ONLY EVER YOU by Rebecca Drake

March 23, 2016
ONLY EVER YOU

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Jill and David are living the suburban dream; he’s a lawyer about to make partner and she’s a photographer who can afford to do charity work on a regular basis.

Their strong willed three-year-old daughter, Sophia, disappears in the park one afternoon, and a frantic search turns her up a short while later. Jill notices what appears to be a needle mark on her arm, but the doctor thinks it is a bug bite and the child has no drugs in her system.

A few weeks later, Sophia disappears again, this time during the night.

The parents are always the first suspects and as the cops dig into their lives, things take a real turn for the worse. Sophia is eventually assumed dead, but Jill refuses to believe it.

The novel is divided into “before” and “after” the kidnapping, and interspersed with journal entries from the kidnapper. Drake created a fast paced story with enormous tension until the muddled ending. This page turner is a nice addition to the suburban thriller genre, made popular by Harlan Coben.

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

03/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

ONLY EVER YOU by Rebecca Drake. Thomas Dunne Books (March 22, 2016).  ISBN 978-1250068910. 304p.

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FOOL ME ONCE by Harlan Coben

March 22, 2016

fool me onceRetired U.S. Army Capt. Maya Stern Burkett has had a hellacious time of it since her return from Kuwait. While she was given an honorable discharge, her days as an army helicopter pilot were over after a snafu involving her killing civilians, including children. Whistle blower Corey Rudzinski released video of the assault but not the audio, and Maya is waiting for the other shoe to drop – and it’s not going to be pretty.

Maya is suffering from PTSD, which manifests itself into audio hallucinations – basically, she keeps replaying that night over and over, especially when she tries to sleep. She can’t stop the screaming in her head, and it really upsets her two year old daughter.

And that was just the beginning of the bad news. While Maya was out of the country, her sister Claire was murdered. A few months later, after she gets home, her husband Joe is killed in a Central Park mugging which Maya barely escapes.

Maya’s best friend gives her a nanny cam and a few days later she is watching the video and sees her daughter climbing onto Joe’s lap. Her dead husband Joe. She confronts the nanny, who denies seeing anything on the video, gives Maya a face full of pepper spray, steals the memory card with the video and disappears.

Meanwhile, Joe’s family is acting a little odd and her sister-in-law tells her that the family is paying off the detective investigating Joe’s murder. Maya decides to investigate on her own, and things really start spiraling out of control – or so it seems.

This standalone is Coben at his best, moving the story along at a breakneck pace, leading the reader on a terrific romp up to the incredible, shocking ending. I loved it.

3/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

FOOL ME ONCE by Harlan Coben. Dutton (March 22, 2016).  ISBN 978-0525955092. 400p.

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FROM PAUL LANE:

One of the most prolific authors of constantly challenging fiction is Harlan Coben. Fool Me Once is another of those books that catch the reader at the onset and never lets him or her go. Maya Stern was a captain, a special ops pilot in the army, and saw action in a combat zone. She met her future husband Joe Burkett while on leave and never returned to the military.

The novel opens at Joe’s funeral. He has been killed while with Maya at Central Park in New York; seemingly during a robbery gone sour. The police investigating the crime and apparently picking up the probable killers have put closure to the case, but Maya is sure that these men are not guilty of the murder. She decides to handle her own investigation, but two weeks after Joe’s funeral she sees him walking about on a tape taken from a nanny cam used to watch her two year old daughter while cared for by her housekeeper.

The shock of seeing Joe still alive and walking around their house galvanizes her into wondering what is the truth of her husband’s murder. And secondly what is the connection if any, with Joe’s death: the murder of Maya’s sister and 17 years ago the accidental drowning of Joe’s brother while on a boat trip in the Caribbean.

Coben again proves himself an expert in providing one scenario after another, leading the reader to one set of conclusions and then yanking these away for another set of facts. The ending is not telegraphed at all but one that is logical and a result of everything established. An extremely mesmerizing read, one that is completely stand alone and will continue to allow readers to constantly look for Harlan Coben’s books.


THE TWO-FAMILY HOUSE by Lynda Cohen Loigman

March 21, 2016
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I am often asked how I decide which books to review. I hear about new books from all kinds of sources, publicists, authors, various review journals, etc. If it sounds like something I would like, or something I think my library patrons would like to know about, I’ll take a look at it. In this case, I heard about this book from the author’s sister-in-law.

I was working in the library when a woman, her mother and young daughter approached the desk. The younger woman asked if I had this book available but when I looked it up, I saw that our copy was checked out and in fact, all the libraries’ copies were checked out and there was a waiting list. Usually the reaction to such news is disappointment, so I was surprised when these women got all excited about it. That’s when I found out the author was related. They told me about the book, but just from the title alone I knew I would want to read it.

I was born in New York, and the first two years of my life were lived in a two-family house. My parents and I lived upstairs, and a nice lady named Mary Jane and her family lived downstairs. Mary Jane’s daughter was my babysitter. I don’t really remember living there, but on an occasional trip to the area my parents would point out the house so I had a good idea of what it looked like – very much like the cover of this book. So I was intrigued.

The story is about a Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York and starts out in the late 1940’s. Abe and Mort are brothers, and when their father passes away they inherit the family business, a box manufacturing company. Abe is a natural born salesman, but Mort loves numbers and wants to become a mathematician. It quickly becomes apparent that Abe cannot run this business alone, so Mort drops out of college to help out. He hates his job and is resentful of his brother for forcing him into this position.

Abe marries Helen, and short time later Mort marries Rose. Abe and Helen soon have four boys, but Mort and Rose have three girls, driving another wedge between the brothers. Mort is jealous that he has no sons to carry on his name and treats his wife appallingly. He is judgmental and controlling, has little use for his daughters, and Rose is docile and sad about it all.

The brothers live in a two-family house, and Rose and Helen become the best of friends, closer even than sisters, helping each other out with the cooking, the kids and everything else. Then they both get pregnant at the same time. A few weeks before their due dates, their husbands are out of town on business when one of the worst blizzards in New York history hits the city. Both women go into labor, ambulances cannot get through nor can the doctor, but luckily there is a midwife a few doors down who delivered a baby and was stuck there because of the storm. The midwife makes her way down the block and delivers the two babies, a boy and a girl. She steps out for supplies, and Helen’s oldest daughter, Judith, comes in and is holding one of the babies. She asks whether it is her cousin or her sibling, and the two women look at each other and a deal is struck.

This story follows the lives of these women, their marriages and families, and how secrets can destroy lives. I laughed, I cried but most of all, I couldn’t put it down. I loved it. If you loved Joshua: A Brooklyn Tale by Andrew Kane, or you are a fan of Naomi Ragen, then this is the book for you.

3/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

THE TWO-FAMILY HOUSE by Lynda Cohen Loigman. St. Martin’s Press (March 8, 2016).  ISBN 978-1250076922. 304p.

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RELIC by Gretchen McNeil

March 17, 2016
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Annie Kramer’s post graduation trip to Slaughterhouse Island was supposed to be a fun start to her final months before college. She and a group of friends rented a houseboat, spent their first night camping on the beach with booze, and planned to hike one of the nearby abandoned mines the following day. Everything went basically according to that plan with just two hiccups: the arrival of a couple of cops intent on making sure the group was aware of just how off limits the mines are and a passerby who attacked Annie before running off into the woods.

The mine itself was something of a nightmare for the group. With passages shooting off from the entrance, they split into four pairs to explore. Each pair ended up separated in the maze of tunnels, eventually finding their way back to home base only to discover their radio had been demolished while they were inside. What’s worse, they arrived home in time to hear that a body was discovered just outside the mine that very day. And that was when the horror really began.

Gretchen McNeil’s latest is a fantastic return to horror for the author. Readers may wonder, though, why it’s an ebook release only. Sadly, the book was orphaned with the shuttering of Egmont last year. But fortunately for us all it was rescued by Epic Reads, hence the ebook release.

I would have loved for the book to have been longer (much longer, maybe). More detail of Slaughterhouse Island (where did THAT name come from?.) and time focused on building the setting and ominous tone would have made this book so much more of an intense read, in my opinion.

That said, it’s still fantastic fun. There’s a bit of history around the mine, some creative area folklore, and plenty of murders to make this a worthy successor to McNeil’s previous horror releases, Possess and Ten. There’s even a sample of McNeil’s upcoming I’m Not Your Manic Pixie Dream Girl to tempt your reading palate as well.

Fans of Gretchen McNeil are sure to be satisfied by this latest and it’ll make a perfect diving in point for new readers too.

3/16 Becky LeJeune

RELIC by Gretchen McNeil. Epic Reads Impulse (March 8, 2016).  ASIN: B00ZP5WPBC 352p.

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THE TOTAL PACKAGE by Stephanie Evanovich

March 15, 2016
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This is the latest contemporary romance from someone who has become one of my favorite authors. If you haven’t read Big Girl Panties (which made my best books of 2013 list) or The Sweet Spot, you can start here. Like most romance series, the latest book barely touches on the previous ones, but if you’ve read them, you will appreciate the update, and if you haven’t, you will want to after reading this one. Make sense?!

Tyson Palmer was a super star quarterback until he fell into drug and alcohol addiction. During that time, his college tutor, Bella, who had a big crush on him, managed to get him to take her virginity, but he barely remembers it.

Fast forward a few years, and Tyson has been given a true gift by the owner of a fictitious Texas football team. The owner gets Tyson dried out and cleaned up and back playing the best football of his life. Sports reporter Dani Carr isn’t too impressed, and in fact, keeps her distance from him. Until she’s hired by the team as a publicist for one of their closed mouth superstars and she is forced to deal with him.

Eventually Tyson figures out who she really is, but it takes a little longer for the romance to reach it’s usual conclusion – but not before the angst, the laughs and hot sex -and Evanovich really excels at all three. This is a terrific romance for fans of Jennifer Crusie or Susan Elizabeth Phillips. I loved it!

3/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

THE TOTAL PACKAGE by Stephanie Evanovich. William Morrow (March 15, 2016).  ISBN 978-0062234858. 256p.

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FAR FROM TRUE by Linwood Barclay

March 9, 2016
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Promise Falls Trilogy, Book 2

Barclay presents the second novel in Promise Falls trilogy, taking place in the town of Promise Falls. No surprise that characters and situations from the first book are present in this novel.

Further developments of action take place and lead the reader into additional insight into the people and plots that began in Broken Promise. The book opens when the horrific happening of a drive in movie screen falling down occurs, killing four people in their cars while watching the movie.

The daughter of one of the victims asks Cal Weaver, a private investigator, to look into the situation.  Cal investigates and discovers a secret room in the father’s house, which has obviously been used for sexual activities. He immediately finds that a number of DVDs have been stolen and may be the prime cause of the “accident” killing the woman’s father. At the same time, detective Barry Duckworth is attempting to solve two murders, one of which is three years old but believed by Duckworth to be connected to the present one.

Barclay is a master at making the protagonists in his books become real and having faults like everyone else. Detective Duckworth is overweight and is starting to experience the symptoms of cardiac problems.  These do not stop him, but do make him appear more normal. Duckworth’s wife is on him to watch his diet and take care of himself as would any spouse in a like situation.

As the lies surrounding the murders start, Weaver discovers facts pointing towards evil once buried, which is present in Promise Falls. Another murder occurs and both Duckworth and Cal pursue their investigations no matter where their findings take them.

The evil in the town’s past seem to point towards involvement with the present day. Far From True ends on a complete cliffhanger, with some things solved, but others still pending and awaiting solution.

The question arises, how many books are planned by Barclay involving Promise Falls, and can they be written as episodes rather than opening and closing.  There is no doubt that Linwood Barclay can almost effortlessly keep his readers glued to his books. Will he continue to do so if the series extends far out into the future?  I am a fan of his, and will continue to look for anything he comes out with as long as he keeps coming out with novels.

3/16 Paul Lane

FAR FROM TRUE by Linwood Barclay. NAL (March 8, 2016).  ISBN 978-0451472700.  480p.

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THE TRAVELERS by Chris Pavone

March 8, 2016
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Chris Pavone’s first novel, The Expats, set the stage for his second and now his third book. The stories involve Americans whose working lives in some way involve residing or traveling overseas.

Will Rhodes is recently married and somewhat insolvent, gets a job as a travel writer for the prestigious magazine, “The Traveler.” His work is to travel all over the world and write attractive articles about the food in different areas he visits in order to attract a well to do clientele that subscribe to the magazine –  and are also probable clients for a series of travel agencies that have been set up by the publication.

One night he meets a very attractive woman in Argentina wine country and in spite of his being married, starts an affair.  It seems that she wants to entrap him via a blackmail scheme into accepting an offer he can’t refuse.

At her orders, he travels all over Europe from France to Ireland onto a mega yacht and to an isolated cabin on the rugged cliffs of Iceland. Will is drawn further and further into a web of intrigue with connections to a gigantic global conspiracy.

The people closest to him, including his new wife, all seem to be involved in the conspiracy and may prove to be the greatest threats to him. The ending is not telegraphed but becomes the only weak area in a novel that is compelling. It would almost appear as if Pavone just came to a point that he thought would be a logical ending and he proceeded to do just that  – end it.

3/16 Paul Lane

THE TRAVELERS by Chris Pavone. Crown (March 8, 2016).  ISBN 978-0385348485.  448p.


DEADLY JEWELS by Jeannette de Beauvoir

March 7, 2016
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A McGill University doctoral candidate, Patricia Mason, has made an amazing discovery; she has found some of England’s crown jewels in a locked room under the city of Montreal, where they were hidden from the Nazis during World War II.

The mayor believes this find could be great publicity for the city, and calls in publicity director Martine LeDuc to put a good spin on it. It shouldn’t be difficult, until a skeleton is found alongside the jewels, a stone goes missing, and Mason is murdered.

LeDuc once again calls on her friend, Detective-Lieutenant Julian Fletcher, whose family’s wealth and prestige allow him great latitude with the police department, in this terrific second book (The Asylum, 2015) of the series.

Turns out a Neo-Nazi group is interested in the jewels, as they believe, as did Hitler, that the stones possess mystical powers. The story moves back and forth from very interesting World War II flashbacks to the present day, a riveting mystery. LeDuc’s personal life adds to her stress level, as her husband wants his children to move in with them on a permanent basis. Steve Berry fans should enjoy this.

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

3/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

DEADLY JEWELS by Jeannette de Beauvoir. Minotaur Books (March 8, 2016).  ISBN 978-1250045409. 352p.

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THE CAIRO CODE by Glenn Meade

March 6, 2016
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Novels about love existing during the course of war and the strains put upon the lovers by the conflict raging about them are plentiful. The Cairo Code is an excellent book revolving around a segment of World War II and the parts three people play in the drama.

U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill met in Cairo, Egypt during November 1943 in order to discuss plans going forward for operation Overlord, the invasion of Europe at a near future date. Hitler had the impression that if this invasion were allowed to take place, it would be the capstone on the defeat of Germany, which he felt was already started. He ordered the assassination of both Roosevelt and Churchill, with the emphasis on murdering the US president as primary.

Major Johann Halder, a brilliant agent of the Abwere, was assigned to head the attempt along with Rachael Stern, an Egyptologist, to accompany him to supply credibility that they were in Cairo to reexamine tombs. Their families had been excavating those tombs prior to the war. Stern, of Jewish descent, was being held at a concentration camp and released to Major Halder with the promise that she would be freed after the successful venture, as well as her parents, who were also being held prisoner by the Nazis.

The Americans, getting wind of the plot, assigned Lt. Colonel Harry Weaver to go after Halder and his party. Weaver was one the best officers the U.S. had and was thought to be the soldier that could foil the plot. The caveat in this was that Harry, Halder and Rachel had  been together at excavations in Egypt with their families prior to the war. They had been close friends but both Harry and Johann fell in love with Rachel, and never knew whether or not she was in love with either of them.

The story revolves around the chase between Harry and his two friends, and if any of them would be able to actually kill their former friends or object of love.  Meade handles the sequences of the chase and reactions of both sides with knowledge that they were facing former great friends and what they would do if they actually met. There was an attempt by the Nazis to kill Roosevelt at the Cairo conference in real life which obviously did not succeed. But the major thrust of Meade’s story involves love tested by being on opposite sides during a world war.

Extremely well done novel with the reader easily being caught up in the emotions and activities of both sides. The ending is not at all telegraphed but does leave the reader with the impression that he or she has just finished one of the most satisfying stories written in a long time.

3/16 Paul Lane

THE CAIRO CODE by Glenn Meade . Pinnacle (February 23, 2016).  ISBN 978-0786037308.  416p.


SAVING SOPHIE by Ronald H. Balson

March 5, 2016
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This is the follow up to Once We Were Brothers, a hugely popular by word-of-mouth book that was originally self published, then picked up by St. Martins. Ron Balson is a practicing attorney in Chicago so writing novels is his second career, and he’s quite good at it.

The two protagonists from Once We Were Brothers, private investigator Liam and attorney Catherine, return here and move between Chicago and the Middle East. The story opens with the theft of 88 million dollars and a man on the run, and we don’t know anything at all about the whys or hows of it. And then we learn…

The titled “Sophie” is a young girl who has been kidnapped by her maternal grandfather and taken to his fortress of a home in Palestine.

Sophie’s father, Jack Sommers, is heartbroken. His wife had died and when his in-laws sued for custody, trying to prove he was an unfit father, they lost their case. But Jack felt bad about cutting off his daughter from her grandparents, so he suggested visitation once a month. On their third visit, they disappeared with Sophie.

Jack is a lawyer and he manages to embezzle money in hopes of paying ransom and getting his daughter back. He disappears, but his partners in crime end up dead and there is still no sign of anyone getting Sophie back to him. Liam and Catherine are hired to find the money and Jack Sommers, and in the process agree to try and help Jack get his daughter back.

The story moves to the Middle East and Balson does a phenomenal job of interspersing the history of Zionism, the state of Israel and all the fighting in the Middle East going back to biblical times, creating a fascinating back drop to the present day story.

Turns out grandpa is from a long line of terrorists, and is in the middle of planning a September 11th size attack using biological warfare, creating a terrifying culmination to the story.

This is another exciting thriller from a terrific storyteller.

3/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

SAVING SOPHIE by Ronald H. Balson. St. Martin’s Griffin (September 15, 2015).  ISBN 978-1250065858. 448p.

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