It’s Been How Long?

Piles of Books

Book Reviews

Been a long time since I’ve posted a blog. So I thought I’d finish 2023 with some book reviews from other authors I’ve read over the past year. Below are 4 of my favorites. If you’ve read any of them, I’d love to hear your thoughts. 

The Reading List a Novel by Sara Nisha Adams 
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The Reading List by by Sara Nisha Adams

Someone has created a list with the heading ‘Just in case you need it’ followed by 8 well-known fiction novels. This mysterious list is written in an elegant hand and there are multiple copies floating around a London neighborhood. The characters who encounter the list are struggling in one way or another. Two of these characters are the main focus of the story.

Mukesh is a self-conscious, aging man who feels lost since the death of his wife. She was his inspiration during their many years of marriage. Now he finds himself alone and lonely. At least until he discovers an overdue library book under his bed.

Aleisha is a teenage librarian for the summer break and would rather be any place else. Unfortunately, she and her older brother Aidan are the only breadwinners in the family. Their father left and their mother suffers from crippling depression. Aleisha feels lost and alone until she encounters Mukesh at the library.

An assortment of other characters pass through the pages. Each with their own unique challenges. But they all gain new insights after encountering ‘the list’. 

I loved reading this author’s debut novel because it demonstrates the power of a good story and the value of community, culture and tolerance. It is a book that I will read more than once.

Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward
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Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward

Fifteen-year-old Esch lives in the fictional town of Bois Sauvage, Mississippi. She narrates this tale of her life with her father and 3 brothers. The family struggles to survive on their late mother’s ancestral land.  

Esch’s alcoholic father is currently obsessed with preparing for a hurricane, only 10 days away. Brother Skeetah only cares about breeding pit bulls for fighting. Oldest brother Randall hopes that his basketball skills will get him out of Bois Sauvage. Young Junior runs wild. And Esch stands in the center of this chaos in auto-pilot.

When Esch discovers she is pregnant by a neighborhood boy who doesn’t care about her, memories of her mother’s death during childbirth haunt her.

When the hurricane strikes it is with a vengeance and everything that Esch thought was important is lost.

I was impressed with the poetic prose in the voice of Esch, alternating between unsightliness and beauty. Esch narrates a day by day countdown of a community living in poverty while preparing for a category 4 hurricane. Her family is put to the test where survival of the fittest reigns. The losses are great but the community comes together, giving Esch a new sense of value.

The One Hundred Years of Lenni and Margot by Marianne Cronin
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The One Hundred Years of Lenni and Margot: A Novel by Marianne Cronin

At Glasgow Princess Royal Hospital there is a ward for terminally ill children called the May Ward. 17-year-old Lenni will spend the rest of her life there. She will touch the hearts and minds of Father Arthur whose hospital chapel is always empty, New Nurse whose red hair clashes with her uniform, Paul the Porter whose arms are covered with questionable tattoos, The Temp who was over qualified to work at the hospital, Pippa the art therapist who is very good at her job and Margot whose 83 years added to Lenni’s 17 makes for a 100-page pictorial account of their combined lives.

Margot and Lenni share in the narration of their lives before and up to Glasgow Princess Royal Hospital. Although it is Lenni that this reader longs to interact with, Margot’s bits and pieces of her long life are a joy to read.

In Lenni’s words, “When people say ‘terminal’ I think of the airport.” Lenni has a way with words and her interactions with Father Arthur regarding God were a pleasure to read. She manages to distract others from her obvious ‘terminal’ outcome with humor and wisdom. In the end, Lenni will return to her airport metaphor in a beautiful and touching way.

The Jealousy Man and Other Short Stories by Jo Nesbo
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The Jealousy Man by Jo Nesbo

Jo Nesbo, famous for Norwegian crime novels, has the reputation of creating scary bad guys and smart but flawed good guys. There are 12 stories in this collection, each with its own unique Nesbo twist.

One story takes place in an airplane’s first class section. A woman, seated at the window seat is leaving her unfaithful husband. But she wants to leave him with a message. She has signed an unbreakable suicide contract that ensures her death within a 3-week period. A death that will not appear to be suicide. Then she falls in love with her seatmate. 

Another tale takes place on a small island in Greece where identical twin brothers are visiting for rock climbing. One brother goes missing and an investigation reveals that both men were in love with the same woman. Without a body, the Athens detective must unravel what happened to the missing brother. All this while a storm pounds the island.

There is also a story that focuses on a Chemistry student working as a cashier and who hates it when people cut in line. She sees it often but she has a unique method for relieving the world of such people.

I’ve read many of Nesbo’s novels including the Harry Hole series. What I enjoy most is a common theme of the love and lust that drives his characters. And the unexpected which always shows up.

Happy Holidays and Well Wishes for the coming year.

Other Book Reviews

Note: This blog is sponsored by me, Karen J Adams. Any recommendations or suggestions are purely my own opinion without the exchange of money.

 Unpublished work © 2023 Karen J Adams

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

I’ve Been Busy Reading and Writing

My last post was in November 2021. Yikes! After the chaos of the holiday season, I got busy on a huge writing project. A novel. First draft is finished. Hurray!

Will be doing some revisions and then on to the challenge of publishing. I’ll keep you posted.

In the meantime I have read many books. Here is a list of my seven favorites (not in any particular order):

Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel

A time travel story with a twist. Gaspery-Jacques Roberts is a detective living on the Moon’s Night City. He is hired to investigate an anomaly in the North American wilderness. On Earth. Beginning with a stop in 1912.

Turns out there are several people involved in this anomaly. As well as several centuries. Notably, an old man playing a violin in an airship terminal. Once he learns the source of the anomaly, Gaspery must choose between his gut and the rules of time travel.

Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr

This novel is a mosaic of time and space. At the center of the story is an ancient Greek book. Entitled Cloud Cuckoo Land. It is the fictional novel about a shepherd, Aethon. Aethon dreams of being turned into a bird so he can fly to a utopian paradise. Cloud Cuckoo Land has made it into the hands and minds of five characters.

Fifteenth century Anna is an orphaned seamstress residing within the walls of Constantinople. She crosses paths with Omeir, a village boy. He lives outside the walls. Omeir and his beloved oxen are conscripted into an army. One that will siege the city.

In present day, elderly Zeno, enjoys translating ancient Greek texts. He spends his days in an Idaho library. Seymour, an autistic teen, also spends time in the same library. Seymour becomes involved with ecoterrorists. He plans to bomb the library.

In the distant future, on an interstellar ship is 12-year-old Konstance. The ship, Argos, travels to a planet that her future offspring will inhabit. Konstance questions the purpose of the journey. She is familiar with the story of Aethon. Passed down to her from her father. It is a story that she will also pass along.

Each of these characters have a common need for survival and a longing for a happy ending.

Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt

This tale requires a small stretch of imagination. But it’s worth it. The widowed Tova Sullivan takes a custodial job at the Sowell Bay Aquarium. Staying busy helps her cope. Like when her 18-year-old son, Erik, went missing 30 years prior. Tova forms a relationship with Marcellus, a grumpy giant Pacific octopus.

Marcellus resides in the aquarium where Tova cleans. He was rescued at an early age. Although Marcellus thinks of himself as a prisoner. Here’s where your imagination must extend itself. Marcellus narrates his story and his observations of the human species as a whole. He is also aware of what happened to Erik all those years ago. How will he get that information to his friend, Tova?

A beautiful tale of love, loss and unexpected connections.

The Boys: A Memoir of Hollywood and Family by Ron Howard

Take a walk down memory lane with Ron and Clint Howard. Learn about behind the scenes activities of the Mayberry crew. The book includes details about Ron’s directorial debut and how he got it. Clint discusses his substance abuse. Both brothers speak warmly of their parents.

If you were a fan of nightly television in the 60’s and 70’s, you’ll enjoy this memoir.

The Last House on Needless Street by Catriona Ward

You have your serial killer. Your stolen child. Revenge. Death. This novel is filled with surprises. At the beginning, you’ll be certain you know what’s going on. You don’t. Each chapter offers a new unexpected tidbit. Coming together for a satisfactory ending.

Harlem Shuffle by Colson Whitehead

Ray Carnie is almost completely legitimate with his Harlem Furniture Store. His cousin, Freddie, doesn’t pretend to be legitimate in his dealings. Then Freddie offers Ray a deal too good to be true. How will Ray maintain his stellar reputation, keep Freddie alive and get his fair share of the deal?

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

How does a High School Science teacher save the world? That’s what Ryland Grace is tasked with. However, when he wakes up from a very long sleep in an unfamiliar place, he doesn’t remember anything. Not even his name.

On top of that, there are two dead bodies in the room with him. Also with him is a set of robot arms that care for his needs. He remembers scientific data but doesn’t know why. It all comes back to him in short flashbacks. Until he realizes he is on a suicide mission. Earth’s last resort for survival.

With lots of science and plenty of mystery, the story unfolds. With some unexpected assistance, it may not be a suicide mission after all.

Note: This blog is sponsored by me, Karen J Adams. Any recommendations or suggestions are purely my own opinion without the exchange of money.

 Unpublished work © 2022 Karen J Adams

Dying to Win

My Interpretation of Squid Game

Note:  Spoiler Alert

Netflix’s most watched series, Squid Game, is a phenom.  Why?  Is it the unabashed violence?  The exaggerated character dramas?  Its South Korean roots?  Could be the stark differences between the players.  Or maybe it’s just the idea of deadly child’s play.  Regardless, there seems to be no shortage of viewers or contestants who are dying to win. 

Despicable Ralph

The first episode offers up our main character.  I’ll call him Ralph.  Ralph is a 30-something “ne er’-do-well”.  He lives with his ailing mother who cooks and cleans for him.  Ralph lost his union job and works part-time as a chauffeur.  His wife divorced him and took their daughter. Ralph believes his luck will change so he steals his mother’s debit card and uses the cash to gamble.  He manages to win a bundle after several misses.  That’s good, right? 

Could have been if he didn’t owe money to the local loan sharks, who happen to chase Ralph at the casino.  Ralph runs and collides with a girl (I’ll call her Suzi).  Turns out Suzi is a skillful pickpocket.  Once cornered in the public restroom by the loan sharks, Ralph reaches for the cash, which is no longer in his pocket.  Uh-oh!  Ralph negotiates one last chance.  Repay on deadline or give up organs.  Hmmm, is that a “thing” in Korea?

The Thrill of Winning

By this point Ralph has proven his unworthiness to himself and to us viewers.  As he is slithering back home, via the rail, he meets a stranger who engages him in a game.  It’s a Korean version of Slap Jack – only different.  Each time Ralph loses, the stranger slaps him.  Across the face.  If only Ralph had money, then he could have avoided the slaps. 

Ralph finally wins and as he readies to slap the stranger, he is rewarded with cash!  The stranger also gives him a card.  On it is a phone number.  The other side is decorated with a circle, a triangle and a square.  An invitation to play more games.

A Beaten Down Ralph

Ralph makes the call and is picked up by a van filled with sleeping people.  He’s excited at the prospect of winning big money but quickly falls asleep when the van fills with gas. 

A New Kind of Child’s Play

Enter the House of Games!  Ralph finds himself in a warehouse filled with other people, all wearing the same crayon green warm-up suit.  And they are numbered.  Ralph is the last, number 456.  He buddies up with an old man, number 001.  001 is frail and doesn’t seem capable of playing any game, much less winning. 

Ralph notices Suzi is there and so is his neighborhood buddy, Sam.  Several other contestants emerge, all of which are in some form of financial distress.

The caretakers of the games are dressed in hot pink boiler suits with hoods and black masks.  A stark contrast to the green track suits.  Their masks have one of three shapes: square, triangle, circle.  We’ll call them the Pinks.  The Pinks are like robots.  Void of emotion and carrying weapons. 

The Pinks and The Contestants

Shock and Awe

The first of six games is Red-light, Green-light.  This is how it’s played: One player,  in this case a giant Baby Doll, turns their back on the other players. Baby Doll calls Green Light and the other players race toward her. She turns around and calls Red Light for all the players to stop. Baby Doll has roaming, movement-detecting eyes.  The players who moved are eliminated.  With a bullet.  Ralph is paralyzed by this new turn of events.  Which is good because he’s not moving.  But Sam reminds him that a clock is ticking and there is a finish line to cross. 

Killer Baby Doll

A lot of, not so smart, players freak out by the violence and run in the other direction.  Only to be sprayed with automatic weapons.  Improving the odds for Ralph and his friends.

Back in the warehouse, Ralph makes a stand.  He wants to go home and others agree.  It’s a good thing the Pinks have ‘Yes and No’ buttons handy so everyone can vote.  The old man has the last vote to break the tie.  He takes forever to decided, like the demented dude that he is meant to be.  Ralph’s team wins and everyone goes home. 

Handy Buttons

What Now

But wait, there’s eight more episodes!  You guessed it; they return but with different attitudes.  Every man or woman for themself.  Plenty of interesting sub-plots to enjoy that I won’t go into.  One has to do with organ harvesting.  I guess it is a thing.

Throughout the games we viewers feel compassion for some of the characters and learn to hate others.  So, in the sixth episode, many of our favorites are “eliminated” in the one-on-one game of marbles.  Sigh…

Sam and Suzi Meme

If you want to know more, you’ll need to watch it.  Or not.  My personal ‘shock absorber’ is to close my eyes at certain, uncomfortable parts. 

I am amazed at the record-breaking audiences for the show.  I am also, somewhat ashamed to have been one of them.  Squid Game is a source of entertainment filled with the unexpected.  Sharp contrasts of colors and themes.  And believable characters that are all dying to win.

Have a Happy Thanksgiving!

Note: This blog is sponsored by me, Karen J Adams. Any recommendations or suggestions are purely my own opinion without the exchange of money.

 Unpublished work © 2021 Karen J Adams

Captured by Indians

comanche mustangs
Comanche Village

~ History ~

Some of my earliest memories come from my childhood in Texas.  My grandfather loved hearing me say, “I’m a Texas Partner”.  I wore my Annie Oakley outfit at every opportunity. I watched a movie called “The Searchers” with John Wayne and Natalie Wood.  My first exposure to a tale about a girl captured and raised by Indians. I was enthralled and secretly wished to be that girl.

Over the years two more prize winning films hit theaters. In the 1970’s Little Big Man and in the 1990’s Dances with Wolves.  Tons of others did not become blockbusters.  There are heaps of books, too.  Some were written and/or narrated by the captors, themselves. 

News of the World Novel Cover

~ A Recent Novel ~

In 2016, the novel, News of the World, by Paulette Jiles was released.  Captain Jefferson Kyle Kidd travels through Texas in the year 1870.  A difficult time for Texas and its post Civil War reconstruction. A veteran of the War of 1812 and the Mexican American War, Kidd wanders from town to town entertaining locals for a dime. He reads newspapers aloud to his audiences, sharing the news of the larger cities.

Captain Kidd stumbles upon an unexpected task. A self-imposed assignment of returning a girl to her remaining family members in Castroville, Texas.  The girl, Johanna, was removed from a Kiowa Tribe who captured her four years prior. Johanna has no desire to be anywhere other than with her Kiowa family.

~ Historical Nitty Gritty ~

Captured children assimilated quickly into tribal life. They refused to go back to their civilized lives.  Returned kids ended up stuck between two worlds. One world that wanted them and the other who couldn’t have them. Read some of their stories here.

Olive Oatman
Olive Oatman ~ captured and returned; Read about Olive here

Children from the white homesteads adapted well to Native life. Less stress. There were no crops to tend or livestock to care for.  The low maintenance and nomadic lives of the Natives was a lot more fun. 

Why did the Natives capture children?  Tribal conflicts have gone on for centuries. Survivors of the conflicts were often children. Those children would replace tribal members lost to disease and to wars.

~ The Newest Movie ~

News of the World Movie is now available on HBO.  As with most movies made from novels, details were missing.  Details that add more insight to the characters.  Missing was the depth of confusion and discontent among Texans regarding reconstruction. The movie was, however, engaging on its own.  The acting by Tom Hanks as Captain Kidd and Helena Zengel as Johanna was excellent. If you like the movie, read the book.  You won’t regret it. 

~ Alas ~

Gone are the days of my childhood fantasies. Yet, I’ll never grow out of my love and fascination with the Wild West. Novels and movies alike.

See ya next month, Partner!

Annie Oakley
Annie Oakley

Note: This blog is sponsored by Karen J Adams. Any recommendations or suggestions are purely my own opinion without the exchange of money.

 Unpublished work © 2021 Karen J Adams

Deacon King Kong

My Review of a Novel by James McBride

The Shooting

One afternoon, a drunken, 71-year-old Cuffy Jasper (aka: The Deacon) nicknamed Sportcoat, walked up to Deems Clemens, the local drug dealer, and shot him.  He did this in The Cause Plaza in front of 16 witnesses. 

Some Backstory

Deacon King Kong takes place in the fictional Causeway Housing Project (called The Cause) in New York City.  The year is 1969.  Like any small town, the residents of The Cause know each other and each other’s business.  But that’s not the focus of this amusing tale. 

The focus is the old, drunken Sportcoat.  He drinks the local brew, King Kong and is driven to set a few things straight. 

Christmas Fund

Sportcoat’s late wife, Hettie, collected money weekly from fellow members of the Five Ends Baptist Church.  She kept it in a safe place.  This was how folks saved for Christmas gifts for the children. 

For reasons unknown, Hettie drowned in the river two years prior.  She never told anyone where the money was kept.  Sportcoat has numerous conversations, or rather, arguments with his dead wife regarding the location of the money.  To no avail.

Now that the money was missing, the assumed amount has grown from a few hundred to a few thousand.  Sportcoat needs to find it or consider himself obligated to pay out of his own pocket. 

Baseball

The Cause used to have a good baseball team.  Coached and refereed by Sportcoat.  Deems Clemens and his pitching skills brought them to the attention of college scouts.   Sportcoat had practically raised Deems, who had no guidance from his drunken mother.  Sportcoat taught the boy how to pitch. 

Then heroin came into The Cause.  Young Deems decided selling drugs was more profitable than playing baseball.  Though he did have doubts about selling drugs.

In The Meantime 

Just outside The Cause lives an Italian bachelor, Thomas Elefante, carrying on the family business of moving stolen goods.  Thomas refuses to get into the drug business.  He’s also getting tired.  He’d like to find a nice, plump country girl and get married.  Move away. 

One day, Thomas is visited by an old cellmate of his late father’s.  An Irishman called The Governor.  Before he dies, the Governor would like Thomas to find an artifact that the elder Elefante hid away.  Thomas isn’t interested; he’s got enough to do.  That is, until he meets the Governor’s plump and single daughter, Melissa.

Another Irishman, NYPD Sergeant Kevin Mullen, aka: Potts, is planning to retire soon.  He loves The Cause and the people who live there.  Potts is looking for Sportcoat.  If for no other reason than to protect him from the retaliation of the drug suppliers.  During his search, Potts meets Sister G.  Sister G, a leading member of The Cause community, is smitten with Potts.  Potts feels the same.  But they don’t talk about that.  They mostly talk about finding Sportcoat.

The Cheese

Expensive, white folks’ cheese.  It’s delivered to the Cause every month and has done for years.  No one knows where it comes from except, maybe, Sister Paul.  Sister Paul is 102 years old and lives in a nearby home.  Sister Paul and Sportcoat’s late wife were friends.  Sportcoat ventures out to visit Sister Paul.  Perhaps she will shed some light regarding the whereabouts of the Christmas Fund.

James McBride’s tale is witty, sad, beautiful, and ugly in its depictions of love and of prejudice.  The multiple characters and cultures are colorful and captivating.  The prose is the result of an obvious love for creative writing.  I look forward to reading more of his work. 

Note: This blog is sponsored by me, Karen J Adams. Any recommendations or suggestions are purely my own opinion without the exchange of money.

Unpublished work © 2021 Karen J Adams

Missing Virgie

We like road trips.  We take a lot of them.  Driving along highways.  Through cities and farmland.  While we drive we listen to audiobooks.  We get these books through Audible, our local library and Chirp.  Our first Virgil Flowers novel was from the library.  That was June of 2020.  We are fans of the author, John Sandford.  And the book sounded interesting.  Turns out, we loved it.  We got another one and loved it, too.  We became Virgil Flowers’ greatest fans.

Virgil

You see, Virgil is unconventional.  He works for the Minnesota Department of Criminal Apprehension.  He wears his blonde hair long.  Always in a t-shirt, jeans and boots, Virgil likes music and fishing.  His collection of t-shirts depicts popular rock bands.  He’s been married and divorced 3 times. 

Virgil is also honest and kind-hearted.  The son of a minister, he talks to God most nights before going to sleep.  He keeps his gun in a safe in his truck.  Virgil’s friends and co-workers all agree that’s the best place for his gun.  Virgil is a poor shot with a pistol.  When things get dangerous, he calls down the muscle.  Jenkins and Shrake. 

Sidekicks and Cases

Jenkins and Shrake are mostly literate and dress in suits and ties. They are hard-drinking thugs that often take the night shift surveillance jobs.  They like to tease Virgil whenever possible but they always have his back. 

The crimes Virgil investigates are also unconventional.  A shootout with Vietnamese spies made headlines. There’s the dog snatchers who sell the full blooded dogs to breeders and the mutts to labs. A mating pair of rare tigers are kidnapped for their body parts. Sold off for medicinal purposes. The cases are many and often more than one in each novel.

Characters

A quote from Holy Ghost:

“Wardell Holland, the mayor of Wheatfield, Minnesota, was sitting in the double-wide he was renting from his mother, a Daisy Match Grade pellet rifle in his hands, shooting flies.”

Each story is filled with rich characters and humorous scenarios.  That’s why we looked forward to hopping in the car for a listen.  Even if we were just going to the market.  Unfortunately, we have listened to all 13 novels.

Now we must carry on without Virgil.  So, in parting:

Dear John Sanford,                                                                                     Please write more Virgil Flowers books.                                                                           Regards,                                                                                                           Virgil's Greatest Fans

Until next month, enjoy.

Note: This blog is sponsored by me, Karen J Adams. Any recommendations or suggestions are purely my own opinion without the exchange of money.

Unpublished work © 2021 Karen J Adams

The Goldfinch, a novel by Donna Tartt

My Review

Several years ago, I found a hard-bound copy of The Goldfinch (published in 2013) on an airplane where I was working.  It won the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for fiction but, after reading a chapter or so, I found its 700+ pages too much bulk for me to drag around in airports and hotels.  I passed it on to another Flight Attendant.  Then, recently, the audio version became available at my local library; 32+ hours of listening. 

The story centers around a 13-year-old boy, Theo Decker, who lives in New York City with his divorced mother; his father having deserted them a few years earlier.  Theo narrates the story that begins with the day his mother died. 

Mother and son were on their way to a meeting with Theo’s principal and found they were early.  Theo’s mother wanted to see an exhibit in the Metropolitan Museum.  He’d rather have something to eat than go to the museum but doesn’t mention it because he feels nervous and guilty about the meeting with the principal.  In the museum, he is distracted by a red-headed girl, about his age, who is looking at the Goldfinch painting.  An elderly man, who is with the girl, is explaining the story behind the painting.  Theo’s mother leaves him there so she can look at an exhibit in another salon. The two teens make eye contact.  Then a bomb explodes.

Finding himself covered in rubble, Theo stumbles around in search of his mother.  He finds the elderly man who had been with the girl.  The man is bad shape but he points to the Goldfinch painting in the rubble.  He insists Theo collect it and wrap it up, which Theo does as well as putting it in a shopping bag.  The man insists that Theo take a ring from his finger and tells Theo where to deliver it.  Theo stays with the man until he appears to fall asleep.  He then takes the painting and goes in search of help and to find his mother.  He finds neither and is, instead, pushed around and ignored in the chaos of the explosion.    

That was the beginning of Theo’s path to self-loathing, guilt and self-destruction.  He cannot get over the guilt of getting in trouble at school (the reason for the meeting with the principal).  He can only think of all the “what if’s” associated with that day.  All his conclusions point to him being the cause.  He cannot get over the guilt of keeping the painting, wrapped and hidden away, a thing that has somehow replaced his mother. 

Theo delivers the ring, as instructed, to an antique shop.  He is greeted by another elderly man, Hobie, who was the business partner of the man from the museum.  They bond and Theo discovers that the red-headed girl, Pippa, is alive and infirmed there.  Pippa and Hobie become sources of hope for Theo.  But his life is ever changing.  He goes from living with the wealthy family of a school friend in Manhattan to his estranged father in Las Vegas.  There he meets a Ukranian boy, Boris, from school who introduces Theo to shop lifting, drugs and alcohol.  Two years later Theo’s father dies in a car crash.  He leaves Las Vegas and heads back to New York City where Hobie takes him in and teaches him about the antique business. 

This should have been a happy time for Theo but the self-loathing won out.

As you might imagine, the story is sad.  There is a fascinating story behind the Goldfinch painting, which is real.  There are a lot of insights into the antique business.  The self-talk of Theo from his teen years to young adult are true to the times.  I thoroughly enjoyed the dialogue between Theo and Boris.  I believe the 700+ pages are well worth anyone’s time.

The HBO miniseries, however, would be difficult to follow if you have not read the book. 

Substitution Order by Martin Clark

My Review

Kevin Moore was once a highly regarded Virginia attorney.  He was happily married to his best friend.  He had everything he dreamed of.  Then he got stupid.   He allowed Cocaine into his life.  Now, paroled, disbarred and separated from his wife, he manages a Subway knockoff sandwich shop called Substitution.  The shop is in a small Virginia town where most folks don’t know him or his history.  The owner of the shop, a previous client, has the staff turn the ovens on twice daily (with cooked rolls inside) to emit the smell of freshly baked bread.  From respectable attorney to a paroled sandwich artist, Kevin believes he has hit rock bottom.    

That is until an odd looking stranger walks into the sandwich shop with a proposal for Kevin.  His name is Caleb Opportunity (right) and he is there to offer Kevin a percentage of an insurance scam.  Mr. Opportunity claims that it’s an easy $5 million as long as Kevin doesn’t mind a malpractice suit regarding a former client.  Insurance will pay off the lawsuit and everyone is a winner.  But Kevin wants his career back and is willing to work hard and stay clean.  He refuses the deal. 

From that point on Kevin’s world goes into a tailspin.  He’s forced to go into the city to a different Parole Officer for a drug test. No one seems to know why.  This PO finds Crack and a gun in Kevin’s car and drugs in his urine.  Kevin is charged with violating parole, among other things.  The charges are bogus so Kevin reaches out for help but none of his old friends believe his story.  He knows that Caleb Opportunity is at the root of this but he can’t prove it.  Caleb, turns out, was wearing a disguise.  The video recording system at the sandwich shop mysteriously went down during Caleb’s visit so there is no evidence that the conversation ever happened.  His coworker, a technological genius, saw the man but didn’t hear the conversation.  When Kevin thinks it can’t get any worse, he has a stroke. 

During his recovery, Kevin does the only thing he can.  He plots and plans a way out of this mess that will also stick it to Mr. Opportunity and his shifty backers.  The plan is brilliant and even though the reader knows there will be revenge; it’s doesn’t come together until the end. 

The story is fast paced, humorous and perfectly believable.  The prose is a narrative from the main character and well written. 

Martin Clark is a retired Virginia Circuit court judge and knows how to weave a great legal thriller.   I look forward to reading his next novel.

The Things You Find in Rockpools by Gregg Dunnett

My Review

Billy is an 11-year-old whiz kid, who doesn’t have much time for other people.  He lives alone with his Dad who is an avid surfer and also the caretaker of vacation cottages on Lornea.  Lornea is an island off the coast of Massachusetts.  Billy plans to become an oceanographer and is already working on a project regarding the fiddler crabs in the rockpools near his home.  The island is all abuzz regarding the 16-year-old daughter of a vacationing family who disappeared during the summer.  Winter is approaching and there have been no clues or leads.

Emily, the local café waitress suggests that Billy could do a better job of finding out what happened to the girl than the local police.  That was all Billy needed to inspire him and to turn his and his Dad’s life upside down.

This novel was offered as an Amazon Kindle deal and the synopsis interested me so I took a chance.  I thoroughly enjoyed it.  The story starts out with a good grab for the reader then it calms a little for a short time.  Gradually the suspense grows until it is difficult to put down. 

Kudos to Gregg Dunnett, an independent author. 

The Dog Stars by Peter Heller

My Review

Hig is a pilot who lives in a small Colorado airport hanger.  He has a dog, Jasper, and a neighbor, Bangley.  Jasper is old and Bangley is a heavily armed cynic.  The three are the only living beings in a radius of about 10 miles.  This is due to a flu epidemic followed by a blood disease.  The few people that do approach the well-guarded hanger are shot to be safe because most of the humans that Hig and Bangley have encountered were not very nice.  The two men depend on each other for survival even though they have very different world views.  The world is changed, though, now that most people are dead. 

Hig is the narrator of the story and he spends much of his time talking about the past.  He is lonely and doesn’t really know how to feel about Bangley, who has saved his life many times.  There is a compound of Mennonites who suffer from the blood disease about 10 miles from the hanger.  Hig flies patrols to watch for any trouble over a 30 mile radius.  It is on these runs that he occasionally visits the compound to bring supplies.  Bangley doesn’t trust the Mennonites. 

On one of Higs’ runs he received a radio transmission that inspired hope.  Three years later he is motivated to investigate even if it means he won’t make it back to the hanger.

One of the things that I like about this book is that the writing is concise; there are no wasted words.  That makes it move quickly.  I also enjoy the viewpoint of Hig; he is more of a soft touch than Bangley. 

An excerpt:

“Bangley a long time ago gave me a bulletproof, one of the vests in his arsenal.  He has all kinds of shit.  He said it’ll stop any handgun, an arrow, but with a rifle it depends, I better be lucky.  I thought about that .  We’re supposed to be the only two living souls but the families in at least hundreds of square miles, the only survivors, I better be lucky.”

But the pair are good for each other’s survival.  And Hig, later, learns the value of their friendship. 

The author, Peter Heller, has a long resume of adventure travel stories and contributions to Outdoor Magazine.  He has written a handful of books.  Constantin Films (of Resident Evil fame) has acquired the film rights.  You can find a YouTube trailer here. Don’t get too excited about the all-star cast; it was using film clips from several other movies. So far, there is no info yet regarding the movie. 

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