Friday, April 30, 2021

Every Vow You Break by Peter Swanson



Hello everyone.  I hope you are enjoying your day.

When you got married did you have a nice honeymoon?  My sister went to one of those islands...one of the "amas" or "ini" places off the coast of Florida.  I can't remember where but I'm certain she had a nice time.  For me, I got one night in Scranton, PA.  Now if you're from Pennsylvania don't get your drawers in a twist.  I love the state, lots of my family came from PA.  However, as far as exotic, seductive locales go, the Hilton in Scranton doesn't exactly blow up your skirt.  Okay, between us buddies, it was cool.  It was an old train station that we got to explore, but as far as brag-ability it isn't great.  "Oh so your sister went to the islands.  Where did you go? One night in Scranton???"  Hubby said not to tell you this story lest you think he's cheap.  In his defense, we purchased our first house thirty days before our wedding and we used our honeymoon money for a down payment.  But if he asks, yes, I think he's cheap and owes me a trip to Europe at the minimum!

I recently read Every Vow You Break by Peter Swanson.  This is the story of Abigail and Bruce. They are getting married.  First Abigail is attending her shower, only not the kind where you get a toaster, the kind where you and your friends go to a resort. While at this resort, Abigail meets another man who wonders if she loves her husband-to-be as much as she thinks she does, especially after she sleeps with him.  Of course, once home and during the final preparations for the wedding, she tells Bruce nothing about what happened on the trip.  Panic sets in when she sees the man she slept with and when he starts emailing her.  She kindly refuses his advances and proceeds with the wedding.  After the nuptials, Bruce whisks his new bride away for a lovely honeymoon, but guess who shows up? Oh yes, it's deliciously evil.  If you want more, you'll have to read it.  This book has got great pacing and an even better setting.  Lots of fun with this story and a nice escape!

After reading Every Vow You Break I'm a little more grateful for my single night in Scranton, but I'm gonna tell people it was Scranton, France.

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Nathalie Dupree's Favorite Stories & Recipes



Hello everyone.  I hope you are having a nice day.

I have to do something you may not like.  I try to be good to you mixing it up with current and backlist books, popular and lesser known authors, and different genres. Yes, I know I'm thriller heavy...thanks for reminding me. I'd say thrillers are my guilty pleasure but I wear my thriller addiction proudly. Nope, today I must be my housewifey best and review....wait for it....you knew it was coming someday....oh yes, I MUST review a cookbook. I swear I hear at least one person out there cheering and the rest of you stop pouting, it's just one book.

I recently read Nathalie Dupree's Favorite Stories and Recipes by Nathalie Dupree, Cynthia Graubart. This book is a kind of a "best of" tale, although I only see one recipe in it that I already have in another volume. Favorites Stories and Recipes is just that it has stories about her life and the food she cooks. I have at least nine of her cookbooks, and I am not a cookbook collector. Frankly, there are way too many recipes to  be had online, why spend money on a book.  I buy these books because they teach you,  there are tips, explanations and variations offered throughout each of Nathalie's books.  She is a trained chef, restaurant owner, teacher, and tv show cooking host and you really reap the benefit of her experience.  It would be so easy to take advantage of her following and just put out great recipes but her books go the extra mile and that's why I buy them.  I actually learn. 

Years ago when I was first married, I couldn't cook.  I literally had to call my mother to find out how to make a baked potato.  You wash the potato, put it in the oven and bake it.  You test to see if it's soft by sticking it with a fork.  I did that and it exploded in my face, all over my clothes and the oven.  You actually have to poke them before baking or kaboom.  My mother left that out.  While she found it quite funny, I realized I REALLY knew nothing about cooking if I couldn't chuck something in the oven and turn it on and be successful.  During that time Nathalie Dupree was on PBS every Saturday morning with a cooking show.  Not only was she talking about what she was doing but she told you why.  One time she mentioned the amount of money that is spent learning to play golf, reasoning that learning to cook was just ...learning...and a bad pie crust was a small amount of money to pay for a successful future.  

Today, I can cook almost anything and I owe that to Nathalie Dupree.  Favorite Stories and Recipes is a book filled with stories, recipes and beautiful, large color photos.  Honestly, you can't go wrong with any of her books. You will learn loads, get an interesting book to actually read (not just reference) and get some great workable recipes too.

Thursday, April 15, 2021

The Drowning Kind by Jennifer McMahon



Hello everyone.  I hope your day is going well.

I have to confess, I am behind on reviews.  I try not to post too many a month, not to pester you.  How many times do you want to read these before I make your teeth itch or you roll your eyes at what I'm saying for the gazillionth time? (My mother would say not to do that or they'll stay that way.) The issue is that I've read so many books lately. Thrillers are making me very happy.  It seems for the longest time we've had lots of domestic thrillers, you know, wife is secretly someone else, hubby is a serial killer, or the kindly next door neighbor has fifteen bodies planted in his garden hoping they'll fertilize his roses.  Aah you say, but April you love those. I do indeed! However, all of the sudden there are a batch of books out that take my thriller addiction out of the neighborhood and into interesting locations or have a smidge of supernatural thrown in...something different.  Honestly, I'm reading them faster than I am reviewing them as I'm basically having thriller-paloosa here. Still I'll try not to slap gobs of reviews up but sometimes I can't help myself.

I recently read The Drowning Kind by Jennifer McMahon.  This book features two time lines, the current day and 1929. Both time periods have a story that surrounds a natural spring.  Supposedly you can talk to this water, tell it what you want, basically make a wish and it comes true.  But the water gives at a price.  

In the current day there are two sisters Lexie and Jax.  Lexie has been written off by Jax, who believes her sister is having mental issues and has stopped taking her medication. In fact, Jax is receiving multiple calls from Lexie that are gibberish, so they go ignored.  Sadly, shortly after, Jax discovers that Lexie has died, drowned in the pool on the family's estate she now owns. When returning home for the funeral, Jax is flooded with memories of her sister and the beloved pool, remembering what a strong swimmer she was.  Things are complicated when Jax finds the estate house a disaster, things are everywhere, dirty dishes, belongings, and tons of paper.  It seems that before she died Lexie was researching the estate and her own family.  Did that play a part in her mental break or death?

In 1929, Will and Ethel are newly weds and very much want to have a baby.  Unfortunately Ethel hopes each month that she is pregnant only to be disappointed.  Will decides to ease the stress by taking them away to a beautiful resort.  Ethel discovers that the waters of the resort are supposed to heal, cure and may even be able to grant wishes.

Clear your schedule for this one.  Opening the book will have you instantly hooked and you'll ignore your loved ones until it's over.  Loved this, hope you do too.

Monday, April 12, 2021

The Burning Girls by C.J. Tudor



Hello everyone. I hope your week is going well.

How do you feel about religion?  Do you believe in a higher power, a creator or an afterlife?  I believe in God.  All I have to do is look at a baby, that cannot be an accident or evolution.  What makes one person love turkey sandwiches and the next hate them...hubby would say the person that hates turkey sandwiches is just flat out nuts but consider the source! Also, all the people throughout history who have seen a ghost are lying or suffering from mass hallucinations?  For thousands of years? Highly doubtful.  I know what I heard and saw in my own house!  Anyway, I recognize everyone's choice to believe what they want and frankly, I find religion a very personal thing.  

I recently read The Burning Girls by  C.J. Tudor.  This is the story of a vicar in England who has been transferred to a very small church in the countryside.  The town is close-knit and not very accepting of strangers. When the new leader of the small church arrives with their daughter, a welcome present is left.  You know this book is going to be good when the gift left for the new religious leader to make them feel at home is an exorcism kit.  Oh yes, you read that correctly!  

The reader quickly finds out that the burning girls are two young women who were burned as martyrs during the Protestant revolution.  Little twig dolls representing these young woman start appearing. I won't spoil it for you but I want to warn you if you are thinking of skipping this book, don't!  It is a super fast read, with lots of twists.  It isn't about witchcraft, it isn't too scary, and if you're not a fan of religion you'll still enjoy this book...the religion isn't the point just the setting for a this heart pounding supernatural mystery.

This book is so good you'll asked to be "blessed" with more books by C.J. Tudor.

Saturday, April 3, 2021

No Exit by Taylor Adams




***Just a warning.  I usually try to avoid telling you anything specific about the book so you can discover it on your own, in this review I reveal something that happens. This fact I talk about doesn't ruin the story for you but I can't tell you how I feel about the book without explaining why in this way.  So I guess it's a tiny spoiler but not for the whole book and certainly not for the ending.  What I tell you here happens early on.


Hello everyone.  I hope you're having a good day.

How important is a characters connection to you?  Can you love a book if you don't care for any of the people or doesn't it matter?  I've seen so many book reviews where people say they couldn't connect with the characters so they hated the book.  I think that's really interesting and I wonder if that opinion varies by genre.  I would imagine in a romance you must really care about the people involved so you can root for them to fall in love.  For a thriller, I am unsure if that is so true. I think perhaps thriller readers are looking for twists and not so much character development.  Don't get me wrong, thrillers with uninteresting characters kill a story but I think perhaps it's less important.

I recently read No Exit by Taylor Adams.  This is the story of a college student, Darby, who is going home to see her dying mother.  Darby gets stuck in a snowstorm in the Colorado Rockies and must pull over and spend the night at a Rest Area along with four others already stranded. While outside trying to find a signal for her cell phone, Darby discovers a van with a small girl locked in a cage in the back, obviously having been kidnapped.  The dilemma who of the four others inside is the kidnapper.

While I thought this book might be boring given its limited scene of the Rest Area and cast, it isn't.  In fact, it is action packed and very much a page turner. I thought I had read a total of thirty minutes yet was on page 197...obviously an engrossing book.  Ah, not only engrossing but gross, this has lots of violence and gore and it's all very graphic.  Do not read with a weak stomach.  While I enjoyed the book and loved the pacing the main character drove me crazy.  I found myself yelling at the book.  When Darby gets to speak to the kidnapped girl, does she ask any of the important questions that any normal, sane person would ask? NO, she doesn't.  I kept yelling ask the question, ask the question. Instead of asking which of the four was her kidnapper and more importantly are they armed, Darby wastes time on her name and where she's from.  If tf wasn't so annoying it would sound like a bar pick up line..."Hey, where you from?"  It happened repeatedly throughout the book. At one point Darby was so dumb and annoying I found myself actually rooting for the kidnapper!

No Exit was a great read, especially for any thriller lover.  Just beware of the dumbest heroine in history and that it is not for the squeamish.