May bookshelf

May 1, 2014

MAY 14 Collage 3I updated the Win Books page for May and I’m really jazzed about these thrillers! As usual, there is a great collection of NY Times bestsellers, solid storytellers and some newbies.

Late addition to the bookshelf: THE KEEPER by John Lescroart! Dismas Hardy returns to hunt for clues about a woman who has gone missing. Jeffery Deaver is back with THE SKIN COLLECTOR, with a new killer on the loose: a criminal inspired by the Bone Collector.

Steve Berry offers up his latest, THE LINCOLN MYTH. Berry writes incredibly well researched historical thrillers that will entertain you and painlessly educate you. Joseph Finder has a terrific new thriller, SUSPICION, about a father who is forced to make a choice with unspeakable consequences. 

One of my favorite debut authors of last year is back with her sophomore effort; Jenny Milchman returns with the outstanding family thriller RUIN FALLS. Military thriller fans are in luck – Dale Brown has a new one, STARFIRE. 

THE HOLLOW GIRL by Reed Farrel Coleman, the final novel in the critically acclaimed Moe Prager Mystery series, is up for grabs. I loved the debut EAT WHAT YOU KILL by Ted Scofield, a terrific financial thriller with an unusual protagonist. Debuts THE BUDDY SYSTEM by Brandon Herbert and FATAL SNOW by Robert Walton and an ebook, LEGITIMATE BUSINESS by Michael Niemann, round out this month’s bookshelf.

If you are new to the site, each month I run a contest in conjunction with the International Thriller Writers group. We put together a list of books including bestsellers and debut authors, so you can win some of your favorites and find some new favorites.

What makes this contest really special is that all of the books (except eBooks) are signed by the author!

Don’t forget, if you subscribe to the newsletter or follow this blog, you get an extra entry into every contest you enter.

Thanks for reading, and good luck!

 


THE STORIED LIFE OF A.J. FIKRY by Gabrielle Zevin

April 30, 2014

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Let me start by saying that I loved this book. It is a favorite of librarians (it topped the April Library Reads list) and booksellers (it also topped the Indie Next List.)

I wasn’t sure, to be honest, if it would have wider appeal than those in the book industry, so I recommended it to a few of my library patrons to see what kind of response I would get.  I am happy to report that they loved it too.

All that praise heaped on one small book!

A.J. Fikry is the main character, a small bookstore owner in a tiny vacation town with a bustling summer business that dies the rest of the year. He is barely getting by, especially since he lost his wife. When one of the small publishers sends a new sales person to see him, he is especially rude to her, as she recommends a memoir that he has no desire or intention of reading. But when he finally does, he is completely taken with it, and with her.

Meanwhile, he is drinking to excess and wakes up one morning to find that his most valuable book has been stolen. To complicate his life further, a day later a baby is abandoned in his store, along with a note explaining that a bookstore would be a good place to raise a child.

The town police chief befriends him, and Fikry, who learns about people by what they read, is not surprised to find that the chief’s favorite author is Jeffery Deaver. Like any good bookseller, Fikry helps expand his horizons and eventually the chief forms a book discussion group for cops. (Deaver fans will enjoy his references here; I know I did.)

Fikry may be a prickly character, but there is also something quite lovable about him, too. All the characters in this story are quirky and interesting and the reader can’t help but care about what happens to them. Reading groups will love it, there is lots to discuss here.

This is an utterly charming book that is sure to make my best books of the year list; it is simply 272 pages of bookseller bliss. All I can say is don’t miss it.

4/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE STORIED LIFE OF A.J. FIKRY by Gabrielle Zevin. Algonquin Books; First Edition edition (April 1, 2014). ISBN 978-1616203214. 272p.


NATCHEZ BURNING by Greg Iles

April 29, 2014

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After a five year hiatus due to a horrific auto accident, Greg Iles returns with what is undoubtedly his masterpiece, a book that is announced as the first of a trilogy.

Iles uses the Cage family, featured in many of his novels, as the vehicle to tell a monumental story of the old south from the 1970s until about the Katrina hurricane. Penn Cage’s father, Tom has been a doctor ministering to both whites and blacks for many years. He had, in the past, a short lived affair with his Afro American nurse, Viola Turner, who rather than compromising Tom’s marriage left the area to move to Chicago. Viola was raped by men belonging to a secret group within the Ku Klux Klan before leaving Mississippi for Chicago. Many years later she was dying of cancer. She returned to tell Tom and others that she had had a child in Chicago.

The question later arises if the child is Tom’s or as a result of the group rape. Viola dies and examination indicates that she did not pass away as a result of the cancer. Enemies of Tom Cage accuse him of murder citing the possibility of a mercy killing to ease Viola’s pain.

Penn Cage, the mayor of Natchez, takes on the task of proving that his father is not guilty of any crime, and in undertaking the investigation opens up a long history of criminal activity, including murder by the “Double Eagles,” the group within the KKK led by one of the richest and most powerful men in Mississippi. Iles takes us into an era when blacks were second class citizens and crimes against them were not considered in the same vein as against whites. Complete segregation was enforced by hate groups openly pursuing the practice and it appears that Penn’s task will involve opening the past in order to prove his father innocent of murder.

Natchez Burning is over 800 pages in length but proves to be completely engrossing, forcing the reader to continue reading far into the night. The book solves several problems, first of which is to prove Tom Cage innocent of murder but leaves many other details for the second and third book. This novel can be read as a stand alone, and is very satisfying as is, but does leave room for the other areas to be detailed in the following novels. Great book, extremely well done and certainly a return to normal for Iles.

4/14 Paul Lane

NATCHEZ BURNING by Greg Iles. William Morrow (April 29, 2014). ISBN 978-0062311078. 800p.


THREE WEEKS WITH LADY X by Eloisa James

April 28, 2014

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Desperate Duchesses

Eloisa James has become my favorite romance writer. She does historicals, this one set in 1799 England.

Thorn Dautry is the bastard son of a Duke, and grew up on the streets until he was taken in by the Duke and his stepmother. It is time for him to marry, but despite his power and wealth, his parentage is a burden.

He meets LaLa, an exquisitely beautiful, sweet young society woman whose father has some financial troubles. He decided she is exactly what he wants in a wife, and needs to win over her snobby mother to make his case.

He purchases a country home in hopes of impressing LaLa and her family, but it is in serious disrepair so he hires the famous Lady Xenobia India St. Claire, daughter of a deceased marquess, who solves all decorating and servant problems. But she has never taken on an entire house before, especially one with a three week deadline. She decides this will be her retirement project, because she has earned enough money for a substantial dowry and it is time for her to marry.

India is a bright, independent woman and she and Thorn butt heads regularly. But he is intrigued by her, and in working together to fix up his home they fall in love – but neither will admit to it. She’s convinced he is madly in love with LaLa, and he thinks LaLa is the type of wife he needs and tells himself that India is just a friend.

Their letters back and forth about the work on the house add an additional layer to this already multi-layered story. James excels at creating believably complex, well developed characters and richly imagined stories. People magazine said, “Romance writing does not get much better than this,” and I agree.

4/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THREE WEEKS WITH LADY X by Eloisa James. Avon (March 25, 2014). ISBN 978-0062223890. 400p.


THE LUCKY SANTANGELO COOKBOOK by Jackie Collins

April 27, 2014

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I never thought of the glamorous Jackie Collins as someone who would actually cook, but who knew, she now has a cookbook named for her most popular character and based on some of the food that’s shown up in the books. Open the book to find the inside covers filled with pictures of Jackie and her celebrity pals, including her sister Joan Collins of Dynasty fame. But no worries, there are lots of food pictures inside the book too. Also sprinkled throughout are occasional notes about why the recipe was included, i.e. “English Roast Potatoes are a teenage Gino junior’s passion. He devours them…”

The first chapter is Cocktails, and the first thing I tried was a drink called The Jackie Collins, which was created by Wolfgang Puck. It includes some of my favorite flavors, raspberry and lemon, and was really delicious. This may be my new favorite drink.

Appetizers are next and include a few salads like a Caesar with white anchovies and terrific Beet and Avocado Salad with a honey balsamic vinaigrette. There are also several pizzas and mac & cheese (as an app? really?) Then comes the Pasta Appetizers, with such rich fare as Veal Saffron Cream Pasta Sauce, Fettucine with Crab and Cream, and Rigatoni with Lobster Champagne Cream. I can’t imagine Jackie Collins eating any of these.

Entrees are next and this is the most extensive chapter in the book, with about 35 recipes or so. When the weather turns cold again I’m definitely going to try Lucky’s Kick-Ass Chili with four kinds of chili peppers. The Pork Chops Milanese were delicious and easy, and I loved that they were served with an aurugla salad. I am also intrigued by the Bourbon-Marinated Flank Steak with Dijon mustard, Worcestershire sauce, lime juice and soy sauce. There are some nice fish dishes, too, like Santangelo Salmon with red miso and sake butter, and a simple Sole with Parmesan Crust.

There is a chapter devoted to side dishes like The Best Mashed Potatoes Ever, which is a pretty standard recipe, but the Sweet Potatoes and Apricots is a bit more unusual – chopped dried apricots are soaked in bourbon and then added to a brown sugar enriched mashed sweet potato along with pecans. There is also a Thanksgiving “lifesaver”, Brussels Sprouts Moutarde, which is made entirely in the microwave, nothing I will be attempting; however, I can see the merit in the idea.

A short chapter with five sauces is next, including Blender Hollandaise Sauce and Lucky’s Best Besciamella Sauce and then we get to desserts, including Flourless Chocolate Cake, Moist Sugar Cake, and a Buttermilk Panna Cotta with Strawberries, along with several other fruit desserts and a couple of sorbets.

It is a lovely cookbook and Jackie Collins’ fans should definitely add this to their bookshelves.

4/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE LUCKY SANTANGELO COOKBOOK by Jackie Collins. St. Martin’s Press (April 8, 2014). ISBN 978-1250014658. 176p.

 


THE TROUBLE WITH BEING A DUKE by Sophie Barnes

April 26, 2014

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At the Kingsborough Ball

I really like historical romances, but they have to be well written – Eloisa James has spoiled me. I am delighted to have found another good author in Sophie Barnes.

This is the first book in the Kingsborough Ball series. It appears the books following all get their start at the same event, the ball given by the Anthony Hurst, the Duke of Kingsborough. This is the first party held at the estate in more than five years, since his father became ill and eventually died. A year later, Anthony decides that returning to the habit of hosting their annual event is just what his mother needs to help pull her out of mourning.

Tradition holds that it be a masked ball, and Cinderella is the theme, replete with a glass slipper carved of ice, and a pumpkin inspired carriage outside, with an artist on hand to sketch couples who deign to sit inside it.

To honor his father’s memory, the Duke realizes that he needs to change his rakish ways, find a bride and produce an heir – and he meets the girl of his dreams at the ball. She is beautiful but masked, and gives her name as “Miss Smith.” The family quickly realizes that she is lying about who she is and that she’s not on the guest list, but the Duke is smitten. Fireworks are set for midnight, and of course “Miss Smith” disappears, but the Duke is determined to find her.

Isabella is an avid reader of fairy tales, and dreams of meeting her prince. But as the daughter of a carriage driver, she knows that it’s impossible, especially as her parents have an arrangement with Mr. Roberts, who has been calling on her weekly for a year. He hasn’t proposed, but she suspects he will, and she feels it is her duty to marry him. He is a wealthy entrepreneur and will help take care of her family, and he is looking for what we now consider a trophy wife.

Barnes excels at creating tension, making the pages just fly by until the requisite happy ending, but not before throwing several obstacles in the way – as well as a bit of sex.

I am looking forward to the next book in the series, The Scandal in Kissing an Heir, especially after reading the first chapter which is included in the back of this book.

4/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE TROUBLE WITH BEING A DUKE by Sophie Barnes. Avon (August 27, 2013). ISBN 978-0062245076. 384p.


FIRST MURDER IN ADVENT by Sharon Wildwind

April 25, 2014

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An Elizabeth Pepperhawk/Avivah Rosen Mystery

The protagonists,  Elizabeth Pepper-hawk and Avivah Rosen, are women who have served in Vietnam, as Wildwind herself did. In Wildwind’s second mystery, set in 1972, Army nurse Pepperhawk is between assignments when she receives a call from Benny Kirkpatrick, ex-Special Forces first sergeant.

Their friend Avivah is in trouble, and with Benny and Avivah’s friend, has sought refuge in a convent in the mountains of North Carolina. When Pepper goes to help, she finds mil-itary intelligence officer Darby Baxter, her on-again, off-again love interest, with three other men.

What follows are days without electricity in a mostly empty convent, in a snowstorm. Avivah, Pepper, Darby and Benny, along with a few nuns and some members of a paramilitary think tank, struggle to survive the cold amidst murder, secret passageways and lost wills–delicious reading with tangling sub-plots. Too bad this series didn’t get more attention as the stories are quite good.

04/14 Jack Quick

FIRST MURDER IN ADVENT by Sharon Wildwind. Five Star (ME) (October 2006). ISBN 978-1594145278. 323p.


Win The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan!

April 24, 2014
T_Drop Cap_large_The_Joy_Luck_Club

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I feel like celebrating – this year marks the 25th Anniversary of Amy Tan’s huge bestseller, The Joy Luck Club! To celebrate, Penguin Classics—together with Penguin Art Director Paul Buckley and Jessica Hische—has created a stunning new Drop Cap.  They are celebrating with a very special anniversary edition of a book beloved by readers around the world.

The letter ‘T’ is dedicated to the talented Amy Tan.

This stunning edition is perfect for anyone who wants to commemorate the publication of a novel that has changed lives.

I am offering one lucky reader a copy of the Penguin Classic Edition along with a copy of the limited edition ‘T’ Drop Cap edition. 

 

This beautifully designed new edition of The Joy Luck Club celebrates an important milestone.

 

If you’d like to win both editions of The Joy Luck Club –

Send an email to contest@gmail.com with “JOY LUCK CLUB” as the subject. You must include your snail mail address in your email.

All entries must be received by May 5, 2014. One (1) name will be drawn from all qualified entries and notified via email. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age in the United States only. One entry per email address. Subscribers to the monthly newsletter earn an extra entry into every contest. Follow this blog to earn another entry into every contest. Winners may win only one time per year (365 days) for contests with prizes of more than one book. Your email address will not be shared or sold to anyone.

 


EVERYTHING TO LOSE by Andrew Gross

April 23, 2014

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Set during the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy and the massive damage done by the storm to wide areas of the Northeast, Everything to Lose is another up all nighter by Gross.

Hilary Blum, a divorced mother of a boy with Asperger’s Syndrome, has just lost her job. Unable to force her ex-husband to pay her many expenses, she is at her wit’s end when she witnesses a freak accident in which a deer darts in front of the car in front of her, forcing the vehicle off the road. She runs down to the scene of the crash, finding the driver dead and next to him on the front seat, a satchel filled with money.

Suddenly caught between her inherent honesty and the need for money she throws the satchel out of the car into a dense group of trees to possibly come back for it. The amount of money in the bag could probably solve her financial problems immediately and also allow her to help her parents, who coincidentally have run into financial woes. Her decision to keep it plunges her into a maze of unforeseen consequences starting with a 20 year old murder, problems with the Russian Mafia, and into the company of a New York City detective that by coincidence has ties to the funds.

Gross ponders the subject of callous and unemotional kids which weighs heavily in the details of the novel. While he does not suggest that actions be taken to find these children and treat them, he does describe their abnormal reactions to people and situations in telling the story. The book is typical of Gross, well thought out, fleshed out characters and a plot that grabs and holds the reader. Well done, and awaiting his next novel with interest.

4/14 Paul Lane

EVERYTHING TO LOSE by Andrew Gross. William Morrow (April 22, 2014). ISBN 978-0061656002. 336p.


RUIN FALLS by Jenny Milchman

April 22, 2014

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Liz and Paul Daniels have two young children and live a fairly idyllic life on an organic family farm. Paul is a professor who is determined to live a green, postconsumer lifestyle and Liz goes along with it as much as possible.

They take their first family vacation in years, a road trip to visit Paul’s parents on their commercial farm but stop at a hotel along the way. When Liz wakes up, her children are gone, and then Paul disappears, too.

The police immediately abandon their search, considering it a domestic dispute, and Liz is heartbroken, yet furious. She is determined to find her children, and begins her search with her in-laws, who deny any knowledge of their son or grandchildren. Liz soon heads home to her husband’s computer and his office at the university and quickly realizes that she doesn’t know her husband at all. Her best friend tries to help but she has her own hands full with a son who has suffered a traumatic brain injury.

How far Paul will go to live his politics and how a determined mother can seemingly overcome almost any obstacle is at the heart of this tautly written page-turner. Milchman proves her chops with her sophomore effort and she carves out a new niche with this unusual environmental family thriller.

Copyright ©2014 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

2/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

RUIN FALLS by Jenny Milchman. Ballantine Books (April 22, 2014). ISBN 978-0345549075. 352p.