I recently watched the Amazon Prime Video version of Ordeal by Innocence and thought it could not be accurate to Agatha Christie’s book. So I read it, and I was right. The book is far superior. The characters are the same—five adopted children, their father, two employees, a spouse, and a man that throws everything into turmoil when he alibis the accused murderer of Rachel Argyle, their mother. However, the motives, personalities, and actions are significantly different, and Christie does not have to rely on shock or disgust to weave her tale or entertain her reader. Ordeal isn’t my favorite Christie mystery, but it did leave me wondering who done it.
Sunday, September 16, 2018
Wednesday, August 22, 2018
Lying in Wait
Liz Nugent’s Lying in Wait is different from other suspense novels that I have recently read. The reader knows from the beginning who the murder victim is and who the murderers are. Told from multiple points of view—the victim’s sister, the perpetrators, their son—the reader isn’t left confused, guessing, or deceived as happens in so many contemporary novels. This style of storytelling is refreshing and shows respect to the reader. That said, it also leaves the reader wondering what the surprise or twist could possibly be—but it did not disappoint. Lying in Wait is a fast, easy—and disturbing—end of summer read.
Friday, July 27, 2018
The Long Game
Tess Kendrick Keyes is back in Jennifer Lynn Barnes’ second installment of The Fixer series: The Long Game. This time, Tess is trying to help her classmate win a school election. What could be a simple high school story instead deals with corruption, terrorism, and even the #metoo movement. Barnes does not shy away from unhappy and uncomfortable situations and topics. People die. Characters aren’t exactly who you think they are. Barnes takes risks, particularly for a young adult novel, and I respect her for it—and for expecting her YA readers to take those risks with her.
Friday, July 13, 2018
Be Prepared
Vera Brosgol’s graphic novel Be Prepared is based on her experiences as a child at summer camp. Vera, a young Russian immigrant in New York, doesn’t quite fit in with the other girls at her school. Every summer, her friends go off to summer camp, so Vera jumps at the chance to attend a camp for Russian diaspora. She longs to have the camp experience and to fit in with other children. However, camp isn’t exactly what she was hoping for. Vera’s feelings of loneliness and isolation and her longing for acceptance is a universal human experience than any reader can relate to.
Tuesday, July 10, 2018
Bring Me Back
Finn’s girlfriend, Layla, disappears under puzzling circumstances at the beginning of B.A. Paris’s Bring Me Back. Several years later, Finn is engaged to Layla’s older sister, Ellen, and starts receiving mysterious messages from his past. Bring Me Back is an easy and fast read. I was happy to finally have an unreliable narrator that is male but surprised that Paris decided to resolve some of the mystery so early on in the novel. As such, I suspected the ending, but it was still a fun and painless ride.
Monday, July 2, 2018
The Death of Mrs. Westaway
Hal, a young, impoverished tarot card reader, is surprised when she learns of the passing of her grandmother, Mrs. Westaway—particularly since her grandmother had died before Hal was born. Hoping to alleviate some of her financial distress, Hal attends Mrs. Westaway’s funeral and discovers everything isn’t as she initially imagined.
The premise of Ruth Ware’s latest novel, The Death of Mrs. Westaway, is intriguing. However, it took me a long time, almost to the last 80 pages, to feel hooked on this book. The execution is slow and sometimes rather dull, but ultimately the story grabbed me and I had to know the ending.
The premise of Ruth Ware’s latest novel, The Death of Mrs. Westaway, is intriguing. However, it took me a long time, almost to the last 80 pages, to feel hooked on this book. The execution is slow and sometimes rather dull, but ultimately the story grabbed me and I had to know the ending.
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
Death of an Honest Man
Hamish Macbeth is back in another installment of MC Beaton’s series. This time, he is investigating the murder of a man known for offending everyone he meets with his “honesty.” Although nothing ever really seems to change in Hamish’s life, at first I was impressed that Beaton seemed to be embracing progressive ideas of equality in the book. Yet, as it progressed, some sort of “evil” possessed Hamish and filled him with alarmingly misogynistic ideas that may have tainted my love for him permanently. It seemed a strange move for a 2018 novel. Other than this glitch, the rest of the book maintained its cozy mystery standards and was an easy, relaxing read.
Friday, June 15, 2018
The Perfect Mother
Aimee Molloy’s The Perfect Mother is a fast, easy, and entertaining read. A mother’s group in Brooklyn is rocked when one of the babies is kidnapped. The kidnapping reveals that not all the members of the group are what they appear to be. As a mother, I could relate to many of the group members’ feelings, but more than anything I was engrossed by the story and finding out what actually happened to baby Midas. Molloy does a good job of concealing, yet revealing, the truth, leaving me feeling intrigued and only slightly manipulated. Definitely a fun summer read.
Tuesday, February 6, 2018
Seven Letters from Paris: A Memoir
Seven Letters from Paris is American Samantha Vérant’s memoir of rekindling a romance with a Frenchman she met 20 years earlier while traveling. The premise is romantic—that the spark of true love can remain for many years, and it gives hope to readers that are down on their luck or struggling in bad relationships. Although the memoir is written as a narrative, and Vérant gives a lot of description and details (sometimes too much of both), the book lacks a certain literary quality. It was interesting to read her story, and I stuck with it because of my love for Paris and obvious desire to marry a Frenchman and move to France, but I never felt captivated by the writing.
Thursday, January 25, 2018
The Agency: A Spy in the House
The Agency: A Spy in the House is the first in a series of YA novels by Y.S. Lee. Young Mary Quinn is rescued from the gallows by an unusual school for young women in Victorian England. The school educates girls in desperate situations, and Mary finds herself with the opportunity to become a spy in the guise of a domestic servant.
Mary is an appealing heroine, although she does make some decisions that really boggle the mind. Lee does a nice job of describing a realistic Victorian London that many of off us have probably romanticized and introduces some history I was previously unaware of. I was both educated and entertained by the novel and will certainly read the second book in the series.
Mary is an appealing heroine, although she does make some decisions that really boggle the mind. Lee does a nice job of describing a realistic Victorian London that many of off us have probably romanticized and introduces some history I was previously unaware of. I was both educated and entertained by the novel and will certainly read the second book in the series.
Wednesday, January 17, 2018
Emma: A Modern Retelling
Emma: A Modern Retelling by Alexander McCall Smith is just that—a version of Jane Austen’s Emma taking place in the modern day. McCall Smith adds a few modern “twists” that purists might find distressing or at least distracting, but he mostly stays on Austen’s plotline. McCall Smith has an easy style of writing that is comfortable and entertaining. His Emma, though, lacks the genuineness of the original and the attractiveness of Paltrow’s Emma and Silverstone’s Cher. His Emma seems to be less clueless, if you will, and more malicious, which takes away from her appeal. However, he does try to redeem her in an ending that feels rushed. Casual Emma fans will enjoy the retelling, but fanatics should probably stay away.
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