THE LAKE HOUSE by Kate Morton

October 20, 2015
Click to purchase

Click to purchase

Sadie Sparrow was warned about becoming too involved in the Bailey case, but a letter that arrived just as it was all getting started put her in a mindset that definitely wasn’t ideal. At least that’s what she’s blaming for what happened. Now she’s on forced leave, visiting her grandfather in Cornwall, and waiting for the other shoe to drop.

But Sadie has found a new case to keep her mind occupied. After stumbling upon a grand and long-abandoned house in the area, Sadie learns that it was the scene of a decades-old missing persons case that remains unsolved even today. In 1933, the youngest Edevane – coincidentally the brother of the now famous mystery author A. C. Edevane – disappeared without a trace. For years folks speculated as to who could have been the culprit and what happened to the boy, but no solid evidence was ever found. Now, seventy years later, Sadie aims to be the one to solve it.

This latest from Morton is split between the Edevanes’ stories and Sadie’s. We’re shuttled from the 1930s to present day, and back even further than the disappearance, to when Eleanor – the rightful heir of Loeanneth (the Lake House in question) – met and married Anthony Edevane.

A slew of characters offer up their own perspectives of the case, each contributing pieces the others are unaware of until the entire picture begins to emerge. Morton also offers up insight into the emotions and motives each of these characters had in maintaining their silence or, as is the case with Sadie, in doggedly pursuing the truth.

For the most part, The Lake House is a satisfying read filled with Morton’s usual intricate plotting and fabulous atmosphere. Unfortunately, though, the end felt a bit too neat and tidy for my taste (though there are lots of comments about coincidence throughout the book to support this nice and neat ending). All in all, it’s one that will likely satisfy Morton’s fans but maybe isn’t the strongest title to start off with if you’re new to her work.

10/15 Becky LeJeune

THE LAKE HOUSE by Kate Morton. Atria Books (October 20, 2015).  ISBN 978-1451649321. 512p.


STRONG LIGHT OF DAY by Jon Land

October 15, 2015
Click to purchase

Click to purchase

Caitlin Strong is a kick ass Texas Ranger and one of the toughest female protagonists around. In this seventh outing, she has a lot on her plate.

She’s called to investigate 30 missing children, one of whom is her boyfriend Cort Wesley Masters’s son, who all seem to have vanished while on a camping trip. Then she’s brought in to help negotiate with a crazed rancher who is holding his family hostage, claiming that aliens have taken his cattle and he will kill his family before he lets the aliens take them.

There are various subplots including a billionaire businessman who has a genetically engineered pesticide that is causing cancer and controversy, Navy Seals in Afghanistan back in 2003, and some really nasty Russians that add yet more layers to this complex tale.

How everything ends up tied together is at the crux of the story, and it moves at lightning speed. Also interspersed is some background about Strong’s family – she is fifth generation Texas Ranger.

Fans of the series and readers who like their women fearless and smart will love this story.

Copyright ©2015 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

10/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

STRONG LIGHT OF DAY by Jon Land. Forge Books; First Edition edition (October 13, 2015).  ISBN 978-0765335128. 352p.

Kindle


CLEAR BY FIRE by Joshua Hood

October 14, 2015
Click to purchase

Click to purchase

A Search and Destroy Thriller

Clearly a writer with Joshua Hood’s credentials should deliver a novel about men (and women) in war that brings the reader into the heat of battle with all the horror, killing and personal trauma that such experience entails. And Clear By Fire certainly does.

Hood is a five year combat veteran of the 82nd Airborne division and saw action in both Iraq and Afghanistan. He is currently a member of a full time SWAT team in Memphis, Tennessee. Clear By Fire is his first novel and reflects a background of exposure to being placed in harm’s way by his profession.

Hood brings in two protagonists with the obvious intention of keeping them together in future novels. The first is Mason Kane, who was a member of the army’s Anvil Team, a special ops group working in the shadows. He enters the book as a disgraced warrior as he had refused to kill an Afghan family when ordered to do so by his commanding officer. That order originated due to the officer having some twisted idea about prolonging the war in the Middle East.

The other protagonist is Renee Hart, a female special forces operative with the army who has chosen the military as a career and has an excellent reputation with her commanding officers. Kane and Hart find themselves in a fight against a conspiracy that leads all the way to the U.S. president’s inner circle. They must battle against rogue U.S. soldiers that are among the best in the world in order to stop them from completing their dangerous plan.

As expected action in the book is described, Hood has no problem in bringing the reader into it with apt descriptions of battle, the equipment used in fighting the battle and outcomes involving killing and being killed or wounded. It’s real – an author should concentrate on writing about what he is familiar with and Joshua Hood was there. The weakness I found was a tendency to move too rapidly from one scene to another. And most important since Kane and Renee will be placed together in future novels, there is no real character development.There is some insinuation that a love affair will develop between the two but who are they aside from being professional soldiers? These are factors that should be corrected as new books involving the duo are written.

The book is an adrenaline rush from the get go and certainly introduces situations that are real and well described. Looking forward to the next Joshua Hood novel.

10/15 Paul Lane

CLEAR BY FIRE by Joshua Hood. Touchstone (August 18, 2015). ISBN: 978-1501105715. 352p.

Kindle


WINK OF AN EYE by Lynn Chandler Willis

October 11, 2015
Click to purchase

Click to purchase

Gypsy Moran’s return to Wink, Texas was meant to be an attempt to lay low after the fallout from a recent case. Instead, he finds himself roped into a local mystery that could have devastating results.

Twelve-year-old Tatum McCallen is certain his father did not commit suicide. He’s insistent about that fact. The man in question, a cop – as his father was before him, had been investigating a series of missing persons cases the department had already shrugged off, in his personal time, when he was found hanging from a tree in his own backyard.

At first Gypsy isn’t interested in getting involved, but as he learns more about the McCallen family and the case Tatum’s father was digging into, even he begins to realize something is very wrong in Wink. And as his own investigation progresses, Gypsy finds he may not like where the clues are leading.

This 2013 winner of St. Martin’s/PWA Best 1st PI Novel Competition introduces a great new private investigator to the mystery scene. Michael “Gypsy” Moran grew up in Wink and longed to leave from an early age. In truth, it was because he didn’t qualify for a football scholarship and couldn’t see himself working a ranch. And so he left for Vegas where he became a PI. But things, as we soon learn, have gone a bit sour in Sin City forcing him to return to his hometown.

In terms of plotting and setting I think Chandler-Willis has done a fantastic job. I was hooked from page one with Tatum’s plea and found Gypsy to be a compelling and utterly likable character (perfect as a PI series lead, in other words). The clues and story unfold at a great pace and Wink, an actual town in West Texas whose claim to fame is that Roy Orbison once lived there, comes to life completely.

I should be clear, though, in that the case Gypsy is investigating is the death of Tatum McCallen’s father. There are a few cases that are intertwined with this one, including the missing girls, but that case isn’t Gypsy’s focus right now. By pointing that out, I mean to say that there are a few questions left unanswered at the end of the book, questions that likely make for further installments in what I hope will be a series. (The author is reportedly working on her second Wink project as we speak.)

Wink of an Eye has been nominated for a 2015 Shamus award in the Best First PI Novel category.

10/15 Becky LeJeune

WINK OF AN EYE by Lynn Chandler Willis. Minotaur Books (November 18, 2014).  ISBN 978-1250053190. 304p.


THE EINSTEIN PROPHECY by Robert Maselo

October 9, 2015
Click to purchase

Click to purchase

What if the outcome of WWII were determined by something of a decidedly supernatural and evil nature? This is the question Maselo poses in his latest, The Einstein Prophecy.

After being injured while on a mission for the Cultural Recovery Commission, Lucas Athan finds himself teaching at Princeton. Though both the student body and staff have shrunk as a result of the war, war hero Athan is exactly the kind of man the university will pull strings to have on their roster. But his job with the CRC hasn’t ended. The very ossuary he was tasked with recovering when he was injured – a sarcophagus of historic significance that Hitler tagged for his own collection – has been recovered and the government wants Lucas to continue his work. The primary goal is to find out exactly what Hitler’s interest in the piece may be.

Simone Rashid and her father know all too well what the ossuary represents and what it is capable of. They were, after all, the ones who discovered it in the first place. But even Simone doesn’t understand the full potential of the ossuary or what Hitler’s goal may be. What she does know is that if she isn’t able to intercept the piece or at least warn the people involved, no good will come of opening the ancient coffin.

The Einstein Prophecy is what would happen if The Monuments Men and Indiana Jones had a baby and invited The Manhattan Project to the shower. (The CRC is a fictional creation based on the Monuments Men.)

The story is set in 1944 and Einstein, Gödel, Oppenheimer, and a few others all make appearances. Of course, too, there’s the very real history behind Hitler’s obsession with the paranormal and the occult, the also very real Manhattan Project (which does play a big role in the story), and the biblical history of the ossuary as well. Maselo uses the actual history of the era and the key players to anchor a tale that is based in mythology/theology to create an action packed mashup that’s a quite fun read.

If you’re a fan of James Rollins and the like, you’ll love The Einstein Prophecy.

10/15 Becky LeJeune

THE EINSTEIN PROPHECY by Robert Maselo. 47North (August 1, 2015).  ISBN 978-1477829400. 326p.


THE SEARCHER by Simon Toyne

October 7, 2015
Click to purchase

Click to purchase

A stranger arrives in a small Arizona town called Redemption, but in a big departure from what sounds like Lee Child’s Jack Reacher series, this stranger is an albino and thinks his name may be Solomon Creed. He thinks he is there to save Sheriff Coronado, but he’s really not sure about any of this.

There was a plane crash just outside of town, and Creed may be the only survivor. The crash starts a rapidly spreading fire that’s a real threat to the small community.

In another storyline, Mulcahy is a corrupt cop who is in town at the behest of a Mexican drug lord. The drug lord is holding Mulcahy’s father hostage.

Interspersed throughout are memoir chapters from the founder of Redemption,“King” Cassidy. There is a lot of action, several brutal murders and an occasional ghost.

All these story lines eventually intersect but this is the first book of planned trilogy, so there is more to come. With its touches of the supernatural, F. Paul Wilson’s Repairman Jack readers will feel right at home here.

Copyright ©2015 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

10/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE SEARCHER by Simon Toyne. William Morrow (October 6, 2015).  ISBN 978-0062329721. 480p.

Kindle


A COLD WAR by Alan Russell

October 6, 2015
Click to purchase

Click to purchase

Elese Martin disappears in Alaska while on her honeymoon and her husband Greg is the prime suspect, especially when the cops find out his first wife had him arrested, and he’s taken out a large insurance policy on Elese. But the case goes nowhere and Elese is never found.

Three years later another woman, Nina Granville, goes missing. Nina’s fiancé is the political wunderkind of the Donnelly family, a Kennedy-like clan. A multi-million dollar reward spurs on a massive search, but also to no avail.

An Alaskan survivalist, Baer, is convinced that there is an upcoming nuclear winter, which he is determined to survive. He kidnaps Elese, and after her death, Nina, who is repeatedly beaten, raped and kept in a small cage. Nina keeps her sanity only by finding Elese’s secret journal hidden away in the cage.

This “Cold War” has nothing to do with Russia and everything to do with an Alaskan autumn, and is a fascinating look at survivalists and the wilderness of our fiftieth state, as well as being a truly gripping page turner.

Copyright ©2015 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

10/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

A COLD WAR by Alan Russell.  Thomas & Mercer (October 6, 2015).  ISBN 978-1503945807. 368p.

Kindle


THE KILLING KIND by Chris Holm

October 5, 2015
Click to purchase

Click to purchase

Tidy picture of a hit man with a great twist. This is a man that only hits other hit men. Michael Hendricks was once a covert operator for a secret organization of the U.S. military.

Taking advantage of an assignment in Afghanistan that went bad and caused him to be thought killed in action, Hendricks began a new life. He left behind his old one, including the girl he was engaged to.

For 10 times the price offered for the murder of an individual he will kill the man sent to take out someone. A great way to make a lot of money but also to set himself up as a target for a lot of skilled murderers.

The novel follows him as he pursues his vocation until he comes across his ex-fiancée and her family. This changes the entire complex of the book and almost gets Michael killed.

A well done portrait of a man with no qualms about taking a life as a way of life.

10/15 Paul Lane

THE KILLING KIND by Chris Holm. Mulholland Books (September 15, 2015). ISBN: 978-0316259538. 320p.

Kindle


JILLIAN CADE by Jen Klein

October 4, 2015
Click to purchase

Click to purchase

(Fake) Paranormal Investigator

Jillian doesn’t believe all the paranormal mumbo jumbo her father peddles but she does know that an all but orphaned teen has to earn money somehow. Umbra Investigations is Jillian’s somehow – a PI agency focused on cases of an unusual sort. In other words, taking advantage of the same folks her father does.

But then Jillian gets a case that definitely sounds more serious: a missing person, and she’s been hired to find him. Of course the person hiring her believes the missing guy has been cursed and the new boy in school who has suddenly latched himself onto Jillian also believes this to be the case. (He blackmailed his way into partner status.) Nevertheless, Jillian needs the paycheck more desperately than ever and is determined to solve the case even when the clues start to point in some pretty unbelievable directions.

A writer on Grey’s Anatomy with a slew of other show credits to her name, Jen Klein definitely has the chops for a clever and catchy novel and she absolutely delivers in her debut! Jillian Cade: (Fake) Paranormal Investigator is a fun blend of Veronica Mars sass and Buffy the Vampire Slayer supernatural and is perfect for fans of both.

But Jillian Cade is no Veronica or Buffy – she’s all Jillian. She puts up a bad-ass front all the while dealing with some heavy stuff, most prominently the recent weird death of her mother and her father’s abandonment. And things only get harder for the teen. Confronted by the fact that not one but two people are threatening to out her as a fraud, she knows she has to solve this case.

I expected the whole story to be “(Fake) Paranormal” and was quite surprised to find that wasn’t at all the case. There are some pretty big revelations both for our skeptical heroine and for the reader as well. Considering all of that, I assume that Jillian Cade is the first in a series and will most definitely be looking forward to more.

10/15 Becky LeJeune

JILLIAN CADE by Jen Klein. Soho Teen (September 1, 2015).  ISBN 978-1616954345. 288p.


DIE AGAIN TOMORROW by Kira Peikoff

October 2, 2015
Click to purchase

Click to purchase

Isabel Leon is beautiful triathlete who lands the dream job – star of a reality series called Wild Woman. She’s survived the Brazilian Amazon jungle, the shark-infested waters of Australia and the Saharan desert, only to face the biggest crisis of her life – her mom’s quickly advancing cancer.

There is an experimental drug available that could pretty much cure her, but the price is high, more than a quarter of a million dollars. So Isabel does the unthinkable and makes a deal with the devil, and as usually happens with such deals, it backfires on her and she is murdered. Except a small group called The Network has hold of her body, and they have the drugs to bring her back to life.

Big pharma and the life insurance industry take it on the chin in this twisty thriller that bounces all over the place, sometimes making it hard to keep track of who is who and what is happening. But the story and the characters are so well drawn it doesn’t matter, and the pages fly by.

Readers who like strong female protagonists like the Caitlin Strong books by Jon Land or the Rizzoli & Iles books by Tess Gerritsen should be happy to meet Isabel.

Copyright ©2015 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

10/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

DIE AGAIN TOMORROW by Kira Peikoff. Pinnacle (September 29, 2015).  ISBN 978-0786034918. 320p.

Kindle