All Soul’s Trilogy by Deborah Harkness

Witches, magic, hidden manuscripts, a sexy vampire, time travel- it is all here in this wonderful trilogy by Deborah Harkness.

A Discovery of Witches_Beginning in A Discovery of Witches we are introduced to Diana Bishop, a descendant of  one of the Salem witches who is trying to live the “normal” life her parents wanted for her before they died mysteriously leaving her with relatives. Now as a Yale historian, Diana is doing research at the Bodleian Library at Oxford University, when one of her searches turns up Ashmole 782 a rare and magical book, also known to magical creatures as the Book of Life.  By calling forth the book and opening it, Diana inadvertently sets off a maelstrom of magic, with various groups vying for control of the book. Needing protection from what she has unleashed she finds help from an unlikely source, a vampire named Matthew Clairmont. Together they try to unlock the mystery of Ashmole 782 even while they find their attraction for each other growing, in spite of the Covenant’s prohibition against it.

The story continues in Shadow of the Night, where Diana and Matthew follow leads concerning Ashmole 782 back in time to Elizabethan England and to Matthew’s friends whoShadow_ call themselves the School of Night.  Hoping that they can find a witch who can train Diana in her growing but unpredictable powers they find a small coterie who begin to help Diana realize her own potential. Their search for traces of the book leads them to the highest reaches of power and they become embroiled in the political intrigue of England and must hurriedly leave before solving the riddle of Ashmole 782 and its missing pages.

The Book of Life finds Diana and Matthew back in present time at Sept-Tours, France, Matthew’s family home. Here, even as they deepen their relationship with each other and with family, they face great danger as those who want to prevent their union gather against them, Book of Life_including Matthew’s son, the powerful vampire Benjamin Fuchs. As these forces gather against them, Diana finally learns to become the weaver of magic that she was destined to become.

These are fun books! Diana, as a reluctant witch, is an interesting character filled with self doubt and yet over the course of the three books she fully comes into her own both as a woman and as a magical person. We don’t see as much character development with Matthew, but his great expanse of life experience makes him interesting as well. Harkness who is a history professor and an avid oenophile with her own wine blog, fills these books with all kinds of historical details and interesting arcana about life in Elizabethan times, as well as introducing us to various wines.  Her knowledge of the science and customs and culture adds an extra dimension and realism to the story. These were great fun to read and enjoy and a great glass of wine to accompany them would not be amiss!

Brenda’s Rating: ***1/2 (3 1/2 Stars out of 5)

Recommend this book to Sharon, Marian and Lauren

Book Study Worthy? Maybe

Read in ebook format

 

Posted in Fantasy, Fiction, Historical Fiction, Mystery, Series | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Year in Summary for 2014

It is always interesting to look back and see what my reading year was like-the highs, the lows, the books I tried to like, but just couldn’t and the ones that surprised me and made me glad that I read them. All are a part of the reading life which enriches and informs my my real life.

In 2014 I read 85 books. Most of them were fiction but fewer than usual were in the mystery/thriller genre that I usually prefer and more in the literary or general fiction category. For non-fiction I continued to read Atkinson’s WWII series; Day of Battle: The War in Sicily and Italy 1943-4 and another in Cahill’s series: Desire of the Everlasting Hills
both of which I thoroughly enjoyed which is really encouraging me to read more non fiction in the new year.

My Top Picks for this year are :

Lost City Radio_Lost City Radio by Daniel Alarcon tells the story of a South American radio show where Norma, the host of the show, intersperses the news of the day with music and the reading of the names of the missing and lost. One day a boy arrives at the radio station carrying more names and Norma is shocked to find her missing husband’s name on the list. A gentle yet compelling story, Lost City Radio is a quiet meditation on war and it’s aftermath and the power of second chances.

The Goldfinch_The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt which won a Pulitzer Prize tells the story of  Theo, who struggles to come to terms with his life after his mother’s death in an explosion at the New York Metropolitan Museum. In the aftermath of the explosion Theo picked up a small painting, one that his mother loved, for safe keeping but in the end never gives it back. Somehow the painting becomes both a talisman-reminder of what life was like before and after the explosion and then later a burden and symbol of bad choices. Tart asks thoughtful questions about living a life of integrity and how we overcome our own bad choices and live fully even in the face of death.

A Deniable Death_A Deniable Death by Gerald Seymour is a spy thriller, but it is one of the most thoughtful of its genre that I have ever read. The main characters are fully human right down to all their annoying habits and tics, and yet they are doing something that requires enormous endurance, patience, skill and strength.  Their target, an Iranian bomb maker called the Engineer is even handedly described and we are given insights into our “enemy” including his family which are both disconcerting and humanizing. Seymour has been called the “best spy novelist ever,” an assessment with which I fully concur!

Burning Natchez_Natchez Burning by Greg Iles is a haunting story of the legacy of slavery and  the fight for civil rights in Mississippi. When Dr. Tom Cage’s former nurse, Viola, dies under suspicious circumstances, Dr. Cage becomes a primary suspect.  However citing patient doctor confidentiality he refuses to defend himself, leaving his son,  Penn Cage a lawyer and now mayor of Natchez, to  defend him without any help or insight. Raising issues that seem all the more prescient given the recent incidents in Missouri, this book was very thought provoking.

Other books that I really enjoyed were How To Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia by Mohsin Hamid, Pendragon’s Banner Triology by Helen Holick, Life after Life by Kate Atkinson and The Storied life of A. J. Fikry by Gabrielle Zevin.  

I hope that you can find a few new books that you might want to try from this list!

Thanks for following my blog!

Happy New Year!

Brenda

 

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments

Messiah by Timothy Botts

Merry Christmas! I hope that you had a wonderful and joyful celebration!  If you are like me, you are probably using this day to catch your breath!  It is a great day to sit by the fire, and cocoon if you will!

Messiah Cd_One of the things I like to do is to get out my cd of the Messiah conducted by Robert Shaw, get a big mug of hot coffee and maybe a left over cinnamon roll and settle down with Timothy Botts ‘ Messiah, a book of calligraphy inspired by the words of Handel’s great oratorio.

Botts uses calligraphy to illustrates the words of the oratorio in Messiahsuch a profound and deep way that as I  read and see his words, I am able to hear the music in a new way. Each page is a masterpiece of calligraphy, with bright colors and numerous styles all derived from the sense and style of the music.  When the music is staccato the calligraphy reflects that, when it is mournful so is the lettering, when it is joyful, the words seem to fall from the page in joy!  As the music washes over me and I see the words twisting and soaring on the page I am profoundly moved and grateful for these artists who help me reconnect again to the heart of Christmas.

Hallelujah indeed!

 

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

Recommend this book to: Everyone!

Book Study Worthy? Just Enjoy!

Read in hardback edition.

 

Posted in Art Books | Tagged | Leave a comment

Tree of Cranes by Allen Say

In the middle of all the hustle and bustle, the anxiety of trying to please everyone on my list and getting everything done in time it is often hard to remember what the point of it all is!   When that happens, I try to remember back to when I was a Ideals Christmaslittle girl and my mom would read me stores from the Ideals Christmas Stories That Never Grow Old.  Wonderful stories like O’Henry’s Gift of the Magi, or The Juggler of Notre Dame by Anatole France, were some of  what she shared with me, and my appreciation for the myriad ways the Christmas story could be told began there on her lap listening to her read. As I grew older I collected my own stories about Christmas and shared them with my own children.

It is strange how stories written for children are often the most profound and can somehow stop us in the middle of all of our busyness with their clear and true message- and of course beautiful illustrations don’t hurt either!

Tree of Cranes_The Tree of Cranes is a about a little boy in Japan who experiences his first Christmas. Christmas is not a traditional holiday in Japan but his mother, who had lived in California before her marriage, still remembers the trees, the lights and the gifts gathered under the tree and in her own quiet way she shares that with her son so that he too can understand the gift that is Christmas.

Say’s simple and thoughtful words and beautiful illustrations make you slow down, and really experience again the wonder and magic of this time of year all over again!

Merry Christmas!

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

Recommend this book to: Everyone!

Book study worthy? Just Enjoy!

Read in hardback edition.

 

 

 

 

Posted in Children's Books, Fiction | Tagged | Leave a comment

Deadline by John Sandford

There are some authors who just never disappoint and for me John Sandford is one of those authors.  His books have great characters, good plot lines, suspense, excitement, humor and he still manages to have some deeper insights that make you pause and think.

Deadline_Deadline starring Virgil Flowers, otherwise know as  “that effing Flowers” by his boss, Lucas Davenport of the Bureau of Apprehension in Minnesota, unexpectedly receives a call from his old fishing buddy, Johnson.  Virgil learns that there have been a significant number of dogs that have gone missing in Johnson’s small community, and this has so enraged the town’s folk that Johnson is afraid that they are ready to take matters into their own hands. Hoping that Virgil might be able to head off a lynching, Johnson invites Virgil to come and meet with them, and sweetens the deal with the promise of a little fishing afterwards.  Virgil meets with Johnson and the town’s folk and manages to get them to back down by promising that he will look into things himself. After doing some reconnaissance Virgil narrows the search to an isolated area in the hills outside of town. But before they can even get close enough to really look at that area, a murder occurs close to town. And then there is another murder and suddenly Virgil is no longer just looking into dognapping, but into something much more dangerous and pervasive.  Using all the resources of the BA and then some, Virgil uses his creativity and intuition to bring law and order back to this town.

Sandford is adept at creating a town of real people, who act and talk with the values and cadences of the people of my mother’s hometown in Minnesota. Sandford  doesn’t stoop to caricatures but writes with both respect and humor about small town life, letting you see its beauty and limitations. Virgil’s sly humor and his compassion are what makes you respond to him as a a character. This was one book I had a hard time putting down!

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

Recommend this to: Sharon and Marian

Books Study Worthy? No

Read in ebook format.

 

 

Posted in Detective novel, Fiction, Mystery, Series, Thriller | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Close Your Eyes, Hold Hands by Chris Bohjalian

Close Your Eyes_Seventeen year old Emily, was living a fairly normal teen age life  in Vermont before the accident. Her parents led busy lives working full time at the local nuclear power plant and she was going to school. She could have done better in school, and she had trouble making and keeping friends, and she wished her parents weren’t fighting  or drinking so much, but life was pretty normal, or at least what she considered normal.

But then the accident happened and everything changed.  Something happened at the nuclear power plant, and through human error or mechanical failure, the plant went into meltdown.  During the evacuation of the school, Emily overheard people talking about what had happened and the speculation that her father might have been “drunk at the wheel,” causing the meltdown and the catastrophic disaster that followed.  Unwilling to face the questions and accusations, Emily sneaks away from  the evacuation of the school and makes her way to Burlington where she lives on the streets, taking the name Abby Bliss, the best friend of Emily’s favorite poet, Emily Dickinson.

Her life might have just ended there, in a city park in an igloo made of leaves, tarp and ice and a slow decline into drugs or violence, but then she met Cameron, a nine year old boy also on the street, and a fierce protective instinct consumes her as she takes him under her wing, making her face into the tough decisions she had avoided until then.

Told in a first person narrative style by Emily and divided into two parts, “Before Cameron” and “After Cameron,” this is a story of a young woman struggling to come to terms with events way out of her control while bearing the brunt of  people’s instinct to place blame when disasters happen. Young and alone, living in fear of being found out, and unprepared for the tough life on the streets, Emily struggles to find normalcy in a world that is not normal, to find love where love is hard to find, and to do what is right even if it might cost her everything.

Bohjalian has captured Emily and her voice with startling accuracy and she jumps off the pages, alive in all her complexity. At turns you want to embrace her and her insights and tenderness and at other times you want to shake some sense into her!  She is strong and weak, loving and hateful, smart and stupid, just like we all are, and it is this very humanness which Bohjalian has captured so well that makes us care what happens and propels us to turn the page waiting to see what happens to Emily but also in some deep way to ourselves. This is powerful book about confronting loss and realizing that sometimes all you can do is close your eyes and hold hands and face into it.

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

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

Book Study Worthy? Yes!

Read in ebook format

 

 

 

Posted in Fiction, Literary Fiction, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Leaving Time by Jodi Picoult

When I was about 6 years old and living in Japan, I went on an outing to the zoo with people from my church. We lived far outside of Tokyo, up in the mountains and there were few foreigners in that area and even fewer foreign children. The zoo was quite advanced for its time, with many of the animals in larger natural enclosures.  Naturally, the elephant exhibit was quite popular and all the Japanese kids and I got up on the steps right next to the fence to look at them. Suddenly one of the elephants stopped right in front of me and reached out its trunk over the fence and grabbed ahold of my blond hair!  The kids around me screamed and ran away, but I was caught by my hair and couldn’t really move. The elephant woofed with its trunk as though considering what this yellow stuff was, let go and then took another trunkful and woofed again and let go.  This time I was able to back away and by then the zoo keepers were in the exhibit moving the elephant to the back of the enclosure out of reach of my hair and others were trying to make sure that I was OK and apologizing to my parents for what had happened.  They kept saying over and over, “The elephant thought it was straw, it thought your hair was straw!”

Leaving Time_So given that experience, when I realized that Leaving Time is a story that revolves around a daughter trying to find her mother who happens to be an elephant researcher(!), I was totally intrigued!

Jenna’s mother, Alice, disappeared after a tragic accident at the elephant preserve where she was doing research on elephant grief behaviors.  Jenna was only 3 at the time of the incident but now at 14 she decides that she wants to find her mother and find out what really happened.  Jenna’s father had a psychological breakdown after the incident and has remained in an institution ever since and Jenna’s grandmother, who has taken care of her since that time never wants to talk about it. So on her own, Jenna begins to try and piece together what happened. To help her in this task she finds two unlikely people, the detective who failed to solve the case all those years ago and a once famous but now washed up psychic, who, albeit reluctantly, begin to help Jenna find the answers she needs.

The story is told from the perspective of these four characters, Jenna, the psychic, the detective and Alice’s journals about her work with the elephants. Picoult masterfully develops each character, especially Jenna, who is sharp, sassy and vulnerable all at once-just like a teenager.  Through Alice’s journals we learn the back story of what happened before the terrible accident when she disappeared. We also get an up close view of the elephants and begin to see, like Alice, each elephant with their own personalities and responses to loss. These portions about elephant behavior are not gratuitous, but rather move the story along,  showing Alice’s perspective towards loss and grief, as well as giving us some sense of the personalities and relationships she fostered with the elephants she observed and worked with.

Beautiful and tender, this is a powerful book about the bond between mothers and daughters and the sustaining power of love even in the face of loss.

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

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

Book Study Worthy? Yes

Read in ebook format

Posted in Fiction, Mystery | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

Annihilation, Authority and Acceptance by Jeff Vandermeer

51H2WZitH0L._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-v3-big,TopRight,0,-55_SX278_SY278_PIkin4,BottomRight,1,22_AA300_SH20_OU01_Based on a recommendation from one of my high school friends, (Thanks, Ladd!) I began reading the first of these books, Annihilation and then got so hooked I had to read all the rest.  There is something a bit sneaky about trilogies-if they are good, once you start you are committed to the end!

The Southern Reach is a small and almost forgotten top secret research facility next to Area X. Area X appeared decades ago on the edge of a small jut of land off the coastline and it is the mandate of the Southern Reach to explore it and to find out what it is and why it appeared.  Through their expeditions the Southern Reach knows that the land enclosed by Area X seems to be stripping itself of all traces of human habitation and pollution. But even as it seems to be growing more pristine there is something malevolent there as well, something unseen, and yet destructive. Although the first expedition returned  intact and  with variety of good information, subsequent expeditions have not fared as well. The second ended in mass suicide, the third expedition ended in a hail of gunfire as they all turned on each other and although the members of eleventh and most recent expedition returned, they were mere shadows of themselves and within weeks of their return they all died of cancer.

The twelfth expedition is now ready and as the expedition begins we join along with the the anthropologist, the biologist. the surveyor, the linguist and the psychologist.  Our narrator is the biologist and we quickly learn that her husband was one of the members of the eleventh expedition giving her added motivation to join this expedition.

Everything seems to proceed according to plan, and with the exception of the linguist who bowed out at the very last minute they all are able to make their way through and into Area X.  Initially, the biologist is dazzled by the amazing variety of plants and animals within Area X.  As she catalogues and makes notes of these plants, she and the rest of the expedition are slowly drawn to an anomaly in the terrain, a hole with a stairway leading further down into the ground. This anomaly does not appear on any of the maps given to the expedition, and there is concern that they might be wasting time on something not significant enough and yet they all seem drawn to this strange hole and once they see the writing on the walls, they all decide that it must be explored.

Vandermeer is quite skillful in creating a dream like space and make it come alive enough to make you believe in its reality while at the same time maintaining vestiges of its dream like state. His descriptions of Area X are compelling and yet seem to be just familiar enough to allay our fears. The characters are introduced just by their functions or roles which allows us to maintain some detachment towards them, but as we progress we soon learn their names, their history and what has brought them to the Southern Reach and to explore Area X and we begin to care about and relate to each character and what they can bring to our understanding of Area X.

This is not your classic sci fi book. There is not a lot of equipment, or new scientific discoveries which change the laws of nature. And yet it does confront us with the possibility that we are not alone in the universe and that there may be things, a consciousness or an intent that we have not encountered before and from whom we may need to learn before it is all too late.

Brenda’s Rating: ***1/2 (3  1/2 Stars out of 5)

Recommend this book to: Marian and Lauren

Book Study Worthy? Yes

Read in ebook format

 

 

 

Posted in Fantasy, Fiction, Science Fiction | Tagged , | Leave a comment

To Rise Again at a Decent Hour by Joshua Ferris

To Rise Again_Sometimes a book’s categorization is elusive. Sometimes you just have to enjoy the book without trying to make it fit a mold.  To Rise Again at a Decent Hour is just such a book. It’s a little bit syfi, a little bit fantasy, a little bit romance, a little bit mystery and a little bit thriller.  But mostly it is a very interesting story about an ordinary dentist who goes on an existential journey of discovery. Yes, you read that right, it is a story about a dentist-see what I mean about not fitting into any category?

Paul C. O’Rourke is a dentist with a thriving practice on Park Avenue in New York City.  But there is something lacking in his life, or as Paul puts it, “everything was always something, but something-and here was the rub-could not be everything.  A thriving practice couldn’t be everything.  A commitment to healthy patients and an afternoon mochachino and pizza Fridays just couldn’t be everything…The Red Sox had been everything for a long time, but they disappointed me in the end.”  Obviously Paul is having an existential crises but he doesn’t seem to know it yet, and instead, to distract himself he plays a game that he calls “Things Could Be Worse,” as he walks the streets of Manhattan. “Things could be worse,” he says to himself as he sees “parading by everywhere.. the disfigured, the destitute, the hideously ugly the walking weeping, the self scarred, the unappeasably pissed off.” knowing that he could be one of them.  And then he would see a beautiful woman on the street and think to himself, “Things Could Be So Much Better,” which is the corollary to the first part of this game.

One day Paul treats a patient with an infected canine tooth. After the procedure, the man, woozy from the after effects of the gas, tells Paul that he is leaving for Israel, not because he is a Jew but because he is an Ulm, and after thanking  everyone in the office, he leaves. Paul believes that this is when his life changed.

Six months later, Paul’s practice has a new website that neither he nor anyone in his office designed or had asked to be designed.  In fact Paul has a complete aversion to anything internet related and has refused multiple requests by his head hygienist to create such a thing. Feeling violated by having his identity stolen Paul he emails Seir Design who seems to have designed the site, demanding that they remove the website immediately and anxiously awaits a reply. And thus begins the most annoying, baffling and convoluted correspondence which challenges all of Paul’s ideas about himself, who God is, the meaning of existence and how to find something outside himself that could become that “everything” that he is searching for.

Ferris is very good at getting into the mind of a self absorbed, lonely, commitment phobic, fearful and workaholic man. The story is told mostly through Paul’s stream of consciousness; of random thoughts and memories that eventually get tied together to become cohesive.  This style is both satisfying and irritating especially when we start with some event that is going to move the story forward, but we have to make a long detour and become immersed in Paul’s reflections before we know what actually happens.  You have to learn to trust Ferris, because all of this stuff that seems like random garbage is often actually profound and sometimes even fun, like this rant by Paul about the Internet and emoticons:

My relationship with the Internet was like the one I had with the :).  I hated the 🙂 and hated to be the object of other people’s :), their 🙂 and their :>.  I hated ;-)) the most because it reminded me of my double chin. Then there was 😦 and 😦 and 😉 as well as 😉 and *-), which I didn’t even understand, although it was not as mystifying as D:<, or >:O or :-&.  These simplifications of speech, designed by idiots, resulted in hieroglyphics of such compounded complexity that they flew far beyond my intelligence.

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

Recommend this book to: Keith, Lauren and Marian

Book study worthy? Yes

Read in ebook format.

 

 

Posted in Fantasy, Fiction, Literary Fiction, Mystery, Romance, Science Fiction, Spiritual, Thriller | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Carthage by Joyce Carol Oates

Carthage_Early in the morning, Arlette fearfully wakes up her husband Zeno Mayfield and tells him that their daughter, Cressida, never came home. Her bed was not slept in and Juliet, her older sister, never heard her from her the night before  Soon they are searching the Nautauga National Forest hoping to find some trace of her. They follow her trail from the last place she was seen-in a car with a semiconscious driver, scratches on his face and blood on the passenger seat, parked on the side of the road near the forest.  The driver is Corporal Brett Kincaid, a war hero returned maimed and broken, and fiance to Juliet.  No one is exactly sure what happened that night, but it is clear that Cressida met Brett Kincaid at a biker bar on the outskirts of town. They were seen getting into Brett’s car after an argument. But after that even Brett is not sure, since his medications and the drinks he had that night make things hazy and dreamlike.  They eventually find her sweater, near the river, sodden and dirty but there is no other trace of Cressida.  She is just gone.

Oates takes these broken lives and weaves a truly fascinating story about the effect of losing a child and sister and what it does to a family. Telling the story from each one’s perspective, Oates looks at the hidden jealousies, the give and take in a family’s dynamic, and the limits of love even within a family.  Zeno, Arlette and Juliet each have to face a world that has changed dramatically with this loss and with the prime suspect as someone  they knew and even loved they are now forced to consider the cost of justice and forgiveness. And even as she tells their stories Oates also weaves in Cressida’s story, the girl, the daughter, the sister who vanished.

Oates is without a doubt a good writer. There are places in this book that are lyrical and so evocative they bring tears to your eyes. She is especially effective in describing Zeno’s pain and loss and the tortured world of Brett’s mind.  But she is less effective with Arlette, Juliet or Cressida and there is an unevenness to the writing that is sometimes jarring.  This is particularly evident when you are hearing the story from Juliet’s perspective where Oates uses a one sided conversational style to show us the relationship between Juliet and Brett.

When the grenade exploded and the wall collapsed. It was combat. It was in action. Which is why you were awarded a Purple Heart…How brave you were from the start. Which is why you must not feel shame, that you are returned to us. You are not a traitor or a coward. You did not let your platoon down. You were injured, and you are convalescing. and you are in rehab. And you will be married.

Instead of making us identify with Juliet this stilted style makes Juliet sound wooden and blind to Brett’s suffering.

Yet in spite of this unevenness and  the difficulty in identifying with some of the characters, their pain and suffering seem totally real. Their loss is so horrific that you keep on reading, trying to find out how they managed to survive, what the cost was for them to forgive, and if they could ever really find closure.

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

Recommend this book to: Keith and Sharon

Books Study Worthy? Yes

Read in ebook format.

 

    

 

 

Posted in Fiction, Literary Fiction, Psychological Mystery | Tagged , | Leave a comment