The Round House by Louise Erdrich

What happens to a young boy on the cusp of manhood when his mother is assaulted and almost killed? What happens to a family who must cope while their mother and their wife tries to heal from the physical and emotional trauma of being sexually assaulted and almost burned? What happens to a community, to family, friends and neighbors when something like this happens to your relative, your friend or your neighbor? What if it happens to a Native American woman and family and the crime occurs on Native American land? What if this crime is racially motivated?

Joe and his family live on Ojibwe territory in North Dakota. His dad is a judge on the reservation and his mom is a tribal enrollment officer for the tribe. It is a Sunday afternoon, and Joe’s mom has gone to her office to pick up a file, but as time passes Joe and his father become worried and go looking for her. After looking and not finding her they return home where they find her, barely conscious, beaten and bleeding, sitting in her car in front of the house.

They rush her to the hospital, the police, tribal and otherwise are called, and an investigation is started. But Joe’s mother can barely speak, and seems to remember almost nothing of what happened. After she comes home, she remains in the bedroom, staring at the wall, hardly eating and barely talking.

The investigation grinds on but goes nowhere. Joe and his friends decide they might be able to  find out who did this on their own and so they begin to look for clues. But what Joe finds is disturbing: an empty gas can thrown in the lake which leads to the discovery of a car at the bottom of the lake. As Joe digs deeper and the police seem to do nothing about this crime against his mother, he decides to take matters into his own hands committing to extracting justice or at least revenge, if justice cannot be found, for this crime that has forever changed his family.

Erdrich  has written a powerful and emotionally complex, many layered story, but her prose is spare, simple and honest. Joe as narrator is a delight, and Erdrich captures all the playful, passionate, complexity of a twelve year old boy who must grow up very quickly after a devastatingly tragic event. At once both suspenseful and soulful, this 2012 winner of the National Book Award, has been described as a literary equivalent of To Kill A Mocking Bird, since Erdrich has lifted up another part of the American experience where the dream of equality and justice for all has not yet been realized.

Brenda’s Rating: *****(5 Out of 5 Stars)

Recommend this book to: Everyone!

Book Study Worthy? YES

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The Huntress by Kate Quinn

Ian Graham should have been happy, but instead he felt empty. He and his partner, Tony Rodomovsky had just  caught another German war criminal who was now on his way back to Germany to face justice. Ian had been a journalist covering the Nuremberg trials but once they were over he began using his skills to uncover other war criminals who had somehow escaped justice. He and Tony’s small London office had gained quite a reputation for their efforts to track down and unmask these men and women who had taken on new identities and were trying to escape justice. But there was one elusive war criminal that Ian just couldn’t find and this obsession was the reason he took no joy from his most recent success.  The Huntress, as she was called had been the mistress of a German officer in Poland and she was a ruthless killer who killed Jews, children and POWs in cold blood. Ian is determined to find her and bring her to justice.

Nina Borisovna Markova, had been barely alive when she was found by the Polish Red Cross, after months of trying to evade the German army. Emaciated, filthy, sick and coughing it was a miracle she had survived. With her she brought news of a young English soldier, Sebastian Vincent Graham, Ian’s younger brother who died in the war, a victim, according to Nina, of The Huntress.  Now fully healed she has shown up at Ian’s office wanting to help Ian and Tony find The Huntress, who lives in Nina’s nightmares.

Jordan McBride was certain her father is in love. He had been dating a young German widow, Anneliesse Weber who has a child named Ruth. Jordan was so happy that her father had found someone new as he had been lonely since her mother died, going through the motions of by taking care of his antique shop in downtown New York, and taking care of Jordan. Now that she is about to graduate from high school, she hopes that with this new interest in his life, he might reconsider and let her go on to college so she can study photography. It was an exhilarating thought!

But as much as Jordan wants to love her new stepmother, things don’t seem quite right. There is Ruth, who seems so traumatized by her experiences in the war, but her stories don’t seem to match up with the story Anneliesse has told Jordan and her father about what happened to them. There is the strange medal that Jordan saw accidentally, and the strange unguarded look on Anneliesse’s face that Jordan captured in a photo. Is she imagining these things? Is she jealous? Uncertain and disturbed, Jordan begins to confide in a new employee at the antique shop named Tony Rodomovsky.

Kate Quinn is an excellent story teller, who knows how to weave these varied and interesting story lines and characters together in a creative and unique way. The back stories of each character allows us to see them as individuals and then as the story lines come together the interactions between the characters is that much richer. Meticulously researched, with fully realized, interesting characters and careful plotting which raises the suspense at every turn makes this is a book that is hard to put down!

Brenda’s Rating: ****(4 out of 5 Stars)

Recommend this book to: Sharon, Marian and Keith

Book Study Worthy? Yes!

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Improvement by Joan Silber

How do our decisions reverberate across space and time? What happens when we choose one course of action over another? Do our decisions even matter? Joan Silber explores these questions and more in her award winning book, Improvement, and her conclusions will comfort and surprise you!

Reyna, a young single mother, lives with her son in New York.  Boyd, her boyfriend is serving time in Rikers Island and when Reyna goes to visit him she often asks her Aunt Kiki to watch her son. Reyna and Boyd have gotten very close over the course of his imprisonment and although Boyd is not perfect, Reyna has hope that he might really be the one! Kiki, who has traveled extensively in Europe and Turkey, married young and had to fight to regain herself again,  has now settled in New York and watches Reyna’s  growing attachment to Boyd with love and concern.

When Boyd gets out of prison he seems to settle into life pretty easily. He has a job and he and Reyna see each other quite often, while her young son idolizes Boyd.  But suddenly Boyd begins talking about a cigarette smuggling gig that some friends have set up. Soon, without even realizing what is happening, Reyna finds herself agreeing to help drive on one of their runs, and then at the last minute, for the sake of her son, she backs out and refuses to make the run. That small decision causes a cascade of effects that touch those she knows and loves but also reaches out beyond to those she doesn’t even know.

Winner of the 2018 Penn/Faulkner Award for Fiction, Silber takes us on a journey of discovery, exploring the ways our lives are entwined and affected by others. She dissects Reyna’s decision and shows us the ripple effects in the pond of life that we might not even foresee or even imagine. By using intertwined story lines that move back and forth in time, we begin to see the interconnections in the lives of these characters and see that same truth in our own lives. Silber writes with gentleness and lightness even as she explores these topics like, love, commitment and self discovery. Her characters are endearingly fallible, doing their best in a complicated, less than perfect world just like all of us. Silber seems to want to comfort us, even while opening our eyes to the ways we are connected, letting us know that we are never truly alone.

Brenda’s Rating ****(4 Out of 5 Stars)

Recommend this book to Sharon, Marian, Lauren, and Keith.

Book Study Worthy? Yes!

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Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James

Sometimes a book surprises you by the depth of the world it creates, the uniqueness of its characters, and the grace and fluidity of its story telling. James has created one of those books! In a world unlike any other, rich traditions and stories that seem to come from what might be Africa and yet not Africa at all flow into a rich wonderful tapestry. In it we meet two powerful and unique characters: a shape shifter (man and leopard,) and Tracker, the one hired to find what is lost.

Tracker is known far and wide as the one who finds that which is lost, so  it is not surprising that he is asked to find the boy. What is unique, though, is that the boy has been lost for three years. As the Tracker begins following the faint trail only he can smell, an unlikely assortment of characters join the search including the shape-shifter, Black Leopard, who Tracker knew previously, a giant a witch, and a swordsman. As they follow the boy, they encounter opposition from powerful unknown forces, difficult terrain and magical creatures that threaten and complicate their quest.

As the journey gets more and more dangerous Tracker begins to wonder about the boy they are searching for. Who is this he and why do so many people want to prevent him from being found? As Tracker moves ever closer to discovering those answers, he must determine, who is telling the truth and who is lying while also trying to confront the forces that seem determined to prevent him from fulfilling his task.

Rich and powerful this book is not your ordinary fantasy novel! It is full of graphic images of  violence, bloodshed sex and eroticism and contains graphic “X” rated language. But somehow it all works in a wild and strange way. James, the winner of the 2015 Man Booker Prize for his “A Brief History of Seven Killings,” knows how to build suspense, and gives us entertaining and wonderfully original characters who almost leap off the page with life. This is the first in a trilogy and I look forward to see where Tracker and his band will lead us next!

Brenda’s Rating:****( 4 out of 5 Stars)

Recommend this book to: Ken, Keith and Marian.

Book Study Worthy? Yes

Read in ebook format.

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Slow Horses by Mick Herron

Where do spies who are washed up, get exposed, screw up an operation, or drink too much go?  According to Mick Herron they go to Slough House, an organization in the heart of London that takes in all the broken down and no longer useful spies from MI-5. There these so called “slow horses” wait their turn for redemption while doing seemingly meaningless and tedious work alongside others who share the same fate or are put out to pasture.

River Cartwright, who was blamed for a high profile training exercise going wrong, hopes that he can redeem himself quickly so he can move back to MI-5, but Jackson Lamb, the head of Slough House, quickly disabuses him of this idea and assures Cartwright that he will never leave. Instead Cartwright is tasked with transcribing cell phone conversations, the most tedious and mind numbing task imaginable. But when a young Muslim man is abducted, and the kidnappers threaten to live stream his decapitation if their demands are not met, Cartwright sees a way that he might redeem himself. He begins to investigate whether there is a connection between the kidnappers and Richard Hobden, a disgraced right wing journalist. Racing to avert the execution, Cartwright and the spies of Slough House, must set aside their own agendas and collaborate in order to survive.

Herron won the CWA Gold Dagger award for this espionage series, and it is well deserved.  Herron’s style is laconic, with a hint of bitterness. It is clear that the characters he has created are failures, with very little to redeem them and yet, there is something tender and almost loving in the way Herron teases out something from each one of them that makes you identify and root for them. Although there are no “heroes” at Slough House, there are strong protagonists who must come together regardless of their competing interests and share their skills and knowledge in order to work together as a team. It is a remarkable achievement that Herron makes this work, while keeping you on your toes throughout! I have the next book in the series queued up on my Kindle and am looking forward to reading the next installment of the ‘slow horses” of  Slough House!

Brenda’s Rating: ****(4 Out Of 5 Stars)

Recommend this book to: Marian, Ken and Sharon

Book Study Worthy? Sure!

Read in ebook format.

 

 

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Pieces of Her by Karin Slaughter

Andrea’s mother Laura is a pillar of the community of Belle Island. As speech therapist she has helped many in the community find their words and be able to communicate fully. Andrea admires her mother and her quiet strength, her confidence and the way she helps and encourages Andrea to follow her dreams.  Andrea hasn’t quite manged that yet.  She has struggled to find her dream or to feel the confidence in herself that her mother seems to find so easy to embody.

So when they went to the mall that day they fell into their regular patterns, of Laura encouraging and Andrea wanting to find something easy, less challenging, something more comfortable so that she did not need to leave her own comfort zone. It was a conversation they had repeated over and over again, but this time they were interrupted by a man with a gun who came into the restaurant and started shooting.  Andrea froze, but her mother, calmly confronted the gunmen, stepping into the line of fire, protecting Andrea. What happened next was so unbelievable it defied belief and yet it was caught by the surveillance cameras and eventually shown on national TV over and over again. Laura stands next to the gunman and using a knife calmly cuts his throat.

Laura is wounded and rushed to the hospital. Andrea is in shock by the horror of what  happened. Was the gunmen targeting her mother or Andrea herself? Who is this woman in the video? Her mother, the mother Andrea knew should be incapable of such an act, even if it was in self defense.  But she had done it. The police are insistent on talking with Andrea, but her stepdad, a lawyer, tells her not to speak to them. Laura urges her to leave town, saying that Andrea is in danger and needs to protect herself. Suddenly Andrea is not sure she even knows this woman who is her mother. Who is she, what was she and what happened to her to create that woman in the video?  Who is and is not the mother she has always known?

Karin Slaughter is genius in her plotting. With every twist and turn more is revealed about the life that Lauren led before she became the woman Andrea knows. As each piece is revealed Andrea too begins to fine herself and changes before our eyes, gaining confidence and a sense of purpose. Although this is a suspense novel, it is at its core a mother/ daughter story and in that it shines with that unique bond of love that the best mother/ daughter relationships have.

Brenda’s Rating: ****(4 Out of 5 Stars)

Recommend this book to: Sharon, Marian and Lauren

Book Study Worthy? Yes

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Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear

I share my Kindle account with my daughters and sometimes books that I never ordered appear mysteriously on my Kindle.  When Jacqueline Winspear’s Maisie Dobbs made a surprise appearance I was intrigued and as soon as I started it, I could not put it down!  A combination of Downton Abbey meets a young Miss Marple but with a bit of a twist, since Maisie Dobbs, although not an aristocrat can move with ease between “upstairs and downstairs” due to her interesting and unique background. Smart, curious and insightful, Maisie Dobbs is a fascinating character on her own, but Winspear also provides great supporting characters who add both glamour and integrity to the story. Luckily this is just the first in this sereis and there will be many more opportunities to get to know Maisie Dobbs.

Now that the war is over, Maisie Dobbs is finally able to do what she has wanted to do for as long as she can remember-open her own office of investigation.  As the daughter of a poor farmer it seemed impossible that this day could ever come, but her fortunes changed when she became a maid in the aristocratic Compton household. There her innate curiosity and intelligence were recognized by the indefatigable suffragette, Lady Rowena Compton and her good friend, Maurice Blanche. Blanche, who was often hired to discreetly investigate matters for the wealthy and well connected, took Maisie under his wing and taught her the skills she would need to become a detective.

When war broke out, however, those plans had to be put on hold, and Maisie became a nurse on the front lines. Now, ten years after the Armistice of 1918 was signed Maise is ready to embark on her new career. Her first case seems like a mundane case of infidelity, but as Maise investigates further she finds that the woman whose husband suspects of infidelity has a larger more complicated secret involving a soldier convalescing at The Retreat, a place for soldiers disfigured by the war. Just when Maisie thinks she has solved her first case, another case also involving The Retreat turns up and now Maisie must not only confront the horrors of the war, both past and present to find answers for her clients but must also tackle her own ghosts from the past.

Brenda’s Rating: ****(4 Out of 5 Stars)

Recommend this book to: Sharon, Marian and Lauren.

Book Study Worthy? Sure

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3 Seconds by Roslund & Hellstrom, translated by Kari Dickson

I have found that understanding how another country perceives crime and justice helps me understand their culture. One of the ways I do that is by reading crime novels set in other countries or cultures. In reading this book about a Swedish police detective, Ewert Grens and his investigation into a horrifying murder it was quite interesting to see both the similarities and differences in the way we think and feel about these issues.

Ewert Grens is a bit of an oddity in the Swedish police force. Persistent and ruthless in getting to the truth, he is not interested in the political machinations of getting ahead, he only wants to solve the crime and arrest those who are responsible. So when he is assigned a case involving a horrifying murder he begins investigating with his usual intensity and soon is on the trail of someone he thinks is a ruthless psychopath.

What Grens doesn’t know is that the man he thinks is responsible for this murder is one of the Swedish police’s best undercover agents. A former con, Piet Hoffman (code name Paula) has infiltrated the Polish mafia who are trying to take over the Swedish prison system’s drug trade. It is Hoffman’s responsibility to get himself arrested and then use his time in prison to eradicate any competition and establish connections in the prison system to distribute the Polish mafia’s drugs. Once that mission is completed the police have assured him that they will arrest the Polish mafia and he will finally be freed from this double life, but Hoffman is a private citizen who was recruited in exchange for his freedom and he knows that if he is not careful his handlers in the Swedish police could easily deny his existence especially if something goes wrong.

Well, something did go drastically wrong, and now Hoffman is being pursued by a detective notorious for his thoroughness and persistence and Hoffman must find a way to elude him, prevent the Polish mafia from gaining a foothold in Sweden, and prevent the Swedish Police from denying his existence, all while still staying alive for his wife and family who have no idea he has been leading a double life.

Named Swedish Crime Novel of the Year in 2009, this suspenseful, relentless, and also very human story of two antagonists who are actually playing for the same team is an exciting tour de force. This writing duo, Roslund, a former journalist, and Hellstrom, a former criminal, have created a novel you cannot put down and are worthy of being placed in the same category as two other great Swedish crime novelists who I have also enjoyed, Stieg Larsson and Henning Mankell. Read the book now before the movie, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Informer_(2019_film) comes out in August!

Brenda’s Rating: ****(4 out of 5 Stars)

Recommend this book to: Marian, Keith, Ken and Sharon

Book Study Worthy: Yes

Read in ebook format

 

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The Miernik Dossier by Charles McCarry

I love books that are unexpected. Books with strange characters, books that have narrators that are untrustworthy, books that have unexpected plot twists and books that structured differently. The Miernik Dossier has all of these and something more-a careful and deft writer who pulls it off quite gracefully!

The book is structured like you are reading through a file folder. There are reports, letters, telegrams, interviews, receipts, diary entries, transcripts of interrogations and many other things you might find in a dossier created by an intelligence gathering organization. Presented as a “typical operation” it reflects the US government’s efforts to determine whether a man named Miernik, from Poland, is a spy and whether they should help him defect.

Set in Geneva in 1959, Miernik finds out that rather than having his visa extended so he can continue to work at the World Research Organization he is being recalled to Poland. Visibly upset by this turn of affairs, he consults with several of his colleagues and friends about what to do. Coincidentally, the people he confides in are from British Intelligence and US Intelligence services. This sets off a scramble among many intelligence services, to determine whether Miernik is a Polish or Russian spy with any useful intelligence who is trying to defect and whether or not he is worth helping or useful to their long term strategies.

Instructed by their various services to get concrete information regarding Miernik,  American agent Paul Christopher and British agent Nigel Collins, soon find themselves agreeing to drive with Miernik and the Sudanese prince Kalash el Khatar  in a brand new Cadillac that he is delivering to his father, the king of Sudan. Both Christopher and Collins are hopeful that this extended time with Miernik will yield greater insights into Miernik’s status and intent, but as the journey progresses unforeseen obstacles threaten the easy resolution to their questions.

Although the structure of the novel limits the ability to delve to deeply into the characters inner thoughts and motivations, I found this structure also helpful because it made me feel as if I was another character with a role to play; a member of the investigating committee who after reading the dossier would have to make a decision. McCarry also uses the structure in other ways which enhance the story, like giving the reader more information than the actual characters have, or by revealing a character’s motivations by filling in their back story.

This was McCarry’s debut novel in 1973 but it is still relevant and entertaining today. Paul Christopher who appears in this novel became a recurring character in McCarry’s later books and I am looking forward to reading more by McCarry in the future.

Brenda’s Rating: ****(4 Out of 5 Stars)

Recommend this book to: Sharon, Marian and Ken

Book Study Worthy? Yes

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Tombland by C.J. Sansom

Matthew Shardlake is one of my favorite characters of all time. A hunchback lawyer during the Tudor era of England, Shardlake must overcome his own disability, negotiate some very nasty political traps, elude power hungry sycophants, maintain his integrity and reputation without a whisper of corruption or treason, while still giving necessary impartial legal advise to the crown. With all that just to begin with, you know that each book will be full of political intrigue, impossible choices, and a rich tapestry of historical characters and colorful details of the time period. Tombland, the seventh in this series, does not disappoint at all!

Matthew Shardlake was Henry VIII’s personal lawyer but after his death, Shardlake began working for Princess Elizabeth, as she began to manage her own estates and property. It is spring, 1549 and Edward VI is on the throne but since he is only eleven years old, his uncle, Edward Seymour, Lord Hertford, runs the country as his regent and Protector. Lord Hertford, however, is not doing a very good job. The country over extended by a long war with Scotland is on the verge of economic collapse and and rebellion is erupting among the peasantry all over the country.

In the middle of this instability, Princess Elizabeth asks Shardlake to investigate the mysterious death of one of her distant relatives at her summer estate. No sooner have Matthew and his assistance Nicholas arrive than another murder takes place. As tensions rise among the peasantry around the summer estate, Shardlake must find out who has been murdered and why, as well as any connections these murders may have on the peasant uprising that soon engulfs them.

Sansom takes a little known part of history and breathes life into it. Rich in detail, with numerous characters that Sansom takes care to fully realize, he creates a window into the past that makes you feel as though you are watching it unfold in front of you. This of course comes at some cost, since at 844 pages this is not a light read, but it is more than worth it! Enjoy!

Brenda’s Rating: *****(5 out 5 Stars)

Recommend this book to: Marian

Book Study Worthy? Yes

Read in ebook format

 

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