear throughout her story. Adult Lucy wishes more than anything to have the finances necessary to foster and adopt seven-year-old orphan Christopher Lamb, a student she has taken under her wing and shared the gift of reading. Together they’ve read all of the Clock Tower books and one of their favorite things to do is play the wishing game introduced in the Clock Island books.

Jack Masterson lives on the actual Clock Island in Maine, along with his grumpy but handsome illustrator Hugo Reese. When Jack writes his first book in five years, he decides to hold a contest on Clock Island with the prize being the one and only copy of the manuscript. Lucy is thrilled to be one of the four chosen contestants; if she could win the manuscript, life for her and Christopher would change dramatically.

The book, reminiscent of Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory and Harry Porter, will make you laugh, cry, and jump for joy. The characters are complex, yet loveable. The description of the island, the riddles and games in the story show off the powerful imagination of the author. This is one of the best books I have read in a good while.

 4.28 stars on Goodreads, 4.5 on Amazon



Wednesday, August 16, 2023

Curiosity Thrilled the Cat (Magical Cats Mystery #1) by Sofie Kelly (2011)

I have read many cozy mysteries over the years but none I enjoyed as much as Curiosity Thrilled the Cat. Sofie Kelly adds whimsy and magic to the elements one would expect to find in this kind of mystery which made for a very charming story.

Kathleen Paulson has recently moved to Mayville Heights, Minnesota to oversee the renovation of the town’s Carnegie Library. Unfortunately, the project is moving slowly due to a series of accidents. Kathleen shares her home with her two adopted cats, Hercules and Owen, each with a distinct personality and talent. As the town prepares for the annual Wild Rose Summer Music Festival, Kathleen discovers a dead body and becomes the primary suspect of a murder investigation as the evidence against her mounts.

Unlike most cozy mysteries, it is the cats who are the amateur detectives, bringing Katherine “gifts” that somehow provide clues to solving the mystery. It is up to Kathleen to interpret what the items mean and how they fit into the case.

Like the first book in any series, Curiosity Thrilled the Cat sets the stage for future installments, providing the necessary background information about the town and its residents.

Eastpointe does not own any of the titles in this series.  If you are interested in reading this or any of Sofia Kelly’s other books ask a reference librarian to get it for you from an area library.

3.9 stars on Goodreads, 4.5 on Amazon

 This book is not available at EPL. Ask any of the reference librarians to get it for you from an area library.



Wednesday, August 2, 2023

The House in on Fire by Rachel Beanland (2023)

The House in on Fire is the story of the Richmond [Virginia] Theater fire that took place on December 26, 1811. The theater burnt to the ground, the worst disaster in history at the time. The book follows Jack, Sally, Cecily, and Gilbert through the fire and the subsequent three days. Although this is a work of fiction, the fire did actually take place and the story for three of the four characters is historically accurate. Even their names haven’t been changed. (The Author’s Notes at the end of the book are well worth reading.) Fictional characters are added to provide the reader with a better window into Southern society in the early 1800s.

All four characters are forced to make split-second decisions that will affect not only their lives but those of many in their community. The fire begins when a young stagehand, Jack Gibson, raises the stage chandelier to the theater rafters even though the candles remain lit and the backdrops catch file. Mass panic follows as the audience of 600+ attempt to exit before the fire consumes the entire three-story wooden building. Sally is a young widow trapped on the third floor, Cecily is a slave seated in the “colored people’s gallery” on the first floor, and Gilbert, is an enslaved blacksmith who offers assistance to the victims.

The theater company, knowing that actors are not held in the highest regard, blame the blaze on an imaginary slave revolt that many in Richmond are quick to believe and even quicker to action. Jack wants to tell the truth and finds his life threatened as a result.

This book has it all - heroism, bravery, cowardice, villainy, love, sacrifice, and suspense. The characters and the story are so fully developed, I felt like I was watching the events unfold in front of me. The class and gender distinctions and hatred of the time are also well represented. Many similarities to 9/11 can be found.

In the end though, The House in on Fire is the story of honorable people who rise above the tragedy to do what needs to be done.


Wednesday, June 21, 2023

Reading the Stars: Astrology for Book Lovers (2022)

 

An original and entertaining mashup of literature and astrology for book lovers and star watchers alike. Whether you are a true believer or not, Reading the Stars: Astrology for Book Lovers just might offer you some insight as to why you enjoy the book genres you do.

The book begins with an easy-to-follow introduction to astrology and how the planets, stars, and natural elements combine to influence each Zodiac sign. It is followed by a “chapter” on each sign of the zodiac, beginning with Aries, the beginning of the astrological calendar. The basic personality traits of the sign are discussed, as well as the type of books generally preferred. You’ll also find a list of recommended titles.

I found the book very insightful.


Tuesday, June 13, 2023

The Last Heir to Blackwood Library by Hester Fox (2023)

 

Ivy Radcliffe is a young woman living hand to mouth in post Would War I London when she is summoned to Yorkshire where she learns she is the new Lady Hayworth, the last living heir to the Blackwood Library and a large estate, which began life as an abbey. Ivy knows nothing about this line of Radcliffe’s or the house. At Blackwood Abbey, Ivy is met by an uninviting staff who obviously know something they are not sharing, but is determined to make the best of things in her new home.

A book lover at heart, Ivy is delighted to find the house contains a library that has been neglected for years.  She sets out to catalog the vast library’s collection but the more times Ivy spends in the room, the worse her headaches become and she fears she is losing her memory when staff members tell her she is asking the same questions over and over.

In the local village, Ivy meets Sir Arthur Mabry, to whom Ivy is immediately drawn to Arthur because of his interest in books and the library. She learns he is the member of a mysterious club whose members are very interested in restoring the library to its former glory and opening it up to the public. Misunderstanding Arthur’s meaning and his true intentions, Ivy begins lending some of the library’s books to the local villagers, only to learn that the title of the books lent out seem to be a prophesy of events to follow.

What is the relationship of the library to the nun mentioned in the first chapter who was walled up inside the abbey centuries ago?  Why is the chauffer continuously begging Ivy to leave the estate?  Why is Arthur so interested in the library? You’ll have to read The Last Heir to Blackwood Library to learn the answers. This book hits all the elements of the gothic novel.

This is only Hester Fox Book owned by Eastpointe.  If you are interesting in reading other titles by her, a reference librarian can get them for you from an area library.

3.45 stars on Goodreads, 3.9 on Amazon


Wednesday, June 7, 2023

Bring Me Back by B.A. Paris (2018)

 B.A. Paris is a master of the psychological thriller and Bring Me Back is no exception. I haven’t been so invested in a book in a long time. I read it in one sitting. 

Twelve years earlier, Finn and his girlfriend Layla Gray were on holiday in France when Layla disappeared and was never found. The reader learns in the first chapter that Finn told police the truth about the event but not all of it. The story unfolds from there.

Twelve years later finds Finn is engaged to Layla’s sister Ellen, drawn together but their shared grief.  Finn wants to believe he and Ellen will be happy together even though a sixth sense tells him not to trust her.

As wedding plans are being made, Finn receives a phone call from the detective on Layla’s missing person’s case that a witness claims to have seen Layla near the house in which they had lived.  Items on meaning to both Layla and Ellen begin showing up in odd places.  And Finn starts receiving anonymous emails from someone who appears to know Layla. Could Layla still be alive?  If so, where has she been all this time and what does she want?

Divided into three parts and written in the first person, mostly by Finn – Now and Before, Layla and Finn, and Finn.

If you are interested in reading more of B.A. Paris’ books, ask one of the reference librarians where to find them.

3.51 stars in Goodreads, 3.9 on Amazon





Monday, May 15, 2023

Wyoming Wild (Savage Wells #3) by Sarah M. Eden (2023)

 


When reading Wyoming Wild, I experienced the same warm feelings I did when watching TV westerns back in the day.  Good triumphing over evil; the white hat always wins. In Wyoming Wild, the U.S. Marshall is a young John Hawkings (“Hawk”) but I pictured him as James Arness appeared in Gunsmoke.

When Marshall Hawkings receives an anonymous telegraph warning him of a plot against his life, he immediately begins to investigate. After Hawk traces the telegraph to Sand Creek, Wyoming he and female deputy Paisley take up residence on an area farm posing as brother (John) and sister (Mary). It isn’t long before the two meet the sheriff’s daughter, Liesl Hodges, who they discover is doing everything she can to protect the townspeople from its violent and corrupt sheriff. Everyone in the town is afraid of Sheriff Hodges and his cronies. But when Liesl discovers John is completely unfazed by the sheriff’s attempts at intimidation, she thinks she finally has found an ally in her struggle.

All is good until Liesl learns that John has been lying to her about who he is; another in a long list of men who have betrayed her. Although Liesl continues to distrust Hawk, she goes along with his plan to end the sheriff’s reign of terror. Of course, planning is one thing and execution is something else entirely.

There are other mysteries along the way; identifying the person stealing land deeds from under the town’s landowners who must now pay an exorbitant tax for the right to stay on their own land and a corrupt deputy on Hawk’s payroll. Wyoming Wild reads like the westerns of yore; is well written, wholesome, and a quick read. I enjoyed every minute of the adventure.

4.17 stars on Goodreads, 4.6 on Amazon


Saturday, May 13, 2023

Hester by Laurie Lico Albanese (2022)


Hester will be of particular interest to fans of Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter as it is the author’s imagining of the woman who inspired the main character, Hester Prynne. For those forced to read The Scarlet Letter and hated the novel, Hester will have you reconsidering your opinion.

The heroine, Isobel Gamble is a gifted needleworker, with a very special talent she keeps hidden from the world. She and her husband Edward, an apothecary with a fondness for opium, leave Scotland for Salem, Massachusetts in the early 1800s to escape Edward’s growing debts. But only days after their arrival, Isobel learns Edward has signed up to be a medic on a departing trade ship. Isobel finds herself penniless and alone in a strange country where she must rely on her needle and her inner strength to make a life for herself.

When Isobel meets a young Nathaniel Hathorne, the two are instantly drawn to one other. They have much in common, Hathorne is haunted by his ancestor’s role in the city’s witch trials and Isobel is troubled by her own special talents. Nathaniel and Isobel grow closer and closer as it becomes doubtful that Edward will ever return from the sea. Like Hester Prynne, Isobel finds Hathorne will not stand by her when she needs him the most.

Lico Albanese’s Hester includes vivid descriptions of the Salem witch trails in the late 1600s and the beginnings of the Underground Railroad in the early 19th century, as well as a look into how immigrants were treated at that time. I found the book impossible to put down after Isobel arrives in America.

4.0 stars on Goodreads, 4.3 on Amazon


Blind Spots by Thomas Mullen (2023)

 




Seven years before the story begins, the entire world was hit with a fast moving virus (“The Blinding”), resulting in complete blindness for the entire population. Millions of people died that first year due to panic and the resulting drug overdoses, suicides, rioting, and fires. The following year, Eye Tech, now the most powerful corporation in the world, introduced a cranial implant called a vidder which downloads visual information directly into the brain on what the eyes should be seeing. Blind Spots is the story of what happens when someone learns to hack the technology and can change what the wearer sees.

Homicide detective Mark Owens has been on the force since before The Blinding. When a scientist is murdered and the only witness insists the killer was blacked out of her vision, Owens doesn’t believe her―until he experiences the phenomena himself. No one believes him either until they witness the same thing right before they die. Suspects range from the tech billionaire who designed the vidder to anti-modernity cultists. Owens must investigate them all knowing he can’t trust his own eyes. Parallel to the murder plotline is the internal affairs investigation into the suicide of Owens’s wife Jeanie.

The reader can’t help but draw parallels to today’s world- the COVID pandemic, those that get vaccine and those that won’t or can’t afford it, search engine type results, complete with pop-ups, fake news, and corporations that hold the real power. I found Blind Spots a fascinating read.

3.89 stars on Goodreads, 4.1 on Amazon


Tuesday, April 25, 2023

No Graves As Yet (Reavley #1) by Anne Perry (2003)

 

No Graves As Yet is the first in a five book series set during the years of World War I. This first book begins in the summer of 1914 and takes place in the area surrounding the University of Cambridge, England where life is peaceful until it is not.

The reader is first introduced to Joseph Reavley when his brother, Matthew, comes to Cambridge to inform him that their parents have been killed in a car accident. Joseph is a former chaplain who is now teaching at Cambridge and Matthew is an officer in the Secret Intelligence Service, now known as MI6. Their father, Joseph, had been on his way to London to show Matthew a document he claimed proves a conspiracy reaching all levels of British government with the power to disgrace England forever and destroy the civilized world. That is all Matthew knows about the document, except that it is now missing.

Joseph and Matthew soon discover the accident was actually murder and set out to find the truth. It is not long after that that one of Joseph’s most gifted students, Sebastian Allard, is found murdered at Cambridge.  Sebastian seemed to be loved and admired by everyone who knew him. Why would anyone want to hurt him? Joseph is determined to find out.

Elsewhere, the Austrian archduke is murdered by a Serbian anarchist and England’s peaceful existence is threatened.

The book also introduces us to the Peacemaker character and his nefarious cousin who appear to be at the head of the conspiracy.  But just who are these two?  Joseph and Matthew are hot on their heels but you will have to read the other four titles in the series to find out who they really are.

Perry’s writing style in this series is very different from her other novels. It is very dense and every detail is carefully examined so this is not a fast read. But the reader will feel like they are right in the middle of the action.

3.68 stars on Goodreads, 4.2 on Amazon







Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Glass Houses (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache #13) by Louise Penny (2017)

 

The Chief Inspector Armand Gamache series is set in the small village of Three Pines, Quebec near the Vermont border, where Gamache lives with his wife and a variety of quirky and lovable characters, all well developed by Penny throughout the series. For such a quiet, out of the way village, a lot happens here.

In Glass Houses, Gamache has been plucked from retirement to become the Chief Superintendent of the Surete du Quebec with the task of ridding the department of the corruption that has plagued it for years. The book begins with Gamache on the witness stand in a sweltering courtroom in Montreal’s Palais de Justice. The reader is told this is a murder trial but the names of the victim and the defendant aren’t revealed until much later in the story. As Gamache testifies, the mystery unfolds for the reader. This unique story structure will not appeal to everyone but I found it refreshing.

It all begins when a tall, hooded, and masked figure appears in the green of Three Pines’ Village the day after the annual Halloween party. Gamache and the villagers are at first curious and then wary as the costumed figure never moves or speaks, all the time staring ahead at the village bistro. Or is it staring at someone inside? As no laws are being broken, there is nothing Gamache can do by watch, much to the dismay of his fellow villages. Gamache is correct that the figure has deep roots in the past and is there for some dark purpose. That purpose is to collect a debt of conscience. As its purpose becomes know, each of the villagers must examine his or her conscience. Is the masked figure there for them?

When the figure vanishes after four days and the body is discovered in the church basement, Gamache must discover who the figure was trying to shame. At the same time Gamache is overseeing a complex investigation into Canadian drug cartels and struggling with his own conscience about the decisions he has made. Little does he know, his two cases will collide and bring him right back to that quite, little village.

Penny writes each Gamache book to stand on its own and I had no problem following the story without having read any of the other titles in the series.

4.32 stars on Goodreads, 4.7 on Amazon.

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

The Christmas Hummingbird by Davis Bunn (Miramar Bay, #7) (2022)

 

Fighting an out-of-season wildfire in Miramar Bay, California is not the way any one wants to celebrate the Christmas season but that is the backdrop for The Christmas Hummingbird.

Ryan Eames is a policewoman and single mother to an artistically gifted son who doesn’t communicate with the rest of the world, Liam. Exhausted by the double shifts required by the fire, Ryan is responsible for getting people out of their homes before the fire reaches them. One of whom is Ethan Lange who now has only the clothes on his back.

Ethan is a bank Vice-President and creates concept sets in miniature for a movie producer in his spare time. At the time of the fire, Ethan had just been commissioned to come up with a set idea for the movie adaption of book one of the Elvin Child series, a favorite of his childhood novel  Before the story ends he is also a volunteer fire fighter, working with the police.

With the police force already stretched to its limits, Ethan is deputized and assigned to help Ryan protect the belongings in the destroyed homes with wealthy, absentee owners from the professional thieves operating in the area.  As the two get to know each other, Ethan is introduced to Liam.  Much to Ryan’s surprise, Liam opens up to Liam and even shares his drawings which even his mother isn’t allowed to see.  Together they forge a plan to save the hummingbirds whose habitat is being destroyed by the fire.

Although this is a love story, the real star of the book is the hummingbird and the lessons we can learn from them. They figure prominently throughout the story.

The story moves very quickly but is a little too sweet for my taste.  I also felt the author went overboard with all of Ethan’s great ideas for the town and his almost instant connection to Liam. However, if there ever is a time for a story tied up in a perfect bright red bow, it is Christmas.

4.02 stars on Goodreads, 4.7 on Amazon

Monday, January 9, 2023

Remember Love by Mary Balogh (Ravenswood #1) (2022)

 

Mary Balogh is my favorite Regency author and Remember Love is just another reason why. It is the love story of Devlin Ware, the heir to the Earl of Stratton, and Gwyneth Rhys but the road to their happy ever after is not an easy one.  Both have loved each other from afar while thinking the other despised them. They have one beautiful day together when they confess their love for each other and look forward to a beautiful future.  That evening a scandal rips the Ware family apart and Devlin is banished from his family home forever.

Feeling betrayed by what he always believed to be true and the mother and woman he loved, Devlin enlists in the fight against Napoleon and didn’t look back for six years. He thrusts his family and Gwyneth behind a mental wall, behind which he never visits. His only contact with his old world is his half-brother Ben who travels with him.

When Devlin returns two years after the death of his father, he is a changed man. His face bears a nasty scar, he has lost the ability to feel, and his family and friends are virtual strangers. Everyone has been scarred by the scandal Devlin unknowingly unleashed.

After the shock of seeing what Devlin has become, Gwyneth is convinced the Devlin she knew and loved is still in there, buried deep but struggling to come out. And she feels it will be her love for Devlin that will help him learn to love and trust again and heal all their fractured lives.

The book starts slowly as the reader is introduced to all the members of the Ware family and their relationship to one another. No one paints a character or a place as thoroughly as Mary Balogh and it can be a bit tedious. After learning all about the idyllic world of the Wares and their Ravenswood home, the rug is thorn out for under everyone.

The next book in the series, Remember Me, is due out the end of June 2023.  Mary Balogh has written a number of different series and you really can’t go wrong with any of them but I highly recommend her Survivor’s Club series.

4.06 stars on Goodreads, 4.5 on Amazon