LITTLE BLACK LIES by Sharon Bolton

May 18, 2015
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The Falkland Islands makes for an unusual setting in this twisty tale of missing children.

Catrin Quinn hasn’t been the same since her two children died while in the care of her best friend Rachel. It was an accidental death, but it cost Catrin their friendship and her husband Ben; he was able to move on, she was not. Her former lover Callen feels helpless; still in love with Catrin but not sure how to reach the damaged woman, while he suffers from post traumatic stress syndrome, a holdover from the Falklands War.

When a young boy goes missing, the local police chief is hesitant to blame any local residents, and wants to keep it quiet to protect the tourism trade. But it is the third such child to go missing in a year or so, and Callen figures it has to be a local.

Callen and Catrin find a body on a shipwreck, but even that isn’t enough to convince the authorities. Then a fourth child goes missing; Rachel’s youngest boy, and Catrin becomes the chief suspect.

A pod of beached whales that need to be euthanized adds another layer of horror to the story, and animal activists will not be happy with it.

Each of the main characters has a voice here; the story unfolds in sections, each by a different character leading to various points of view and adding to this compelling novel of suspense.

Note: Sharon Bolton also writes as S.J. Bolton

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

5/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

LITTLE BLACK LIES by Sharon Bolton.  Minotaur Books (May 19, 2015).  ISBN 978-1250028594. 368p.


ORIENT by Christopher Bollen

May 13, 2015
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Orient, New York has long prided itself on its closed community of year-round citizens. Anyone else is viewed as an outsider no matter what their circumstances may be. The only exception is architect Paul Benchley, who was born and raised on the island, and so forgiven for leaving them behind to live most of the year in the big city.

But now Paul is back and he’s bringing a guest with him. A guest his neighbors aren’t anxious to welcome to Orient. The guest is Mills Chevern, an orphan and runaway Paul takes pity on and vows to help by removing him from the temptations and dangers of New York City. But Paul and Mills’s arrival coincide with the death of one of the village’s own. More crime and dead bodies follow and suspicion immediately turns to newcomer Mills, leaving the teen no choice but to prove his own innocence.

Bollen is incredibly long winded, something I thought was going to be a detriment to the book early on. Before long, however, I’d settled into the narrative and really started to enjoy myself.

The insular community of Orient is fabulously drawn with resident busybodies, gossip mongers, and the few “outsiders” like Paul, Mills, and Beth, an artist recently returned to Orient herself. As the plot unfolds, the politics of the town begin to have great influence on the various happenings and goings on, including multiple murders. Bollen does a fair job of keeping the identity of the true killer and their motive under wraps until the very end, though.

Orient is a doorstopper of a read, to be sure, but once the first hundred pages or so are behind and all of the characters are introduced it moves along at a great pace.

5/15 Becky LeJeune

ORIENT by Christopher Bollen.  Harper (May 5, 2015).  ISBN 978-0062329950.  624p.


THE TELLER by Jonathan Stone

May 12, 2015
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Elaine Kelly is a beautiful young bank teller who is supporting her dying mother, both financially and emotionally. She is a favorite of many of the banks’ customers, especially Antonio Desirio, an old gentleman who makes a weekly deposit into a savings account of over a million dollars.

When Antonio is killed by a truck right outside the bank, Elaine acts on a rash impulse and transfers most of the man’s money into her account. She’s never done anything like that before, but she’s sure he is all alone in the world and she’s barely scraping by.

The police are investigating the accident, and Elaine is cooperating with the detective and doing some snooping on her own. Then a man comes in the bank, claiming he is Antonio Desirio, and tries to withdraw the money – but it’s already gone. The police freeze the account, but there are bad men after the money and they are targeting Elaine.

This fast paced shell game of misdirection, where it is hard to tell the good guys from the bad, is reminiscent of Good People by Marcus Sakey and Found Money by James Grippando.  The author’s previous novel, Moving Day, was also terrific.

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

5/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

Kindle: THE TELLER by Jonathan Stone.  Thomas & Mercer (May 12, 2015).  ASIN: B00OV403US

Paperback: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (August 29, 2012). ISBN 978-1250035028. 384p.


CHECKED OUT by Elaine Viets

May 5, 2015
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Dead-End Job Mystery (Book 13)

The fun continues, this time at the library, in Viet’s latest entry into one of my favorite mystery series. Being a librarian, this book holds a special place in my heart.

People return the most outrageous things along with their library books and Viets mentions several of my favorites. But the mystery here is based on a John Singer Sargent painting worth close to a million dollars that is inadvertently left in a book that is donated to the library.

When Elizabeth’s father died, the family donated his collection of books to the library. When she realizes the painting was in one of the books, she hires private eye Helen Hawthorne to find it.

Helen gets a coveted volunteer position at the small city library and gets to work. But other people are aware of the missing painting and don’t necessarily want it returned to its rightful owner, and are willing to kill to keep it.

Meanwhile Helen’s husband Phil, also a private investigator, is looking for a missing ruby and diamond necklace that was stolen during a private party, along with a golf cart. Yes, lots of folks in south Florida own their own golf carts. Some are used for golf, of course, but there are also communities where they are street legal.

I love the south Florida culture that Viets always infuses her mysteries with, and this time out she also inserts lots of interesting library trivia. Any library regular will love all the inside gossip.

Another great cozy mystery with lots of laughs, warm, wonderful characters and an intriguing premise. Don’t miss it.

5/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

CHECKED OUT by Elaine Viets.  NAL (May 5, 2015).  ISBN 978-0451466327. 288p.


GIRL UNDERWATER by Claire Kells

May 2, 2015
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Avery expected a smooth flight from California to Boston, but then she awakens to find her fellow passengers screaming and the plane losing altitude. Six of them would make it off the plane when it crashed somewhere in the Rockies and for five harrowing days they would try their best to survive through winter storms and near starvation.

When Avery awakens again, it is December 10th and she is recuperating in a Colorado hospital. Everyone says she’s one of the lucky ones. Avery does everything she can to get on with her life and goes out of her way to avoid discussing what happened during those awful days in the mountains, but for this once driven college swimmer nothing can ever be the same.

Girl Underwater is a majorly fabulous debut. Kells pretty immediately lets the reader know that Avery survives the crash, switching the narrative back and forth between the crash and the aftermath. What we don’t know is exactly what happened while she and the other survivors were stranded awaiting rescue.

Avery is a great character and one conveniently skilled at survival, but Kells does a quite convincing job of making this aspect of Avery’s life believable. What Avery is less prepared for is making it through what comes later. She finds herself plagued by fears, particularly when it comes to returning to school and the swim team. She’s also plagued by guilt. Hers is a story not only of survival but of love and friendship and of the courage it takes to make it against the odds as well as the courage it takes to rely on others.

5/15 Becky Lejeune

GIRL UNDERWATER by Claire Kells. Dutton (March 31, 2015). ISBN 978-0525954934. 304p.


THE DOLL MAKER by Richard Montanari

April 29, 2015
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Byrne and Balzano #8

Mr. Marseille and Annabelle are young, good-looking, beautifully dressed, and exceedingly polite murderers. We meet them when they kill a teenage girl, pose her in macabre fashion on a freshly painted bench, and leave her with an invitation to a tea dance.

Philadelphia homicide detectives Kevin Byrne and Jessica Balzano are assigned the case. On the day of the tea dance, two more bodies are found, this time with another invitation to a tea dance, along with a doll that is an exact replica of the first victim; things get progressively darker from there.

More bodies and more dolls keep Byrne and Balzano following a path that takes them tantalizingly close, yet the twists and turns keep coming as they are thwarted by this young couple time and again.

The relationships here are interesting; Marseille and Annabelle are an enigma, which is nicely juxtaposed by the relationship between the detectives, who have worked together so long that they can practically read each other’s thoughts.

Longtime fans of the series will not be disappointed; The Doll Maker is just plain good, creepy fun.

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

4/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE DOLL MAKER by Richard Montanari.  Mulholland Books (April 28, 2015).  ISBN 978-0316244732. 496p.


HOLLYWOOD LOST by Ace Collins

April 28, 2015
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Hollywood, tinsel town, in the late 1930s is the setting for the novel by the versatile Ace Collins. It’s a time before computer enhanced special effects where giant studios created the images seen on the screen through human ingenuity. And big name stars made movies with an eye to creating diversions for people caught up in the horror of the great depression.

Shelby Beckett and her family have to leave their farm in Oklahoma due to drought and financial ruin. A situation made familiar by John Steinbeck in several of his books. Her father has been promised help in securing a job with a studio in Hollywood, and Shelby also manages to obtain a position in the wardrobe department as a seamstress.

Charmed by the stars, Flynn Sparks and his rival Dalton Andrews, two of the biggest luminaries working for the studio Shelby becomes exposed to the party atmosphere they exist in. She becomes familiar with stars like Clark Gable and Cary Grant. She is also attractive enough to possibly become an actress.

Collins utilizing the atmosphere of this era sets up a murder mystery involving a serial killer that selects starlets as his prey. Bill Barrester is the police detective assigned to catch the killer and at one crucial point asks Shelby to help him.

As in all Ace Collins’ novels the action is fast, the characters interesting and well fleshed out. The book is more a fast read than an engrossing one, but Collins very rarely disappoints and Hollywood Lost is no exception.

4/15 Paul Lane

HOLLYWOOD LOST by Ace Collins. Abingdon Press (April 21, 2015). ISBN978-1426771880. 320p.


NO ONE GETS OUT ALIVE by Adam Nevill

April 27, 2015
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Based on the ad, the room at 82 Edgehill Road sounded just too good to be true. And it was.

The landlord is skeevy and the shared bathroom and kitchen are so dirty that it’s all Stephanie can do to get in and out as quickly as possible. But the room seems nice, until the lights go out and the noises start. It begins with a rustling under the bed – mice, Stephanie thinks – then voices in the fireplace, which could always be the sounds of another tenant’s TV. But when shuffling footsteps cross her room and something Stephanie can’t see sits on her bed, she’s all out of explanations.

Stephanie vows to get out, even going so far as to consider abandoning her deposit, but with no work and no money there’s nowhere for her to go. And soon Stephanie realizes that the noises aren’t even the worst of it.

Adam Nevill’s latest is a fresh and frightening haunted house tale. Nevill paints his heroine into a corner, taking away all of her options, and then turns her story upside down. It’s dark – as dark as dark can get, actually. And it’s creepy as all get out. But if you happen to like your horror dark and creepy, then No One Gets Out Alive is absolutely perfect.

No One Gets Out Alive is the kind of horror read I crave: one that keeps me up at night, freaks me the heck out, and keeps me on my toes. Not only that, but the twist and big reveal were totally unexpected even for a seasoned haunted house fan such as myself. Top marks all around for Nevill’s latest.

4/15 Becky Lejeune

NO ONE GETS OUT ALIVE by Adam Nevill. St. Martin’s Press (April 28, 2015). ISBN 978-1250041289. 640p.


THE BONE TREE by Greg Iles

April 25, 2015
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This is the second book in a planned trilogy set in a part of the South still rooted in deep racial division. It begins about the time of the Katrina hurricane and flooding of New Orleans. The first of the three novels, “Natchez Burning,” set the stage for the conflicts carried on in this book, with Penn Cage, the mayor of Natchez.

Penn, an attorney, is forced to defend his father Tom Cage on a murder charge in the slaying of Tom’s one time mistress and nurse in his father’s medical office. The nurse had moved out the area years ago after being raped by members of the Double Eagles, a terror group allied with the Ku Klux Klan. She lived in Chicago for many years and only came back when she was diagnosed with cancer so she could die where she grew up. The Double Eagle members and corrupt police accuse Tom of a mercy killing in order to ease her suffering.

Iles, although writing fiction, describes in detail the corruption existing in the area of the south under discussion. He indicates that Katrina forced many African Americans out of New Orleans when their homes were destroyed and powerful white groups plotted to rebuild the city in a different way. The plan only included more expensive homes and apartments in order to prevent the poorer Negros from returning. In addition white gangsters took the opportunity to assassinate their black rivals and take over their territory.

Touched on in the first book and brought out with more detail in this novel is the idea that the killings of John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther king originated with the New Orleans mafia. Iles brings to bear a good deal of research into the John F. Kennedy murder. His knowledge of the ballistics, placement of individuals involved and planning describe a different scenario other than Lee Harvey Oswald as the sole assassin and sets up more of a conspiracy than originally thought.
Penn’s fiancee, Caitlin Masters, editor of a newspaper in Natchez owned by a group controlled by her father has her own part to play in bringing out facts and situations involved in the action. She meets and befriends the wife of an FBI agent investigating the John F. Kennedy killing’s New Orleans roots. Her friend is a world class news photographer and helps Caitlin with the development of the investigation.

The ending obviously sets up the third book coming in the trilogy. Iles writing is nothing short of mesmerizing and the over 800 pages flies by keeping the reader glued to the pages.

4/15 Paul Lane

THE BONE TREE by Greg Iles. William Morrow (April 21, 2015). ISBN 978-0062311115. 816p.


SCENT OF MURDER by James O. Born

April 23, 2015
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Jim Born has been with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for so long he’s about ready to retire. So when he writes a police procedural, you can be sure it will be accurate. I’ve enjoyed all of his books and this new one is really terrific, especially if you like dogs.

Tim Hallett was a detective who got a little overzealous in his determination to find a missing child. He saved the child, but got booted from the detective squad. In a stroke of luck, he was paired up with a Belgian Malinois named Rocky as part of a new K-9 unit. Born really did his homework here, and I loved all the inside info on how these magnificent dogs are trained and treated.

When a teenager goes missing, the dogs (and their human partners) are called into action. They get led on a chase that is both devious and disturbing, especially for Hallett.

This is a fast paced story set in the wilds of south Florida, and I loved the occasional perspective from the dog. Another excellent read from this talented author.

4/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

SCENT OF MURDER by James O. Born.  Forge Books (April 7, 2015).  ISBN 978-0765378477. 304p.