Friday, March 31, 2017

3.31.2017 - The Girl Who Was Taken

The Girl Who Was Taken by Charlie Donlea

Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read this thriller!

If you can get pass the premise of the book - that people get off on abduction stories - and lots of creepy abduction details, then you'll be left with a thrill ride of a book.

Livia Cutty is a fellow in a forensic pathology program in North Carolina, still reeling from guilt over the fact that her younger sister was abducted and is still missing. Megan, the girl who was abducted from the same party on the beach at the end of the previous summer escaped but had so knowledge of what happened to Nicole.

A body fished from the bay starts Livia down a path that leads her to start investigating the disappearance of Megan, Nicole and other girls. Megan is seeing a psychologist and undergoing hypnosis to try and recover more of her memories.

This book will keep you guessing til the last sentence (and even after that!) - it's a great ride and I raced through it

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

3.29.2017 - The Garden of Small Beginnings

The Garden of Small Beginnings by Abbi Waxman

First, thanks so much to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read this wonderful book!

You know when you laugh out loud at the book dedication that you are in for a treat. Lilian is a young mother of two precocious girls, Annabel and Claire. Lilian's husband, Dan, died in an accident in front of their home. Lilian had a breakdown and spent time in a hospital recovering, although 4 years later she is still trying to recover.

Lilian is a textbook illustrator and given the job of illustrating a book on gardening - the client asked that she attend a new gardening class. Of course, the instructor is young, handsome and basically perfect. The class attendees are a fun bunch and they all have wonderful back stories.

The relationship between Lilian and her sister, Rachel, who basically put her life on hold to help Lilian with the girls after Dan's left, is priceless. They argue, laugh, poke fun and basically are wonderful supports for each other - much more than their dysfunctional mom.

This book is just utter joy - the humor is so funny and sarcastic that I laughed out loud in so many spots - in a book about grief! The analogy between plants growing and our lives changing and moving forward is perfect. This book is an amazing read - I used to give the book Good Grief to friends struggling with grief, but this is going to be my next go to.

I loved it - highly recommended!

Sunday, March 26, 2017

3.26.2017 - Burntown

Burntown by Jennifer McMahon

Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read and review this book - I loved it!

While this might not be for everyone, I really loved the mix of mystery, suspense, supernatural, survival - did I miss any? I'm a huge fan of this author's work but I found myself really drawn to figuring out what happened in this book - and there is lots to figure out!

There are layers of mysteries in this book that carry down through one family living in Ashford, Vermont. Miles, the dad, has plans for a machine that was supposedly Thomas Edison's invention that would allow people to speak to the dead. He builds the machine mainly to find out the mystery of his own parents' deaths. Then, on the night of a big flood that threatens their house, the machines speaks and warns of danger. The dad and brother are gone in the flood and we are introduced more to Necco, Miles' daughter, and his wife, Lily, who are living with a group of fire eaters on the fringe of town and hiding from someone that Lily is convinced is after them.

There are so many layers in this story - I loved just diving in until the end of the book when all was settled. The characters are so diverse and eccentric yet have good hearts - well, most of them!

Highly recommended!

Friday, March 24, 2017

3.24.2017 - Anything is Possible

Anything Is Possible by Elizabeth Strout

Thanks so much to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read and review this book!

Elizabeth Strout is another one of those authors that just leaves you reeling at the beauty of her words. Anything is Possible was written in tandem with My Name is Lucy Barton. In that book, Lucy is in the hospital and her estranged mother comes and sits by her bedside. They begin a bond when her mom starts talking about all the people from their small town. This book is about those people. Brilliant.

At the end of each of the stories, I had to put the book down and just think a bit. Everyone seemed to leave you with a different lesson and a different feeling. I wish I had read the two back to back and plan to do that in the future just for additional points of view on all these characters' lives.

Great book!

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

3.21.2017 - One Perfect Lie

One Perfect Lie by Lisa Scottoline

Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read and review this book - I loved it!

Maybe I should first qualify this review by saying that I would probably read Lisa Scottoline's grocery list - I just love her writing. I was thrilled to get the opportunity to read her latest suspense story. And what a story!

From the first chapter, we learn that nothing about Chris is true. He is applying for a position as a teacher and coach in a Pennsylvania high school and he is looking for the right boy to help him with a plan. He seeks out a certain type of boy - being raised by a single parent or have something missing in their home life - and narrows his choice down to 3 boys.

This story is also told in chapters from the mothers of those boys - opening up lots of interesting viewpoints, especially about raising teenagers in this world of social media.

This one has lots of twists and turns and I don't want to say anything to ruin the ride, because it's a fun one! Highly recommended!

Monday, March 20, 2017

3.20.2017 - The Idea of You

The Idea of You by Amanda Prowse

Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read and review this book!

This is definitely an emotional read and a very personal one for the author. Lucy is an executive in a marketing firm in London when she meets Jonah at a baby christening and they begin their fairy tale marriage. Lucy is older and is desperate for a baby but finds out that things aren't as easy as she had hoped.

When Jonah's teenage stepdaughter comes to spend the summer with them, their relationship also isn't easy. Lucy struggles with jealousy and fears that Camille's arrival is taking the place of her dreams for a baby.

Interspersed are emotional letters that Lucy is writing whose meaning becomes more clear as you read the book.

This is a quick read, one I couldn't put down and one that deals with a subject that will resonate with so many. It also makes you think about motherhood and family and all the various forms that can take.

Saturday, March 18, 2017

3.18.207 - Silver and Salt

Silver & Salt by Elanor Dymott

Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read and review this book.

This is a difficult, painful read but a wonderfully-written look into a family fraught with dysfunction and mental illness.

Max is a celebrated photographer who meets and marries, Sophia, an opera singer. He whisks her away from London and her singing world and goes off on his photography trips, eventually leaving her with two small girls. Max is never around and when he is, he's distant and abusive to his wife and girls. Sophia eventually lapses into mental illness. Beatrice, Max's sister, eventually swoops in to care for the girls.

Vinny is the oldest and strongest daughter. She excels at school and is focused on her study of languages. Ruthie is the youngest and doesn't cope well with her parents' absence. Max eventually tries to teach Ruthie photography, but is still abusive and mean in his methods while Ruthie strives for his attention and praise.

When Max passes away, the sisters meet at their villa in Greece. A family is also on the compound vacationing, and Ruthie becomes obsessed with the young daughter, Annie. Annie's brother, Edward, is cruel to Annie and it opens up a plethora of past memories, spiraling Ruthie into the same mental illness as her mother.

A remarkably-written book about such a painful subject.

Thursday, March 16, 2017

3.16.2017 - Marlena

Marlena by Julie Buntin

Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read this book!

This is a coming-of-age story, complete with all the typical teenage angst, however, much grittier and sharp.

Catherine (redefined as Cat) has to leave her exclusive private school and move to a very small town in northern Michigan when her parents divorce. Her mom used her settlement to buy a prefab home for the family, which includes her old brother, Jimmy.

Living in a barn across the street is a very dysfunctional family - Marlena and her little brother, Sal, along with her druggie father. Cat becomes obsessed with Marlena, two years older and coming from a much different background. However, they're both grieving the loss of a parent - Cat's dad who now is remarried, and Marlena's mom, who disappeared. Cat goes from a high-achiever to skipping out of school. They soon become inseparable, and Marlena introduces Cat to a whole different world - drinking, drugs, sex.

We're told in the beginning of the story that Marlena dies - drowning in 6" of water in the woods on a cold November night. The story is spooled out between time periods and locations - Michigan in the past as we learn of the girls' story and New York in the present, where Cat is still struggling with her demons, the loss of her friend, and letting her past define her.

A great debut novel - not always easy to read but written wonderfully.

Monday, March 13, 2017

3.13.2017 - The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley

The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley by Hannah Tinti

Thanks so much to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read this amazing book!

I loved this book and was so drawn into these characters. Such an interesting way of telling this story too - it enables you to feel the reasons why the characters behave the way they do and turn your feelings on end about what is right and wrong.

The story is told in two voices and times - Samuel Hawley and his daughter, Loo. Samuel's story is spun out in alternating chapters, each focusing on how he got a bullet would in his body, so the narrative is from his early past into the future. In the present day chapters, Samuel and Loo have finally stopped their lifetime of running from place to place and have settled in Olympus, Massachusetts. Samuel has a job as a fisherman and Loo tries to fit in at school, mostly unsuccessfully. Loo is haunted by the death of her mother when she was just a child and is obsessed with learning more about her. Samuel is also obsessed by Lily, Loo's mother, and keeps a shrine in the bathroom wherever they go.

Because we learn about Samuel's criminal past slowly through his bullet wounds while we see in the present day how much of a good father he is, it really does color your perception about doing bad things for good reasons.

An amazing book - highly recommended!

Friday, March 10, 2017

3.10.2017 - Dead Letters

Dead Letters by Caite Dolan-Leach

Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read this book!

This is being marketed as a suspense thriller - while it's definitely a mystery, it isn't the type of book that I would classify as a thriller. However, that takes none of the power away from this book.

Ava and Zelda are twins, born to alcoholic, dysfunctional parents who own a winery in the Finger Lakes of NY. They were always opposites - Ava the good girl to Zelda's wild child persona. When their dad leaves the family to start a better life in California (better wife & kids, better winery), the girls are left to care for their mother who is slipping into dementia. Ava is expected to be the one to return home after college and take care of the winery and the family - however, after a betrayal by Zelda, she escapes to Paris to start her own better life. Because of their falling out, Ava hasn't spoken to Zelda in two years - until she gets a phone call to return home because Ava died in a fire.

But did she die? Ava starts receiving messages from Zelda - an alphabet puzzle to solve. The puzzle leads her to discover aspects of her family that she never knew as well as solving the mystery of what happened to Zelda.

I really enjoyed this book and uncovering the truths about the characters. A wonderfully-written debut novel!

Tuesday, March 7, 2017

3.7.2017 - Almost Missed You

Almost Missed You by Jessica Strawser

Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read this wonderful debut novel!

I really liked this book - I just couldn't put it down until I unearthed all the secrets and twisted truths from all these characters.

Violet and Finn are a match made in heaven - with a little help from Craigslist. After a chance encounter at a beach, they find each other again in Cincinnati and a romance begins. When their little boy is born, Bear, Violet couldn't imagine a more perfect world. Until Finn leaves Violet while they are on vacation and takes Bear.

Finn's oldest friend, Caitlyn, and her husband, George, are Violet and Finn's best friends - even though George comes from a very wealthy political family. Caitlyn has twin boys who are practically raised with Bear. But each of these characters has a secret that threatens everyone else in their group. Is anyone really who we think they are?

I thoroughly enjoyed curling up with this book on a rainy day and racing through it to find out what happens. An amazing debut and I can't wait to read more from this author. Highly recommended!

Sunday, March 5, 2017

3.5.2017 - Duplicity

Duplicity by Jane Haseldine

Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read and review this great book!

This is the second in this series of mysteries involving Julia Gooden, a crime beat journalist in Detroit. The first book, The Last Time She Saw Him, was a great story and highly recommended that you start with that book to get the background of these characters and the story. However, it would read well as a stand-alone novel also.

In this story, Julia's husband, David, an Assistant District Attorney in Detroit, is starting a new trial against a crime mob boss, Nick Rossi, accused of drug trafficking, bribery, among other crimes. Just as the trial begins, David has a surprise witness that is set to turn on Rossi and make the case against him stick.

Julia and David are still walking a tightrope in their marriage but things are looking promising that he will return home to Julia and their two sons. Then the unthinkable happens, a bomb goes off at the courthouse just as the surprise witness is being brought in as well as Julia's son, there on a class field trip.

After the dust settles, Julia is intent on proving that Rossi was behind the bombing and she throws caution to the wind to investigate on her own. Returning characters of police detectives Navarro and Russell are back to investigate all the goings-on. In addition, Julia's brother, Ben, who has been missing since he was a child and has had such an impact on her life, is never far from her mind.

This is a high-action mystery with interesting, well-developed characters, realistic action, and great gritty setting in Detroit - wonderful follow up to the first in the series and I can't wait to read the next book!

Friday, March 3, 2017

3.3.2017 - The Arrangement

The Arrangement by Sarah Dunn

Thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read this book - I loved it!

While at first glance, a book about open marriages wouldn't be at the top of my reading list but this one is not to be missed. The writing about marriage, parenthood, real life is spot on - you'll laugh, sometimes loudly!, you'll commiserate, you'll love these characters.

Owen and Lucy have moved from NYC to scenic Beekman, where life is more storybook and a great place to raise their on-the-spectrum son, Wyatt. After a night with friends and too much alcohol, the idea of an open marriage - albeit one with a written list of rules and a time period - transforms from an idea to a reality. What could possibly go wrong?

Really a fun read with a great ending - kudos to the author!

Thursday, March 2, 2017

3.2.2017 - Never Let You Go

Never Let You Go by Chevy Stevens

Many thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and author for the opportunity to read this great book!

I've been a huge fan of Chevy Stevens for a long while and her latest does not disappoint. The book is told in different time periods in different voices, which definitely adds to the storyline.

The subject of the book is Lindsey - a young mom with her daughter, Sophie, married to a very abusive, controlling man. We see the beginnings of their relationship through the escalating abuse and Lindsey's need to escape to save herself and Sophie. Then there's an accident, and her husband, Andrew, is in jail. Lindsey and Sophie move to a small town and start over. When Andrew is released from jail, Lindsey starts noticing signs that he's back in her life, sneaking into her house, trying to contact Sophie.

Can't say any more because that will ruin all the suspense in this story that you just need to read yourself. Very fast-paced and I couldn't put it down- highly recommended!