Sunday, July 18, 2021

The Stranger in the Mirror by Liv Constantine



Hello everyone.  I hope you're having the best day!

Years ago we were watching some program about people being abducted by aliens.  One man, with some crazy Spock like eyebrows (if that isn't ironic) said he was taken to an alien ship and when he came back he remembered nothing.  He told the interviewer he was not suffering from amnesia but "double amnesia".  This sweet man gave us quite a chuckle and we've remembered his unusual statement.  In fact, it drives my family bonkers when playing Taboo, hubby just says the word "double" and I will respond with "amnesia".

I recently read The Stanger in the Mirror by Liv Constantine.  The author is actually a pen name for two writer sisters, Lynne and Valerie.  I applaud their patience working together. My sisters and I would be in jail as someone wouldn't come out alive. Apparently, the Constantine sisters have a great system going. The Stranger in the Mirror is about Addison, who is about to marry Gabriel.  While both are happy and in love, Addison is worried as she has amnesia.  She has been Addison for just two years and cannot remember her life before that time.  She is afraid she has done something bad, or could have another family and is desperate to not hurt Gabriel.  While he is concerned about what caused Addison to forget her whole life, he is willing to put it behind them and concentrate just on their future.  Hours away, Julian is trying to figure out what happened to his wife, Cassandra.  Naturally, these lives come together like some awkwardly fitting jigsaw puzzle, where you trying to pound pieces to make them fit.  The writing is clean and easy to read. The story moves quickly and confidently.  The twists come often, some you can guess, others are a complete surprise.  This book will make you pay attention to details, have you proclaiming "I knew it" one minute then "Oh my gosh" the next.  It is a wild ride and every bit a thriller. 

Sometime, remind me to tell you about the agreement my siblings have about a late night call and the phrase "bring the shovel."  It's probably best if hubby isn't around.

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Survive The Night by Riley Sager



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

Not to push you to other book reviewers, but do you ever watch reviews on YouTube?  I don't like to watch reviews, I don't want to be influenced and I definitely want to be surprised. However, I love seeing people's hauls.  Heck, it's like shopping without spending my money...what could be better (hubby would certainly agree).  Sadly, I saw a complete review from someone who had an advanced copy of the new Riley Sager book.  Not a review, a piece of hell on earth!  They jumped in telling everyone what happened in the book, that they hated it because of the ending, then gave away the big twist of the end!  Arrrrrgggh!  I've been waiting months for the next Sager thriller.  How?  Why?  I sat here in shock.  What do I do now? Read it, knowing it sucks because of how it ends.  Read it anyway, because I've read so many Riley Sager books that I know the others bouncing around in my brain would like a new playmate?  Dag gum it, I hate this decision and I don't want to waste my book money on something I'm not going to like.  God Bless Book of the Month, who had it listed as an add-on, which means you can buy it for $9.99.  Dilemma solved.  For a deep discount I would take a chance.

I recently read Survive the Night by Riley Sager.  This is the story of a girl, Charlie, a college student whose roommate was tragically murdered.  She decides to go home but needs a ride, so arranges to travel with Josh, who she meets through a campus ride board. As they head into the hills of Pennsylvania in the middle of the night, Charlie realizes all is not as it should be and Josh might not be who he says, in fact, Josh might be the killer.  

Beside already knowing the ending, I thought perhaps because of it's limited scene, the car, that this would be boring.  It isn't.  I feared this would be a slow read, watching the miles tick by with nothing to do but talk.  A book full of endless dialog.  It isn't all dialog and it isn't slow, not at all.  Okay, I'll stop being so coy.  The book was good.  It was a real Riley Sager.  Fast paced, exciting, and nerve-wracking.  The ending that had been spoiled for me, was only half true, and there were plenty more twists.  Just go into thinking this is just a book, it's fiction and you're reading for fun.  Set your expectations and criticisms aside and you'll very much enjoy this book

If you're in college, maybe think twice before carpooling home.  I hear the bus is quite lovely this time of year.

Monday, June 21, 2021

Churchill's Secret Messenger by Alan Hlad



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

I recently received a book in the mail and before I could even get the package fully open my husband announced it was his.  Was it his? No, but something about this book intrigued him.  He loves most things spy related....hmmm....maybe I should start wondering about HIM!  Anyway, he is not a big pleasure reader so when he wants to read something, I encourage it.  Turns out he was quite mesmerized by this story, which he says is haunting.  I asked him to tell you about it.  His review follows.

I recently read Churchill's Secret Messenger by Alan Hlad. Set in the early days of World War II, it's about a young English woman who's recruited into a clandestine service to pose as a typical French citizen. Armed with her training, a few tools of the spy trade, and her prior familiarity with Paris, she finds herself parachuting into occupied France to courier coded communications between British Intelligence and the French Resistance. Having had a general interest in spies and cryptology, several books of the genre have made their way to my shelves. 

I now find myself with a difficult task. Without revealing any more of the plot, I wish to highly recommend this work. I realize it's a great deal to ask, to advise readers to avoid any other reviews, and not even to read the jacket blurbs, just to dive in and read it. Simply put, this book transcends the usual spy novel, and will not be one forgotten by the reader.   

Monday, June 14, 2021

The Maidens by Alex Michaelides



Hello everyone.  I hope you are well.

I try and put something personal here that in some way relates to the book.  I know y'all just think I'm yammering on for the heck of it, which is true, but I'm also linking real life to the book of the moment.  I've talked about owning a haunted house, restoring houses, lots of housewife stuff (including endless dusting and chicken roasting, hopefully not really having anything to do with each other), my childhood and my often irritating family (I say teasingly to get a rise out of them). I've even told you way more than you ever wanted to know about my Brownie troop, that somehow was linked to a book. Today, I've got nothin'.  Yes, I know that is not how you spell nothing and incorrect grammar, I'm being folksy.

I recently read The Maidens by Alex Michaelides.  This is the author that wrote the very popular thriller The Silent Patient, which I very much enjoyed and even cajoled my husband into reading.  We were both surprised by the ending.  Reading the number of thrillers I do, I don't get surprised by that many so when it happens it's fantastic.

In the newest book, The Maidens, we are following Mariana, who has sadly recently lost her husband.  Marianna grew up in Greece, where her family was fairly well off. While on a Greek island with her husband on vacation, he goes missing.  She finds that he has drown and as the book opens she is trying to move on with her life but is also in mourning and deeply misses the man she loved so much.  To make matters more complicated she must travel to Cambridge University, where a girl has just been brutally murdered  and was a friend of her niece who is distraught.  Marianna takes it upon herself to help figure out who is the killer, to protect her niece from any future heartbreak and keep her safe.  Despite the police zeroing in on one subject, Marianna suspects a professor of Greek tragedies, Edward Fosca.  Not only does she suspect but she becomes adamant that he is the killer.  As readers, we see possible guilty people everywhere.  The author is astute at directing us to this person then the next, each with the real possibility of secretly being a monster.  

I thought I had this book figured out.  I eliminated everywhere the author was begging us to look for killers and I picked an improbable person and told hubby at page 207 I was a thriller reading genius and despite Alex Michaelides' best attempt, I had won...I knew who did it. Um...yeah...so much for my "I read so many thrillers I know all the authors tricks"...I'm a genius.... I was wrong.  Darn it. I thought I had it.  I really did.  My guilty person was good, really unexpected, explosive, but the author's was better.  The book was all things you expect in a thriller and obviously I enjoyed it despite being outwitted (my family would say that is so easily accomplished!)

Next time Mr. Michaelides, I'll beat you, now I'm determined.

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Malibu Rising by Taylor Jenkins Reid



Hello everyone.  Hope you're day is going well.

When I was six, my parents decided to put in a pool.  A real, in ground, heated, diving board type pool.  One of our neighbors also had a pool.  So the Moms decided we all needed to learn to swim and hired a private teacher to come turn about six of us into mermaids at the neighbor's pool, which thankfully had been done first.  The teacher, we all thought, was the devil incarnate.  She would teach us to dog paddle, hold a long bamboo pole out and then entice us into the deep end, assuring us we could grab the pole should we not feel secure.  Of course, like the charming, angelic, innocent, young kindergarten age children we were, we trusted the "teacher" who, oh yes you know what she did,  she pulled the pole away.  Once in the deep end we were left to sink or swim, literally.  Our mothers sitting by the shallow end, with pretty furniture, drinking iced tea and talking about recipes or some hunky road crew member spotted on the way home from the grocery store.  All the while, we were being tortured by our devil spawn of a swimming instructor.  The joke was on them, Jennie swallowed so much water, after going under for the zillionth time, she promptly barfed all over the place.  Needless to say, lessons were cancelled for several days while the pool was cleaned. I'm certain my parents were very glad that our pool wasn't the one finished first.  Now, despite living near the ocean, I'm not crazy about the water, not even a sparkling blue pool.

I recently read Malibu Rising by Taylor Jenkins Reid.  This is the author of the popular Daisy Jones & the Six and The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo. In this story we follow the Riva family. They all live in Malibu, California and much of their lives has had to do with the water.  The past and present lives of the four siblings are explored, Nina, Jay, Hud, and Kit.  As well as their parents and grandparents.  Their father is a famous singer and his fame affects the family in the past and present.  Every year Nina, the oldest sibling, holds a party in her house.  This year the party gets out of hand and before the next morning, people will be arrested, secrets revealed and the house will be burned to the ground.  

This book is one giant case study for character development.  I felt like I knew each of the kids and wanted them all to succeed.  This book will have to laughing and will tug at your heart.  I found myself in tears in several places.  Despite this book not being a thriller, I still could not stop reading. If you want big action, blood and gore, this isn't for you. However, if you want a great story with wonderful characters, then you'll find this book everything a book should be....memorable.  Loved every second.




Friday, June 4, 2021

Madam by Phoebe Wynne



Hello everyone. I hope you've had a nice day.

When we first started dating, my husband was surprised to learn that there was only one high school in my hometown.  The town he grew up in has ten or twelve.  It's a wee bit bigger of a place.  Still, he was shocked by the support for that one school.  Many years ago, while visiting, we decided to go to a football game.  My dad got hubby to go purchase tickets with him.  Purchase tickets?  In advance?  Hubby thought my dad was looney, which I maintain they both were/are.  Yep, the old spouse was amazed when he got to the school and the box office was mobbed.  He hadn't seen anything like it since seeing major college games.  What can I say? High school football was a major thing in my area and rivalries run deep.  Just ask my cousins, who lived in adjoining towns who were my school's mortal enemies!  It was fun, especially seeing Mr. "we have a dozen high schools" eyes light up when he saw the crowds. 

I recently read Madam by Phoebe Wynne.  This is the story of a girl's school covering the teen years of education. The school, Caldonbrae Hall, is a castle on the cliffs of Scotland. They are very proud of their traditions and insist on maintaining even the slightest detail...no mug, cup and saucer.  Rose, 26, is surprised when she is offered the job of teaching Classics.  The school hasn't hired a teacher in years and the one Rose is replacing left for a reason no one will disclose.  As you might expect of an elite school, the girls are down right snotty and less than welcoming. There is an undercurrent of things being unsaid.  Other teachers advise Rose to play by the rules and stick things out, all will be revealed after her employment probation is up.  As we readers guess immediately, all is not right in the education world.

I don't know exactly how to tell you about this book. It is being given bad reviews by some for a specific reason, but I can't discuss why without spoiling the whole book.  I actually liked the story.  I am a sucker for atmosphere, which this book has plenty...a castle on the cliffs filled with bratty teens, weird caretakers, an elusive headmaster, and a completely unreliable staff...what is not to love.  It made me keep reading, I had to know the secret.  What was being hidden and why?  This issue I have with this novel isn't about the story itself but the time it takes to reveal the secrets.  Now, before you all start booing me, I know the author wants to build suspense.  I get it.  I could have just used fifty less pages of me guessing what was going on a Caldonbrae, which I was correct, and a slightly shorter book.  If you are super critical, skip this.  If you like the whole story idea, like I did, it was an interesting, atmospheric read, give it a go.

By the way, that football game just wasn't as good as when I was a student there. I wonder why?

Wednesday, June 2, 2021

The Half Sister by Sandie Jones



Hello everyone.  I hope your day is going well.

I cannot believe it's June!  The beginning of June always reminds me of the family that lived next door when I was a kid.  The Mom was our beloved elementary school nurse and was an avid gardener.  The Dad built and flew model airplanes.  They had four children.  Two were older but one girl was my age, and one was my sisters'.  Needless to say, we played together a lot.  Heck, I still remember their phone number! It's weird how some things you remember like naming the tree in their front yard "old chucker," the sledding down the back hill, riding bikes, swimming, and the endless games of Red Light Green Light.  Of course, now they are all married, some with kids, and scattered across the country.  I often think of how lucky we were to have such wonderful neighbors. Today is the birthday of that friend, a date that somehow, I've never forgotten.  

I recently read The Half Sister by Sandie Jones.  I've read two books by this author, The First Mistake and The Other Woman.  I liked both very much.  The Half Sister is about two sisters, Kate and Lauren, who are grieving the loss of their devoted father.  One Sunday, while at their mother's house for dinner, a woman comes the door asking to see their father.  When they discover the mysterious woman claims to be their half-sister, they are skeptical but start wondering about different moments from the family's past.  When the woman produces a DNA test, the world falls apart and secrets start being revealed.  Who is telling the truth and who is lying?  This book takes that issue I love of unreliable narrators and spreads it to someone who never appears in the book and is dead before it starts.  Could his life have been a lie?  

This novel is quite the ride and literally has twists until the very end.  If you don't like family drama type thrillers, then stay clear but otherwise I doubt you'd be disappointed.  More likely, you'll be cold from all that rapid page turning!  Another win for Jones.

I don't know what I was thinking, I should have sent my friend this book for her birthday.  That would certainly have made it happy.