WHEN WE WERE ANIMALS by Joshua Gaylord

June 7, 2015
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Lumen Fowler led a fairly normal life as a child. At least that’s what she’d like everyone to believe now that she’s an adult. Now that she’s left that tiny town she grew up in, and the name she was born with, behind.

Her mother died early on, leaving Lumen and her father alone together. Theirs was a loving relationship until the winter of Lumen’s fifteenth year when she went breach. All of the teens in Lumen’s town did it – breached that is – usually around the time they hit puberty. Lumen’s dad did it, but her mom was different and Lumen always thought she would be as well. Now, as an adult looking back on that time of her life, Lumen still feels like part of her will be forever different from everyone around her. Like she’ll never be able to truly escape the past she’s tried so hard to outgrow.

Gaylord, who also writes as Arden Bell, delivers a bizarre and eerie tale in When We Were Animals. The story explores the various hormonal confusions of puberty – with an extra animalistic twist – and the messy emotions of teenage life, as well as the lingering questions of identity and fitting in that follow undoubtedly everyone into adulthood.

There are a lot of questions that are never answered in the book, the most maddening being the reason behind the town’s teens going breach in the first place. Lumen and her journey/experiences are the focus of the tale but even she spends a good amount of the story trying to discover the truth behind the trend.

Unresolved issues aside, Gaylord’s latest is an engaging, almost hypnotic, read and one that will appeal to fans of fiction that’s goes a bit beyond the boundaries of easily categorized genre fiction.

6/15 Becky LeJeune

WHEN WE WERE ANIMALS by Joshua Gaylord.  Mulholland Books (April 21, 2015).  ISBN 978-0316297936.  336p.


THE FATEFUL LIGHTNING by Jeff Shaara

June 6, 2015
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A Novel of the Civil War

With the writing of The Fateful Lightning, Jeff Shaara brings to a conclusion his monumental work about the Civil War in the West.

The book follows the style of the preceding presentations in the series. It is painstakingly researched and documented. Studied examinations via writings, written accounts and third person descriptions of a select group of participants bring them to life for the reader. Using literary license based on careful study, thoughts, conversations and opinions read, conversations and remarks of the characters involved allow supposed dialogs to be attributed to the leading protagonists  presented as pivotal to the story told.

The book opens as the city of Atlanta is captured by union forces, burned and creates a departure point for General William T. Sherman’s famous march to the sea. In the eight months covered by the book there are no major battles fought, but a long series of skirmishes between the opposing forces that push the Confederacy back and lead to their ultimate surrender.

Leading characters involved and followed in the narrative go from General Sherman, who was second to Ulysses S. Grant commanding the Union armies, to General Joseph Johnston, Confederate general who agonized over the need to surrender to Sherman in order to avoid further unnecessary bloodshed. The adventures of a slave freed by the Emancipation Proclamation, named only Franklin, are included, indicating his need to follow Sherman’s army in order to eat and find protection.

Franklin’s adventures are chronicled in later reports about him, indicating that this man actually lived and experienced the trauma of becoming a free man and finding a place in society for himself and his wife.

Shaara’s disdain for the Southern president Jefferson Davis and his inability to recognize talent is evident in the blame placed on him for his major contribution to the defeat of the Confederacy. The normally accepted surrender by Robert E. Lee to Ulysses Grant is shown to be just the first surrender of a southern army. Sherman and Johnston’s later dialogs and decisions regarding surrender are considered by Shaara to be of greater import than the short meeting between Grant and Lee.

The attempt by the Union’s Secretary of War to impose harsher sanctions on the south and Sherman’s fight to retain the original conditions met in the surrender at Appomattox courthouse are an obstacle not covered by most historians.

A brilliantly conceived and written series of historical works delineating the agonizing conflict of Americans against Americans is brought to a satisfying conclusion by The Fateful Lightning.  One wonders if Shaara can find the proper field to bring forth his next book. I hope that his energy level will permit this to be done in the near future.

6/14 Paul Lane

THE FATEFUL LIGHTNING by Jeff Shaara. Ballantine Books (June 2, 2015). ISBN: 978-0345549198. 640p.


NIGHT TREMORS by Matt Coyle

June 4, 2015
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Matt Coyle introduced Rick Cahill in a previous book (the Anthony Award-winning Yesterday’s Echo.) Rick was a police detective when he was hit with the double whammy of the murder of his wife, and the accusation of his own guilt and arrest for the crime. He was released without explanation but due to the adverse publicity surrounding the murder and the suspicion of his guilt had to leave the area and relocate to another city.

Night Tremors takes up Rick’s life two years later at which time he is working for a firm of private detectives and devoting his time to providing proof of infidelity about a wife or husband for the other partner in a marriage. He is good at locating the evidence, but it is not the police work that he loved prior to the stain of suspicion in his wife’s murder that prevents returning to that career.

He is approached by an old nemesis of his to look into the case of an individual currently in prison for murder, to help exonerate that man for the crime. Rick jumps at the chance to do some real police work and takes a vacation from the firm he is working for in order to handle the investigation.

His inquiries take him from the wealthy enclaves of La Jolla to the dangerous areas of San Diego. He draws the ire of the police chief who tried to put him away for the murder of his wife, endangers his job, and causes a biker gang to try and stop him from investigating the murder committed by the imprisoned man.

The reader is pulled along by a writing style that is fast and crisp throughout the actual investigation. A logical, but not telegraphed ending, is the reward for enjoying the book and does set up additional novels about Rick Cahill. Very well done and and a novel that will keep the reader glued to the pages.

6/14 Paul Lane

NIGHT TREMORS by Matt Coyle. Oceanview Publishing (June 2, 2015). ISBN: 978-1608091492. 330p.


CASH LANDING by James Grippando

June 3, 2015
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According to the FBI, in 2005 three masked men stole over 7 million dollars that was headed for the Federal Reserve from the Miami International Airport. Grippando took that idea and ran with it.

Ruban, half Russian, half Cuban, has lost his home and his business, so when the opportunity comes up to settle the score, so to speak, with the banking industry, he is on board. Unfortunately, his co-conspirators are a motley crew; his brother-in-law, Jeffrey, is a cocaine addict, his wife’s uncle Pinky is a career criminal with a penchant for violence, and Marco, their inside man at airport security, seems to have vanished.

The heist goes off without a hitch but before the dust settles, everyone is after the money, from local criminals to the FBI. Ruban manages to keep one step ahead but his wife is suspicious, his cohorts are seriously hampering his efforts, dropping thousands of dollars all over Miami, and then the kidnappings start; following the money is the only way to go.

Grippando brings back the caper in this fast paced and violent tale with a cameo by his series hero, Jack Swyteck.

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

6/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

Another review:

Grippando sets up what is really a prequel to his books about Jack Swyteck an attorney working in Miami. Andie Henning, who will become Swyteck’s girlfriend and later his fiancee and eventually his wife is transferred to Miami from Seattle. She is a new member of the FBI and has evolved a liking for undercover work. Her first major assignment is to work on a theft of several million dollars in cash. The cash is part of a weekly shipment from Germany that is sent to the Federal Reserve bank. Ruban Betancourt, happily married, and apparently not mixed up in shady business, has his home and his restaurant business seized by his bank to satisfy past due debts. While Ruban has generally played by the rules he comes up with a scheme to get back at the banks, and make a lot of money doing it. He sets up a well planned theft of a part of the cash that has been shipped in from Germany. With the help of his brother-in-law and two ex cons he executes the theft getting away with about 7.4 million dollars. The four begin by agreeing to bury the money for a period allowing the heat from the robbery to die down.

Grippando is a master of following the parties involved in the heist, from the thieves and Andie Henning who gets on their trail and also the mob learning about the theft and wanting to get their hands on the money. Cause follows effect and each of the three parts involved are followed and logically contribute to the plot, it’s resolution. Obviously not all of the four involved with the job is satisfied with keeping their hands off the money while immediate desires are unfulfilled. And Andie understands that in order to get the robbers the best way to act is to follow the trail of the money.

Satisfying read with good plot and explanations of how all parties react to what is going on. The ending is logical, following the details outlined in the novel, and without divulging something totally unexpected it ends with Andie about to meet Jack Swyteck.

06/15 Paul Lane

CASH LANDING by James Grippando.  Harper (June 2, 2015).  ISBN 978-0062295453. 384p.


DAUGHTER OF DEEP SILENCE by Carrie Ryan

May 30, 2015
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The official story behind the loss of the Persephone claims a rogue wave was responsible for the sinking of the ship; a natural, freak accident that claimed the lives of three hundred and twenty-three people. But Frances knows the official story is a lie, a cover up spun and spread by Senator Alastair Wells and his son after they were rescued.

Frances was on Persephone and managed to escape only after she witnessed the murders of her parents and her friend’s mother. She and Libby – Elizabeth O’Martin – fled the ship and lasted seven days on the open sea, but in the end only Frances lived long enough to be rescued.

Frances doesn’t know why the senator lied about Persephone. She can only assume that by telling the tale of the rogue wave he was somehow complicit in the attack and thereby responsible for the deaths of everyone she loved. And now, four years later, she’s decided it’s time to get revenge.

Ryan’s latest is a definite step away from the zombie apocalypse world of the Forest of Hands and Teeth series. Daughter of Deep Silence features a contemporary setting and a plot akin to the show Revenge.

While the story could have fallen prey to a serious lack of believability – convincing the reader that Frances could become Libby and trick even the person closest to her (aside from her father, he’s the inside man in the identity theft) was no small task. At first I thought Ryan wouldn’t pull it off at all, but she got me. She made me believe, for the most part, in Frances as Libby and in Frances’s plan.

Daughter of Deep Silence was great fun. My one and only real complaint was that it ended too soon.

5/15 Becky LeJeune

DAUGHTER OF DEEP SILENCE by Carrie Ryan.  Dutton Books for Young Readers (May 26, 2015).  ISBN 978-0525426509.  384p.


THE LAST BOOKANEER by Matthew Pearl

May 29, 2015

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A Bookaneer is a term probably made up by Pearl, although he claims that he has seen the word in writings of many years ago. It is used in bringing us a novel based on facts surrounding the actual stealing of works by famous authors. About one hundred years ago, an international treaty was signed to guarantee  authors’ works as intellectual property and ensuring that those writers would have the income from their works protected.

Prior to the protection of the copyright treaty, it was fair game for works to be literally stolen from their creators and sold by the thieves. Matthew Pearl sets up a well written novel about people that would dedicate their activities to stealing authors’ works and rapidly selling these to publishers. A public hungry for books to read set up a market eager to get new material.

Using a bookseller, E. Fergins, as the narrator of the story Pearl brings us into the last days of the cutthroat era of theft by the Bookaneers. They are all aware of the imminent implementation of the copyright treaty and are looking for one last big score before being forced out of business. Fergins meets the leading Bookaneers and describes their activities.

Authors such as Dickens, Poe and others are mentioned as being victimized. But the top prize seems to be Robert Louis Stevenson, who has moved to Samoa with his family.  Fergins is forced to take a trip there with Pen Davenport, one of the leading Bookaneers, and his employer. Also arriving on Samoa is Belial, another Bookaneer, and Davenport’s arch rival.

Pearl has done a major job of researching and fleshing out Robert Louis Stevenson, his wife and his two step children. They have built a beautiful estate on the island and live the life of royalty. Stevenson is quite ill, but still working to finish what he indicates will be his masterpiece. The conditions that existed on Samoa at the time of this story involved conflict between the U.S., England and Germany for control of the islands. Each of these countries had interests which they sought to enlarge. There was also the importing of slaves captured on other islands in the south Pacific in order to work on plantations.

The interaction between the attempts to get Stevenson’s next novel coupled with the political scene make for a great read.  We are brought successfully into the period and the literary world that existed through Matthew Pearl’s research and skillful handling of the plot.

5/15 Paul Lane

THE LAST BOOKANEER by Matthew Pearl . Penguin Press; 1St Edition edition (April 28, 2015). ISBN: 978-1594204920. 400p.


BEACH TOWN by Mary Kay Andrews

May 28, 2015
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Once again I am kicking off my summer reading with Mary Kay Andrews and she is setting the bar high!

Greer Hennessy is a movie location scout looking for an old time Florida beach, which is getting real hard to find. But when she stumbles into Cypress Key in the Florida Panhandle, she knows she’s earned her paycheck. It’s lovely, with a pristine beach, one motel, and an old boarded up casino that is the perfect spot for the producer’s dream explosion.

But Greer runs into a problem her first night there, and his name is Eben Thibadeaux. He is the town mayor, engineer, hotel towel boy and more – and he is not about to let some Hollywood movie people destroy his town. Cypress Key already had a run of bad luck when the local paper mill polluted the area then left town, laying off everyone. The town is struggling and Eben is determined to bring it back from the brink without blowing anything up, especially an historic landmark like the casino.

But Greer is determined and sweet talks her way into almost everything she needs, with bribes taking care of what the sweet talk won’t. But blowing up the casino is becoming a real issue on both sides when the movie bigwigs find out how far over the budget has gone.

Greer and Eben are meeting and fighting regularly, but also fighting a strong attraction to each other and they lose that fight for sure. Andrews excels at creating characters that are full realized and believable, and their story just draws you in, making this a true page turner.

The romance builds and things get really hot in this sweet, sexy beach read that is the perfect way to kick off summer. I loved it!

5/15 Stacy Alesi AKA the BookBitch

BEACH TOWN by Mary Kay Andrews. St. Martin’s Press (May 19, 2015). ISBN: 978-1250065933. 448p.


THE SNIPER AND THE WOLF by Scott McEwen & Thomas Koloniar

May 27, 2015

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This is the third novel in the action series Sniper Elite featuring Gil Shannon, a Seal Team sniper. In the same vein as the first two books military action and plenty of it are the order of the day. Gil is sent to kill a Russian military sniper known as the Wolf who has spread havoc all across Europe and in the course of events has turned Chechen terrorist. The mission appears to be right on until Gil realizes that he has been exposed by someone high up in the U.S. government.

In order to even the odds now stacked against him he teams up with a deadly Russian special operative. When Gil and his team discover that the Wolf is just the tip of the iceberg and what he is up against is a full blown plot to destroy the U.S. economy and upend the stability of the Western World he must go full against the plotters as well as continuing to track down the Wolf.

Gil takes on hosts of enemy soldiers in his way, and in Herculean fashion destroys them one after the other. While exciting and filled with details of military weapons and one too many actions the number of encounters with armed and deadly troops stretches the imagination more than a little. The idea is to enjoy the book with the expectation of reading about the exploits of a super hero and his overcoming all obstacles thrown in his path; one after the other with no letup.

The book is pure entertainment and must be read as one would to enjoy the exploits of larger than life superheroes that bear little resemblance to us mortals. Doing it this way makes the read very enjoyable and becomes entertainment without having to decipher any devious plots.

5/15 Paul Lane

THE SNIPER AND THE WOLF by Scott McEwen & Thomas Koloniar . Touchstone (May 12, 2015). ISBN: 978-1476787268. 400p.


TRAUMA by Michael Palmer & Daniel Palmer

May 25, 2015

Click to purchaseMichael Palmer was an MD and the author of books of fiction both on medically related themes as well as other novels. He passed away suddenly in 2013 leaving a void in the literary world that will be difficult to fill. He did, as many authors do, have ideas as outlines of books in the planning stage. His son, Daniel Palmer, who is not an MD but has a background in the high tech area, has written successful novels involved with domestic suspense. Daniel has taken background and outline from an idea being developed by his father and completed a novel based on a conspiracy in the medical field.

Dr. Carrie Bryant, a young neurosurgeon, is a highly regarded doctor in residence at White Memorial hospital. Due to scheduling difficulties, she is given a chance to do her first unsupervised brain surgery. She performs the difficult procedure but unforeseen complications arise. While exhausted, Carrie has to rush back to her patient and makes a tragic mistake resulting in permanent brain damage.

During the inquest, Carrie feels impelled to resign her position at White Memorial. She moves back into her parents’ house in order to get herself together to continue with her medical career. Her brother Adam, a returning veteran suffering from PTSD after being in combat, also lives there and his condition leads Carrie into exploring another, different job.

When Carrie learns about a new technique involving Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) being tested as a treatment for the emotional and memory trauma occurring in PTSD by the VA, she decides to enter that program as a surgeon and as a way back into medicine. Her first operation is successful, but amazingly the patient mysteriously vanishes. Almost immediately after her second operation, also successful, has the same result – the patient vanishes.

David Hoffman, an investigative reporter with a local newspaper, is writing a story about the incidence of PTSD in returning veterans and in his work has interviewed Carrie. She feels free to ask him to start investigating the disappearances, which he does. The investigation uncovers a conspiracy going to the very top of the Veterans Administration and exposes both Carrie and David to great danger.

Daniel Palmer incorporates his father’s notes and explanations into the novel making it both a fascinating medical plot as well as an adventure into a major conspiracy. Very readable with explanations about PTSD and its effects on many combat veterans with a need to develop new procedures to help them return to civilian life.

5/15 Paul Lane

TRAUMA by Michael Palmer & Daniel Palmer. Simon & Schuster (May 19, 2015). ISBN: 978-1476764856. 320p.


THE FORGOTTEN ROOM by Lincoln Child

May 23, 2015

Click to purchaseDr. Jeremy Logan specializing in investigations of strange and inexplicable happenings and having the title of the Enigmalogist makes a second appearance in a novel by Lincoln Child. Dr. Logan is called upon by the management of a large “Think Tank” named Lux and located in Newport, Rhode Island, to look at a very strange occurrence. One of the more eminent doctors working for Lux suddenly began behaving erratically attacking a colleague and then killing himself in a very shocking manner.

In the course of his investigation Dr. Logan discovers a hidden and actually lost room untouched for decades hidden in a wing of the institution which is not widely used. The room is filled with strange equipment that points to a top secret project known as Project S. What Project S was and if it led to the strange actions and subsequent suicide of the doctor forms the gist of the novel. What the project was and what it involved leads Dr Logan into the path of an unforeseen and unexpected danger.

The concept and the happenings are well conceived. A flaw encountered but not greatly detracting from an engrossing read are the lengths of descriptions used in the course of the writing. Child’s aim in these lengthy discourses must surely have been to set the scene in both the seashore of Newport Rhode Island and the size and age of the Think Tanks physical plant.

5/15 Paul Lane

THE FORGOTTEN ROOM by Lincoln Child. Doubleday (May 12, 2015). ISBN: 978-0385531405. 304p.