AS RED AS BLOOD by Salla Simukka

January 18, 2015

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The Snow White Trilogy
Translated by Owen Witesman

Lumikki’s day gets off to an odd start when she discovers a mass of bloodied money in her school’s darkroom. While she isn’t tempted to take any, she is curious about the story behind the stained bills and soon returns to the darkroom for further investigation. But Lumikki’s curiosity sets a deadly plot in motion and catches the attention of some dangerous men. Men intent on sending a message. Men who will soon discover that Lumikki is standing in their way.

This Finnish teen debut is the first in a projected trilogy. The translation is smooth and the story is overall quite intriguing but Lumikki herself isn’t as fully developed as I would have liked. It’s hard to say at this stage whether this is intentional; my hope is that her story will be fleshed out further in the next two books. That aside, As Red as Blood stands fairly well on its own. There are no real cliffhangers or terribly open plotlines, which is nice considering the translations of books two and three aren’t available just yet.

1/15 Becky LeJeune

AS RED AS BLOOD by Salla Simukka. Skyscape; Reprint edition (August 1, 2014). ISBN: 978-1477847718. 272p.


WHITE PLAGUE by James Abel

January 16, 2015

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The country’s newest sub is stranded in the Arctic under unforeseen circumstances and Joe Rush finds himself called in to head the rescue mission. The sub reported a fire on board and that’s all the official story will reflect, but there’s much more to the distress call than that. A deadly and as yet unidentified virus has broken out amongst the crew, spreading swiftly and killing many who become infected. As a biowarfare expert, Rush is tasked not only with ensuring the sub itself remains out of enemy hands but in finding out what is infecting the crew. But when things start to go wrong on board the ship, Rush starts to suspect a saboteur amongst the crew.

White Plague kicks off a new series featuring bioweapons expert Joe Rush. The combination military and medical thriller is chock full of action, suspense, and exclamation points. (Seriously, there are lots of them.) Rush is a great lead and the idea of basing a series around a character with a job like his is definitely one I’m on board with 100%.

1/15 Becky LeJeune

WHITE PLAGUE by James Abel. Berkley Hardcover (January 6, 2015). ISBN 978-0425276327. 336p.


THE BOSTON GIRL by Anita Diamant

January 15, 2015

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Anita Diamant, author of the much beloved The Red Tent (and several other books) hasn’t had a new book in a few years so this was highly anticipated. I am happy to say it was worth the wait.

Touching on her usual themes of Judaism, feminism and history, The Boston Girl is also heartwarming and engaging – I couldn’t put it down.

Diamant utilizes a common plot device; the heroine, Addie Baum, is 85 years old and telling her life story to her granddaughter (with much more detail than my grandmother ever remembered.) This is a poignant family story about the immigrant experience in Boston, Massachusetts. The characters are well drawn, especially Addie and her immediate family, but the secondary characters are more shadowy. Since the story is told in the first person, we can only know what Addie knows.

Addie lived through a severe flu epidemic, the Great Depression, women’s rights and lots more, all brought to life through the lens of the Baum family. I won’t be forgetting this family any time soon.

1/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE BOSTON GIRL by Anita Diamant. Scribner (December 9, 2014). ISBN 978-1439199350. 336p.


THE DEVIL YOU KNOW by Elisabeth de Mariaffi

January 14, 2015

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Evie Jones is a young reporter in 1993 Toronto, doing more investigating than actual writing. Her latest assignment is for an ongoing story that Evie nicknames “dead-girls weekend section.” She gets bumped up from digging through basement archives for stories about long dead girls to LexisNexis, which intensifies the search.

Evie has never really recovered from her best friend’s kidnapping and murder when they were eleven years old, and the suspect, Robert Cameron, was never caught. With the digital age upon her, Evie starts digging into her friend’s case as she tries to deal with a growing suspicion that someone is stalking her, but it could also be a figment of her imagination.

Paranoia is the main theme as the suspense slowly builds in this literary thriller, but reaches a frightening climax as Evie, who apparently has never seen a horror movie, goes off alone into the basement of a possible suspect’s hunting cabin deep in the woods. De Mariaffi was long-listed for the Giller Prize for How To Get Along With Women, a collection of short stories, but this is her first novel.

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

1/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE DEVIL YOU KNOW by Elisabeth de Mariaffi. Touchstone (January 13, 2015). ISBN 978-1476779089. 320p.


COLD COLD HEART by Tami Hoag

January 13, 2015

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Tami Hoag has been writing nail biting thrillers for years, but takes a different turn here, while fans will recognize some series characters in minor roles. While the suspense is high, the stakes are even higher as Hoag delves into traumatic brain injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder.

Dana Nolan is a TV reporter who is kidnapped and tortured by a serial killer, Doc Holiday – until she kills him. She suffers a traumatic brain injury in addition to a host of other injuries, and her physical recovery takes close to a year, but her psychological recovery will take much longer. The news reporter is now the news story, and she considers herself as “Before Dana” and “After Dana,” as if she were two different people.

Her family works hard to help her learn to live a more independent life, but she soon realizes that she needs goals in order to move ahead. She starts by trying to re-learn her own life, reading her old journal from high school, and slowly her memories start coming back. The summer before college, her best friend Casey disappeared and was never heard from again, and as Dana looks at her own life, she also looks at Casey’s life.

Casey’s old boyfriend, who was always under a cloud of suspicion surrounding Casey’s disappearance, is back in town, now a veteran and suffering from PTSD and a brain injury. Seven years have passed, and as these two damaged people try to find ways to live a normal life under the most difficult of circumstances, the old mystery gives them focus – he to prove his innocence, and she to find out what happened to her friend.

This unusual look at the serial killer genre is a most welcome exploration of traumatic brain injury and what it is like to be a survivor.

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

1/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

COLD COLD HEART by Tami Hoag. Dutton Adult (January 13, 2015). ISBN 978-0525954545. 3684p.


THE THIRD TARGET by Joel C. Rosenberg

January 11, 2015

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Rosenberg ties in a brilliant novel of conflict and terror in the Middle East with a story about two crusading foreign correspondents. These are men that live to get that story and will do anything to be first on the scene, scooping the competition and delivering the news as quickly as possible to the readers of the services they work for.

The first reporter we meet is A. B. Collins, who had been granted an interview with the King of Jordan forty years previously. He is a reporter working for the Associated Press and goes to the place where the King has agreed to meet him. Events ensue preventing the meeting but allowing A. B. a major scoop.

In the next segment, J.B. Collins, grandson of A.B. and a foreign correspondent for the New York Times, manages a meeting with a jailed officer of ISIS and learns of their plan to launch an attack on a third country. The terrorist’s insinuation is that ISIS has obtained weapons of mass destruction, quite possibly poison gas which they will use in their attack on the country they have in mind.

Action accelerates, J.B. meets and begins a love affair with a beautiful agent of the Israeli Mossad. He then manages to arrange a meeting with the actual head of ISIS held in a Jordanian prison and is advised that the terror group does have poison gas. In a well executed escape from the prison by the Terrorists, J.B. is forced to view the killing by the gas of several members of the prison’s authorities.

Next on J.B.’s list of events is to witness and write about a high level meeting in Jordan of the U.S. president, the King of Jordan, the prime minister of Israel and the head of the Palestinian people living next to Israel. The events of the meeting’s organization and what happens there are realistically described by Rosenberg, who in several prior books, has proven himself a master of events that took place and are taking place in the volatile Middle East.

The ending is a well executed cliff hanger that is obviously page one of the next book, in what should be more than one, possibly more novels utilizing the author’s prodigious knowledge of what is really happening in the Middle East.

1/15 Paul Lane

THE THIRD TARGET by Joel C. Rosenberg. Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. (January 6, 2015). ISBN: 978-1414336275. 448p.


SECRETS OF A SCANDALOUS HEIRESS by Theresa Romain

January 10, 2015

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Matchmaker Trilogy (Book 3)

As usual, I’m starting a series at the end, which doesn’t seem to matter much.

The scandalous heiress is Augusta Meredith, a very wealthy young woman, but the money was earned by her parents, not inherited, which doesn’t sit well with the ton. When she goes off to Bath she decides to masquerade as a widow, Mrs. Flowers, because she thinks a widow is held to lower standards of behavior than a single girl, and she’s probably right – to a point.

Josiah Everett, known as Joss, is also looked down on for his dark skin; his grandmother was from Calcutta and married an English soldier. But when Joss and Augusta get together, the pages fly by.

This is a fast, fun read and I enjoyed it.

1/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

SECRETS OF A SCANDALOUS HEIRESS by Theresa Romain. Sourcebooks Casablanca (January 6, 2015). ISBN 978-1402284052. 320p.


A DANGEROUS MAN by Connie Brockway

January 9, 2015

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I’ve been reading more romances than I ever have before, and I find a lot of these authors through a co-worker, Barbara, who orders all the paperbacks for my branch. She has been reading romance for years and often steers me to writers I may not have heard of. That was the case here; I was going on vacation and wanted a couple of paperbacks to take to the beach and this was one that she put in my hands.

Normally, we weed our paperbacks on a regular basis, which means we pull the old books to make room for the new. Except Barbara has some favorites like this one from 1996 that she refuses to pull.

A Dangerous Man starts off slowly. We meet Mercy Coltrane, an American heiress who has come to England to find her brother. She tries to enlist the Earl of Perth, Hart Moreland, in her search. She knew Hart back in Texas when he worked as a hired gunslinger for her father, and even saved her life when she was being held at gunpoint.

Hart is trying to forget his past and see his sisters wed. He doesn’t want the ton to know about his past, and is afraid Mercy will ruin everything. All the British aristocrats are mesmerized by the beautiful, vivacious American, including the Duke who is to marry Hart’s sister.

The book is slow going until a little ways past the middle. Hart is a damaged character and it becomes obvious that Mercy will be able to save him. Once their characters start interacting, the book moves along nicely and then gets pretty hot by the end. There was a lot of wooden characters to get through to reach that point and I’m not sure it was worth it.

1/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

A DANGEROUS MAN by Connie Brockway. Berkley (October 1, 2013). ISBN 978-0425253953. 384p.


THE STRANGE LIBRARY by Haruki Murakami

January 8, 2015

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Translated by Ted Goossen

This is an odd little book. First of all, the designer is Chip Kidd, who regular readers of this blog know I am obsessed with. He has created some of the most iconic book covers around, and this is no exception. In fact, it reminded me a bit of The Cheese Monkeys, a book Chip Kidd wrote and designed.

The Strange Library is a sort of hybrid hardcover/paperback. The cover feels like stiff cardboard rather than paper, and lifts upward, with the bottom part opening downward. The paper is nice and heavy as well.

The text is large, and there are several full page illustrations throughout so this is a very fast read. Kidd explores Murakami’s nightmares beautifully.

The story revolves around a boy who visits the library to research a report. The librarian intimidates him into staying late and studying, with other worldly results in this fantastic story bordering on horror. There are only a few characters; besides the boy and the librarian there is a man in sheep’s clothing and a beautiful young wraith. It’s scary and fun.

This is a book I will happily find room for on my shelves; beautiful, weird and memorable.

1/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE STRANGE LIBRARY by Haruki Murakami. Knopf (December 2, 2014). ISBN 978-0385354301. 96p.


THE WICKED DEEDS OF DANIEL MACKENZIE by Jennifer Ashley

January 7, 2015

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Mackenzies Series (Book 6)

This is the sixth book in the series, and my first read from this author. This was an unusual historical for me. It is set in England and France, and the main protagonist, Violet Bastien, is a famous medium, along with her mother.

It turns out her mother has a gift, but Violet has a way with machinery, and machinations. She’s able to produce scary knocking sounds, shadows, eerie lights and so forth, all the better to fool her clients and increase her payments.

Daniel Mackenzie is a wealthy lord and an engineer who is equally fascinated with machinery, and is designing a race car. When he wins at a card game, the loser offers to repay the debt by introducing him to Violet.

Daniel quickly realizes she is a fraud but is completely intrigued with her inventions.  In a moment of panic, Violet bashes him in the head and thinks she’s killed him. She dumps his body at the door of a nearby doctor and hightails it to France.

Daniel isn’t dead and he follows her,  learning about Violet’s past but falling in love with her smarts and her sense of adventure. This story had an intriguing premise that is never really fulfilled; the history was more interesting than the characters, so I doubt I’ll be reading any more of these.

1/15 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE WICKED DEEDS OF DANIEL MACKENZIE by Jennifer Ashley. Berkley (October 1, 2013). ISBN 978-0425253953. 384p.