THE LOCKER by Adrian Magson

January 8, 2016
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A Cruxys Solutions Investigation

Nancy goes to her usual locker at the gym and finds a note telling her that her daughter’s been taken, to notify her husband Michael and not call the police. She runs home in a panic to find the front door wide open, her daughter and the nanny gone.

Somehow she remembers that her husband had told her in case of an emergency to call a certain number and tell them Code Red. The number leads to Cruxys Solutions, a private security firm specializing in kidnappings in drug war torn countries and other security issues.

Michael works for various charities in many of these countries as well as the Middle East, and is often out of cell phone range. Nonetheless, Nancy texts her husband as instructed then calls Cruxys.

The action speeds up as the security officers find several irregularities and dig deeper, and Nancy’s story and lifestyle gets more unbelievable with each passing day. Magson takes the suburban thriller overseas and gives it a good twist. Readers who enjoy Harlan Coben and Joseph Finder will happily get lost in the nightmare presented here.

Copyright ©2016 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

1/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE LOCKER by Adrian Magson. Midnight Ink (January 8, 2016).  ISBN 978-0738746722. 384p.

 


WHAT SHE LEFT by T. R. Richmond

January 6, 2016
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Alice Salmon has died. Whether it’s an accident or suicide is yet to be determined, but the death is one that touches many including Professor Jeremy Cooke. Cooke wasn’t one of Alice’s teachers, but he was smitten by the coed nonetheless. His affection is thanks in no small part to the long-running affair he’d had with her mother decades ago.

Cooke, an anthropologist, makes a project out of collecting bits and pieces of Alice’s life. Tweets, Facebook posts, texts, emails… all of the things that seem to make up a person’s public persona in the twenty-first century. What emerges from the study is not a girl who is troubled to the point of taking her own life, but a girl who has been threatened with violence and danger. Could it be that Alice was murdered and that Cooke holds the key to the killer’s identity?

T. R. Richmond’s debut is a great twist on the epistolary novel. There is no straight narrative in the book at all. Instead, letters between Cooke and his longtime pen pal provide a framework and insight into Cooke’s own thoughts and interactions with the various players in the story. The other characters’ stories come through via the various social media and correspondence gathered and arranged as part of Cooke’s project.

The “chapters” make for the kind of pacing you’d expect out of a suspense driven plot but the story itself is more of a drama than a true thriller. As a result, is the kind of book I believe will appeal to thriller readers as well as fans of more character-driven fare.

1/16 Becky LeJeune

WHAT SHE LEFT by T. R. Richmond.  Simon & Schuster (January 5, 2016).  ISBN 978-1476773841  320p.


ANGELS BURNING by Tawni O’Dell

January 5, 2016
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Dove Carnahan is the chief of police in a small town in rural Pennsylvania. Once on the fast track with the state police department, she abruptly left for her small hometown, much to the disappointment of her mentor, Nolan. They still work together and occasionally sleep together, so when a teenage girl’s body is found half burnt, Chief Dove welcomes the help.

The cause of death wasn’t the fire but the fire did enough damage to delay identifying Camio, the shining light of a terribly dysfunctional family of drunks, drug addicts and worse. Camio’s boyfriend is the immediate suspect, as are members of her family, but everyone has an ironclad alibi – or so it seems.

Chief Dove herself comes from a similarly hideous background, but her and her sister seemed to have risen above their mother’s reputation as the town whore and her subsequent murder to become successful, worthwhile members of the community.

This is a small town full of ugly secrets that slowly unfurl, and the prose here has some truly lovely moments, but at heart this is a psychological thriller that is almost impossible to put down.

Copyright ©2016 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

1/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

ANGELS BURNING by Tawni O’Dell. Gallery Books; Library Edition edition (January 5, 2016).  ISBN 978-1501132544. 288p.

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THE FIRST HOSTAGE by Joel C. Rosenberg

January 3, 2016

FIRST HOSTAGE ROSENBERGA J. B. Collins Novel

Joel Rosenberg has demonstrated an ability to write fiction which is centered upon his analysis of what is actually happening or going to happen in the volatile middle east. The First Hostage successfully follows this trend and continues to be centered on the rise of Isis, which Rosenberg described in a previous book, The Third Target.

J.B. Collins, a reporter for the New York Times, had been covering Isis as an emerging offshoot of Al Qaeda. This book’s opening finds him covering an attack by the terror group on Amman, Jordan, in which he puts the entire world on alert about Isis. During the attack the leaders of Israel and Palestine are critically injured, the president of the US is missing and presumed captured, and the king of Jordan has to fight for his kingdom and his very life.

Rosenberg places Collins in the most important salient of the ensuing battles. In the course of his coverage of the events, Collin’s Israeli love interest, Yael, meets up with him again as she appears carrying out action for the benefit of her country as well as getting the injured Israeli leader home for medical care. The two find that in the midst of all the horror they are more and more attracted to each other and will probably work side by side in future novels.

The blame for the success and advance of Isis falls on Collins due to his incendiary stories about them and the horrors they perpetrate in moving forward. He is pursued by the US and finds he has to work with the Secret Service in finding the president as well as clearing his own name.

Rosenberg’s description of Isis and their aims and methods is spot on with what the west is discovering about the terrorists as publicity shows them beheading victims, destroying towns, killing innocent civilians in their path and looking to martyr themselves in order to kill their perceived enemies. He paints the group as completely uninterested in negotiating with their enemies, only killing them.

The writing is hypnotizing in its jet fast progress through the action.  An all nighter does not do it justice since it’s a non-stop express ride. The ending certainly sets the stage for the next book in this series, and readers will await it with bated breath.

1/16 Paul Lane

THE FIRST HOSTAGE by Joel C. Rosenberg. Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. (December 29, 2015).  ISBN 978-1496406156. 448p.

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THE GOLEM OF HOLLYWOOD by Jonathan Kellerman & Jesse Kellerman

December 16, 2015

Golem of HollywoodJacob Lev left homicide because of the toll it was taking on him, but that doesn’t seem to matter to Special Projects. They’re a unit no one, including Jacob, has ever heard of but they seem to be able to pull strings all over the city and they want Jacob on their latest case.

An unidentified head has been found in an abandoned house in the Hollywood hills. The lack of blood and a body seems to suggest the murder took place elsewhere and the only evidence at the scene, aside from the head itself, is a pool of puke and the Hebrew word for justice carved into a countertop. With very little to go on, Jacob is unsure exactly where to begin, but then DNA on the victim comes back as a match to one of two strains tied to a decades old serial case. Digging into those old files could finally lead to a resolution and identifying the head is sure to be the first step in finding the current killer. But as the case proceeds, it takes on more and more bizarre aspects that seem to defy explanation. And Special Projects is starting to look like more of a hindrance than a help in solving the case.

Both Jonathan and Jesse Kellerman have made their respective marks on the thriller scene, but The Golem of Hollywood is their first outing as co-authors (Jonathan of course has co-authored with Faye Kellerman prior to this). I must say the partnership is quite successful.

The Golem of Hollywood is unique in that it ties a gruesome modern murder to a story as old as Genesis – literally. That ancient tale is told in chapters that appear throughout the book, tracing its way from the days of Cain and Abel through to sixteenth century Prague, Rabbi Loew, and the golem.

I definitely had some mixed feelings about the book at first. The current storyline, the murder mystery, grabbed me immediately. The interspersed historical chapters hung up the pacing and were so confusing when they first appeared that I really had no idea what I was in for. Fortunately, the overall plotting is fantastic and the thread of the secondary story began to make more sense the further the book progressed. By the time The Golem of Hollywood started to go into unexpectedly strange and supernatural territory (that occasionally begged for some serious suspension of disbelief), I didn’t care. I was sold and was enjoying myself quite a bit.

I’ve no doubt this is the kind of book that’s going to draw extremely mixed reviews. The blend of Jewish lore, biblical history, and mystery wasn’t completely unexpected. It brought to mind Faye Kellerman’s work more so than what I’ve experienced from Jesse Kellerman (I’ve not read Jonathan Kellerman’s solo work as of yet) but I think having read her prior left me prepared for that possibility. The supernatural aspects were definitely a surprise, again based on what I know about the Kellerman family’s work in general, but it was something I didn’t mind at all thanks to my own reading tastes. I do think that readers more open to something different and unique will take away more from The Golem of Hollywood than someone who’s staunchly opposed to the mixing of genres. But I do hope that even the latter will give the book a shot. As I said, it’s quite fun.

The Golem of Hollywood is the first in a series. The follow up, The Golem of Paris, is out now.

12/15 Becky LeJeune

THE GOLEM OF HOLLYWOOD by Jonathan Kellerman & Jesse Kellerman. Jove (July 28, 2015).  ISBN 978-0425276136. 688p.

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THE PROMISE by Robert Crais

December 15, 2015
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An Elvis Cole and Joe Pike Novel

After multiple delays, The Promise was finally released last month and all I can say is it was worth the wait!

Crais’ last book, The Suspect, was a fabulous stand alone introducing K9 officer Scott James and his ex-Marine turned police dog, Maggie. They are back, joining forces with the “world’s greatest detective,” Elvis Cole, his silent, smart & deadly partner, Joe Pike, and from The Watchman, the enigmatic mercenary, Jon Stone. Having all these characters in one book is like a Christmas gift come early.

So, the story – Cole is hired by a woman to find a missing employee, Amy. Amy is involved in the manufacture of explosives for a government contract company. She and almost half a million dollars have gone missing. Turns out Amy’s son was killed by a possible al-Qaeda suicide bomber and she hasn’t gotten over the loss. In an intricate plot, one twist leads to another until James, Maggie, Cole, Pike and Stone solve the mystery.

I loved this book and stayed up late into the night to finish it. Crais has turned out another real page turner and one terrific read. Don’t miss it.

12/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

THE PROMISE by Robert Crais. G.P. Putnam’s Sons; First Edition first Printing edition (November 10, 2015). ISBN 978-0399161490. 416p.

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TRICKY TWENTY-TWO by Janet Evanovich

December 14, 2015

TRICKY TWENTY-TWOA Stephanie Plum Novel

Anyone who peruses my reviews knows that I am a long time Evanovich fan. I have received review copies of her books since about book five; her publisher would just send them. She changed publishers a few years ago, and I had to ask for her books but still, no problem. Until this book.

There are a handful of authors who don’t make their books available for review prior to publication. This is usually a big deal, involving leaks, accidental sales (Walmart was notorious for selling Harry Potter books prior to publication) and really, it usually isn’t the author, it’s the publicist, trying to drum up even more anticipation.

There are occasionally books that aren’t released for review because they are so bad, they want to avoid the inevitable for as long as possible. And there are books by New York Times bestselling authors that aren’t released for review because too many reviewers enjoy taking pot shots at them, denigrating their writing, their stories, their characters because frankly, some reviewers enjoy the power that brings. Must I add I am not one of them? I hate writing negative reviews, and I’m rarely snarky. When I do feel compelled to write a negative review, I try and keep it as appropriate to the subject as possible, specifics about writing style or characters or whatever I’m not liking. I never attack an author and I never write anything disparaging without careful consideration and criticism.

So when I was told there would be no review copies for this book, and none of the review journals published a review prior to publication, I got nervous. Let’s face it, Janet has been taking a lot of pot shots for the last 10, 12 books – which hasn’t diminished their popularity one iota. This newish publisher not wanting early reviews made me think that maybe this book was going to be the last one I’d want to read.

I am thrilled to say I was wrong, I was nervous for nothing. I loved Twenty-Two, and think it’s her best book in years. I haven’t loved the last ten or so, but I enjoyed them. I knew what I was getting and she always made me laugh. In a way I felt like I was putting up with the inevitable car explosions, the back and forth between Joe and Ranger, and all the other crazy, quirky characters because I loved these people so much. Takedown Twenty almost did me in – that giraffe was so over the top (sorry, couldn’t help it) that I really thought Janet had finally pushed me away. But habits, especially reading habits, are hard to break so I read Top Secret Twenty-One and enjoyed it again.

Which brings me, finally, to Tricky Twenty-Two. It’s short. Publisher claims 304 pages, but that includes a preview of Scam, the new book in the Fox & O’Hare series co-written with Lee Goldberg. I love that series, by the way. So in actuality, the new Plum book clocks in at a fast 280 pages, easily read in one sitting. And that includes a lot of laughing, too.

Lula is here in all her glittery, spandex glory as is Grandma Mazur, who is still packing heat, and Stephanie’s mom, who is still ironing and drinking whenever Stephanie gets into trouble. And Stephanie gets into plenty of trouble. Ranger and Joe are both heating things up and yes, a car or two are blown up. This is a Stephanie Plum book after all, and the plot is the usual bounty hunting goes awry.

All you really have to know is that it is tightly written, moves along at a nice clip, has lots of laughs and lots of romance. All the characters are true to themselves and have earned their longevity. If you’ve given up on the Plum books, it’s time to come back to the fold. If you haven’t read them, or worse yet saw that God-awful movie and were afraid of the books, read this one then go back and start with One for the Money.

I am delighted to say I loved it!

 

12/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

TRICKY TWENTY-TWO by Janet Evanovich. Bantam; 1St Edition edition (November 17, 2015). ISBN 978-0345542960. 304p.

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LOST IN HIS EYES by Andrew Neiderman

December 13, 2015

Lost in His EyesA story of marital infidelity told through the eyes of the wife. Clea Howard is married to a man that is more and more successful in his career as an Insurance company manager. They have a teen age daughter that is in the l6 going on 30 stage. A beautiful home, friends and possessions with time for Clea to enjoy everything since there is no need for her to work to help maintain their lifestyle. With all that she has Clea comes to the conclusion that she is unhappy with her marriage, and her role in the life that she has chosen.  At the seemingly right time she meets a man in the supermarket and begins an affair with him.

The man indicates that his name is Lancaster, he is independently wealthy, travels quite a lot and is very intelligent. Clea learns that somehow her lover knows everything there is to know about her and seems to anticipate her wishes. How is this possible since the meeting is by chance, but at the right time to allow Clea to think of other things beyond her seemingly failed marriage.

Lancaster anticipates Clea’s desires, and always is available for her when she wants him to be. What does he want? Where does he want to go with this relationship with the same question posed for Clea.

A fast read, one that is not overly complicated leading to an ending which is not telegraphed, but is correct for the characters described. Well done.

12/15 Paul Lane

LOST IN HIS EYES by Andrew Neiderman. Severn House Publishers; First World Publication edition (December 1, 2015).  ISBN 978-0727885425. 224p.

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THE DAY IS DARK by Yrsa Sigurdardóttir

December 12, 2015
DAY IS DARK

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Thóra and Matthew are doing well in their budding relationship, so when he approaches her about a job that’s odd but means they’ll get to spend time together she’s in.

The job is one on behalf of Matthew’s employer, Kaupthing Bank, who backed Berg Technology, a company contracted to excavate for Arctic Mining in a remote location in Greenland. Unfortunately, the job has gone off the rails with Berg grossly behind and all but two of their employees abandoning the job. As for the two that stayed behind, no one’s heard from them in over a week – with one small exception. The two men who stayed in Greenland are known jokesters who frequently harass fellow employees and blog about it. Their last communication with anyone outside of Greenland was a garbled and suspiciously bloody video.

Berg doesn’t have a great track record in the area. They’ve already lost two other employees, the most recent just months ago. Both were women and neither was ever seen again. If Berg has defaulted due to negligence or something worse, Kaupthing Bank is on the hook. Matthew, Thóra, and a small team are to travel to Greenland to investigate the situation. If they can prove that the job has fallen through due to circumstances beyond Berg’s control, the bank won’t take the hit when Arctic Mining claims the insurance. And a success could mean more work for Thóra’s small firm.

This is such a fun series and the mysteries themselves always border on the bizarre and possibly unexplainable. I had thought The Day is Dark was actually headed in a quite different direction as far as the fates of the various Berg employees, so the real revelation was quite a surprise. A pleasant and gory one, that is.

It should be noted that this is a translated series and there are a few issues because of that. The phrasing can be awkward and clunky, more so than with other translated works I’ve encountered. This many entries in I had hoped to see an improvement in that regard but can honestly say that it doesn’t greatly affect my enjoyment of the series. I look forward to each new entry, and each new release by Sigurdardóttir (who has two stand alones out now as well), with great anticipation, anxious to see what weirdness Thóra will encounter next.

12/15 Becky LeJeune

THE DAY IS DARK by Yrsa Sigurdardóttir. Minotaur Books; F First Edition edition (February 26, 2013).  ISBN 978-1250029409. 384p.

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STORM FRONT by Robert Conroy

December 11, 2015

storm front conroyAn unexpected snowstorm becomes a monster and shuts down the town of Sheridan, Michigan.  No one forecasted what was going to happen. Not the National Weather Service, nor the majority of Meteorologists forecasting for major networks. But surprise, surprise, the unexpected storm dumps an enormous amount of snow in the area around Sheridan completely shutting down the town and causing havoc for the residents and the authorities charged with protecting them.

Conroy’s description of nature’s devastation and the damage caused by it is excellent. He also works with a scenario in which two killers have come into the town and can’t get out. A builder has put up many homes and other structures which do not conform to government code and not able to stand up to the pressures of the storm.

Meteorologist Wally Wellman working for a TV station and Police Officer Mike Stuart become the author’s go to characters in order to follow the events ensuing from the horrific snow fall. Both coincidentally have become involved with women that they are romantically attracted to; Officer Stuart with a school teacher new to Sheridan, and Wellman with the governor of the state with whom he had a short relationship years before.

The story provides an interesting read and one dealing with the real possibility of nature running wild, something which happens at frequent intervals in areas around the United States.

12/15 Paul Lane

STORM FRONT by Robert Conroy. Baen (December 1, 2015).  ISBN 978-1476780870. 240p.

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