Captivating historical fiction, based on the amazing true story of Cathy Williams, a former slave who pretended to be a man so that she could serve with the famed Buffalo Soldiers. Interesting, witty, heartbreaking, suspenseful – this was a wonderful story from start to finish. Highly recommend!
Thanks to Peggy Townsend, Thomas & Mercer, and Netgalley for providing me with a digital advance copy of this novel.
The Thin Edge is Peggy Townsend’s second novel featuring journalist Aloa Snow. This novel picks up shortly after the last one left off, and I was happy to fall back into the life of Aloa and her quirky cast of friends. Here, Aloa investigates the brutal murder of the wife of a former FBI agent, who has been rendered a paraplegic as the result of a tragic accident. I found this mystery interesting and the characters engaging. Townsend does a great job of describing San Francisco, and she creates characters (like Aloa’s older group of sidekicks) who are interesting, likeable, and believable. I didn’t enjoy this novel quite as much as the first one, See Her Run – I figured it out early on, and I found the side story involving the homeless murders distracting and not fully developed/explained. Still, I enjoyed this novel and would recommend it. This is a series to watch!
Thanks to Minka Kent, Thomas & Mercer, and Netgalley for providing me with a digital advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
Sisters Wren and Sage have lived off the grid with no knowledge of the outside world, until their mother leaves them to seek help for their younger sister and never returns. Nearing starvation and desperate as winter approaches, their situation becomes even more dire when a strange man breaks into the cabin. The sisters are forced to flee into the woods where they not only must face the unknown world, but also the revelation of devastating secrets.
Wow! I loved this book and devoured it in one day. Excellent storytelling, good writing, and a plot that did not disappoint. Highly recommend!
Warning: long read!! So, more and more I find myself realizing just how LITTLE I know and how much there is to learn. Maybe it’s a consequence of aging (like watching more and more PBS?) but anyway, it happens to me a lot, but especially when I was reading The Fifth Risk. I was blown away by how little I knew about crucial government agencies and how they affect our lives. (H/T to Jolynn Dellinger – her review of this book on Goodreads is what motivated me to read it.)
I am recommending this book to you because more than ever I think we all need to be aware of and appreciate the role that our government plays in so many aspects of our lives. Before I go further I will admit that I generally think of myself as a “small government” kind of gal, and someone who is outraged by government waste and excess. Having said that, reading this book gave me a new appreciation for the essential importance of many of the functions of our admittedly massive bureaucracy and of the career professionals at these agencies who are committed to public service.
Lewis has written many great books that I’m sure you’ve heard of, including Moneyball, The Big Short, and The Blind Side. Similarly, this book is wonderfully written and very engaging, even though it focuses mainly on the Trump transition, and on the organization and function of three government agencies: the Departments of Energy, Commerce, and Agriculture.
I had no idea how many important things are handled by the Department of Energy: maintaining and guarding our nuclear arsenal, including tracking and securing plutonium and uranium at loose in the world; training every international atomic-energy inspector; supplying radiation-detection equipment to enable other countries to detect bomb materials; conducting science on nuclear material (a science budget in the billions!), and managing disposal/containment of massive amounts of nuclear waste. So, these are big – some might say, existential – matters. Given that, you might be alarmed at the way Lewis describes the transition of this department. Basically, the department prepared for a year before the election to transition the department in the same way that Bush did for Obama. Let that sink in for a moment – the activities/responsibilities of the DOE are so vast, so varied, and so complex that the employees spent a YEAR preparing the transition materials for their department. Then the election happened, and the DOE was ready the very next day for people from the Trump team to arrive and begin learning. No one came. A month went by. A MONTH. No one came. Then one guy – Thomas Pyle, President of the American Energy Alliance – arrived for a meeting with the outgoing Energy Secretary (Ernest Moniz, a nuclear physicist). He spent ONE HOUR at the agency, took no notes, asked no questions, and seemed disinterested. He left, and never returned. Eventually, Rick Perry was nominated to be Secretary of Energy. Yes, that Rick Perry, who had famously opined that the Department of Energy should be eliminated. (I’ll give Perry the benefit of the doubt and assume that, like me, he had no idea what the DOE really does, and that now that he does know, he’s committed to the mission….). Along with Rick Perry, Trump’s appointments to positions at DOE included many personal associates of his who had absolutely no background in science. In fact, several lacked college degrees, which made them ineligible for the high level government positions to which they’d been appointed.
The story is the same, and equally distressing, for the Departments of Agriculture and Commerce (did you know that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NOAA, which oversees the National Weather Service, is a part of the Department of Commerce? Bet you didn’t!). I won’t go into detail here because this is already too long – but I urge you to read the book. I think the bottom line is that the government is engaged in myriad functions that are critical to our daily lives. Most of that work is performed by dedicated civil servants – career professionals – and many of them are highly credentialed scientists. Right now, many of those same professionals are working without a paycheck. We need to value this work and protect it, but we need competent management in order to do that – indeed, that is the “Fifth Risk”: project management.
I wish I had something encouraging to say to wrap this up, but I don’t. I’ve actually had trouble sleeping since I finished this book, but still, I urge you to read it. At this incredibly fraught time in our history, I think we would all be wise to know more about our government, to appreciate the complexities inherent in it, and to require expertise (or even just basic competence?) in those who aspire to lead us.
The Whisper Man by Alex North, available August 20, 2019
Thanks to Alex North, Celadon Books, and Netgalley for providing me with a digital advance copy of The Whisper Man. This is an excellent thriller — a multi-generational story of a small town trying to catch a serial killer, but also a study of father-son relationships and the ways in which those relationships dictate the future of both the parents and the children. Well done, engaging read. Highly recommend!
I got lucky at the library last week and scooped up a couple of books that had been on my to-read list (love it when that happens!). My summer reading is off to a great start!
The River, by Peter Heller (available now) I did not enjoy Heller’s previous novel (Celine), so I approached this one with skepticism, despite its good reviews. The River is the gripping adventure of two college-aged boys on a long-distance and isolated canoeing trip that goes horribly wrong when they are caught between a ferocious forest fire and potentially dangerous men in their path. Beautifully written, I loved this book from start to finish! This one will stay with me for awhile. Some of the very detailed descriptions of fishing/canoeing, etc. became tedious but I was so drawn into the saga of the boys’ survival that it didn’t bother me much. Highly recommend!
Daisy Jones and the Six, by Taylor Jenkins Reid (available now)
Thanks to Michele Grace for the heads-up on this novel, which follows the complicated story of a late 1970’s rock band. It’s formatted like a book-length interview of all the relevant characters, which takes a bit of getting used to, but provides interesting insight into how different characters view the same events. I just loved this book, and was sad when it ended. Side note: I know this was fiction but how do these rocker types do SO MANY drugs and survive? If I have 2 margaritas I pay for it for days! Anyway, highly recommend!
The Nowhere Child, by Christian White (available now)
I’m not sure what’s in the water in Australia lately, but Australian authors are turning out some really fine mysteries! In this debut novel, Australian Kim Leamy discovers that she may actually be Sammy Went – a child who was abducted from rural Kentucky over 20 years earlier. Her journey to discover the truth is expertly juxtaposed with the story of Sammy’s disappearance. Extremely well done. Highly recommend!
Only Killers and Thieves, by Paul Howarth (available now)
Another Australian book (I seem to be reading a lot of those lately!). This book is really hard to review. The writing is exceptional and the story is interesting (two young brothers searching for justice in the 1880s Australian frontier) and I was interested in it because it reminded me of Philip Meyer’s The Son (historical Texas family saga). But I struggled to get through it because it was so graphic and so violent — I had to keep putting it down and reading other books in between. In the end, I’m glad I finished it, but I have reservations about recommending it. You might read some other reviews and decide if it’s for you.
Just no:
Neon Prey (Lucas Davenport #29) by John Sanford (available now)
What is it lately with usually reliable series going off the rails? There’s no need to summarize this one. It was so bad that I have a sneaky suspicion that it was ghost-written. Pass.
Thanks to Chuck Wendig, Random House Ballantine, and Netgalley for providing me with a digital advance copy of this novel. I am a big fan of well-written dystopian fiction — Station Eleven, The Stand, and The Passage are among my all-time favorite novels — so I had high hopes for Wanderers. Wendig has written a novel sweeping in scope (and massive in length – 800+ pages!), with engaging characters and a plot that seems all too possible. Terrifying yet heartwarming, this book was almost impossible to put down, and I was actually sad to see it come to an end (I might add that I didn’t love the ending). It did not have the lyrical hope of Station Eleven, nor the literary depth of The Passage, and nothing reaches the heights of The Stand, but if you are longing for a good story in this genre, give this one a try. Highly recommend.
Thanks to Ruth Ware, Gallery/Pocket Books, and Netgalley, for providing me with a digital advance copy of The Turn of the Key. Rowan Caine takes a job as a nanny in an isolated Scottish house, which is rumored to be haunted. Will she be scared off like all of the previous nannies? Can she figure out what is really happening? I loved this book and devoured it in less than 24 hours. A Gothic Scottish setting, an old mysterious house, a secret garden, the possibility of ghosts in the attic – what more could one want? This book kept me guessing, and the writing was excellent. Highly recommend.
Welcome to my book review blog! Do people read blogs anymore? I guess we’ll find out! This is not my first blog – it’s actually my fourth or maybe even my fifth: I had a family-related blog before Facebook really took off for that sort of thing, I have a blog related to my Etsy shop, which I haven’t posted on in several years, and I had a couple of short-term blogs when I was doing some crafting projects. So, I’m not new to blogging, but I am new to WordPress, and so I’ve got a bit of a learning curve to navigate.
Thanks for visiting, and I hope you’ll check back for book reviews and book-related content. I always love hearing what other people are reading, so feel free to leave comments!